I also think the Hartford line and the fastbreak busways are terrific.
People hate infrastructure they won’t use.
This states thinks public transportation has to be profitable or break even. Like, our roads are essentially free and make no money. But they allow commerce and free movement. The train and busways do the same.
CT is a great state, but areas are isolated. The fastrak for people who take it in new Britain and Waterbury to Hartford love it. It connects Waterbury, new Britain and Hartford.
It is a bit too long to take fastrak if you don’t live near downtown NB or a station or pickup. They are working to fix that.
CT Rail is awesome. Taken from Berlin to New Haven multiple times. There is just some issues with getting out of union station to work in New Haven (used to work at long wharf), which makes you just drive.
They are working on that. Eventually, the businesses and the housing develop around the transportation. It is created to meet future needs.
State is almost there. We have Springfield to New Haven rail line that is good. A new stop going in for Bradley. There is also shuttles from union in new haven to Tweed and other places.
Fastrak from New Britain ti Hartford is a success. Just because you see an empty bus doesn’t mean anything. They run busses at off times because you need to build in capacity and I sure people can get home .
If they can expand fastrak to storrs on dedicated route that is a game changer. I would totally support a busway from Storrs to Hartford with stops in Coventry, Bolton Manchester and East Hartford.
That would I really connect the state.
'I also think the Hartford line and the fastbreak busways are terrific.'
original capital estimates for 'fastbroke?' way way off. prolly around a
quarter billion dollars wrong.
original daily ridership projections? using widely available estimates from that time, say around 11,500 or so, and
mostly paying customers from the then around 16,000 folks already using the existing bus system. today? still around 16,000 in that demand pool, with fastbroke ridership nearing 11,000. we'll get back to this.
original annual operating estimates
with that paying customer thing?
wrong by
half ($10m guess, then $20m soon after opening). today with that free ride thing? ur kidding, right? here's sum good beagling on this for why those estimates were a bold-faced lie.
Yearly Taxpayer Cost To Operate CTfastrak Jumps 75 Percent From Original Estimate
now, back to that 'ridership' thing. this one cracks me up.
'Ridership figures for April, 2015 should not be used in trend analysis due to the free trial period.' this one comes straight from the current State fastbroke ridership report.
CTfastrak Ridership
and yet, well,
CT Transit buses have been free since April 1. Ridership is now topping pre-COVID totals in some cities.
hmmm, 'free,' and yet the State's own report sez '
'Ridership figures for April, 2015 should not be used in trend analysis due to the free trial period.'
'free' is supposed to end 12/1, like some other election gimmicks set to end after, ummmm, the election!
iffn we were told the truth at the beginning, including the free thing goal, im sure a lot of folks like me would have still supported it then if full disclosure for a reasonable operational cost was included, but we were'nt.
a
100% complete fraud, all around. no car traffic reductions, no change in existing ridership pool, none of that. all crap. 800 millions? who knows? the public info on this is now like the chinese government deciding recently to stop providing quarterly gdp reports, becuz they're sooo freakin bad. luckily, some of us knew this loong ago and made financial
bets accordingly. with all that extra cash, i could eat at 5 guys or whatever, but i don't. i like mickey d's. (don't need their official baloney as there are lots of ways to figger it out, from other existing data that they are too dumb to understand tells the story.)
will they extend the free thing set to expire December 1, 2022?
the end of the covid free cash thing is really a tsunami wake-up call to government budgets all across the land. and oh, gas and diesel are way up in price, too. which reminds me, we have a pipeline from Alaska that has a 2 million bbl capacity, currently carrying only around 350,000 bbls.
madness all around. and, electricity in New England is around 50% generated from nat gas, yet we can't get a dang pipeline built from Pennsylvania, which our ancestors used to get to by horseback in mebbe two days hard ride.
next door!
i really have no strong opinion on the stadium issue, and just hope that whatever State discussion could happen, it comes with full dose of honestly. prolly should repost that original tune now.