Buy Next Month’s Fast Pass Online Now

June 11th, 2007

Adult Fast PassMuni offers passes online, but only from the 10th to the 22nd of each month. (As opposed to hundreds of transit systems worldwide, including Caltrain, where you can buy your pass at any ticket machine.) In any case, if you don’t feel like standing in the line at the cable car turnaround, buy now and the pass will be mailed to you. You can also buy prepaid parking cards.

Muni: “When It’s Bad, It’s Really Bad”

June 10th, 2007

Detailed article today in the Chronicle about the wide range of issues affecting Muni reliability. In particular, Muni’s chronic budget problems are highlighted, as well as Supervisor Peskin’s proposed labor and budget reforms. Mayor Newsom and Rescue Muni vice chair Daniel Murphy are quoted (among others).

Service changes coming to N, J, T, other lines June 30

June 8th, 2007

T-Third N Judah Muni announced this week that it is making some pretty significant service changes on June 30 to improve access to downtown and Caltrain. This was in part due to the public feedback on the T-Third’s troubled start of service as well as the discontinuance of the 15-Third north of Market Street. (Chronicle report here.) The N-Judah will go back to Caltrain, the Castro Shuttle will be restored, and the new 20-Columbus will be a new rush hour service from North Beach to downtown replacing the 15 north of Market.

I’m sorry, Dave. I’m afraid I can’t do that.

May 18th, 2007

Metro’s Automatic Train Control System (ATCS) had a bad hair day Thursday morning.

On a tangential note, it recently came to my attention that one reason the platform signs often don’t indicate T-Third trains correctly is that the ATCS software is written in OS/2 Warp, and Alcatel-Lucent’s remaining OS/2 programmers are busy working on the Docklands Light Railway in London for a few more months.

There’s a lot of talk around Muni about how dated ATCS is, but it was installed less than ten years ago. ATCS brought with it a slew of problems, but I must admit I cringe at the thought of replacing or upgrading it, since the last time Muni installed a new train control system, we endured something like a year of early Metro closures.

Compared to some of Muni’s technology, ATCS is downright modern. The MTA CAC toured Central Control a few times, and it’s quite the computer museum. I only-half-jokingly asked where they kept the punch card readers and spare vacuum tubes. Finding a difference engine in a closet there wouldn’t have come as a great shock.

There’s a big quandary at the heart of any question about upgrading Muni technology. Much of Muni’s hardware and software is outdated, but the agency doesn’t have a great track record when it comes to acquiring new technology. Can the agency which bought the Boeing Vertol and Breda streetcars, or ATCS for that matter, be trusted to make better decisions when money is available to buy shiny new stuff? But, on the other hand, can we afford not to try? Not all of Muni’s problems relate to outdated technology—not by a longshot—but things like ridiculously antiquated radio systems, which make communication with operators difficult and slow, constitute part of The Problem.

-Daniel M.

Riders air grievances about T-Third problems, Caltrain access

May 17th, 2007

T-ThirdJ ChurchUpdate: Chronicle report on the meeting and T-Third issues more generally.

About thirty or forty Muni riders attended the town hall meeting held in response to an online petition complaining about service problems and route changes associated with the startup of the T-Third line. A good number of Rescue Muni members were among the attendees.

MTA Executive Director/CEO Nathaniel Ford outlined the agency’s action plan to deal with service reliability problems—increasing operator availability, dealing with bottleneck intersections, etc.—and promised a preliminary answer within a week to service design concerns raised at the meeting. He emphasized that he wanted to find the right answers to the problems before taking final action.

Attendees, many of whom were transit commuters who live outside the city, made a number of comments and concerns. Here’s a list of the ones I managed to jot down during the meeting; there were quite a few good points raised. I apologize in advance for any omissions or errors. Note that this is a summary of the speakers’ opinions, and doesn’t necessarily represent the views of Rescue Muni, nor those of our evil puppetmasters. Read the rest of this entry »