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Title:

CASE STUDY OF TRANSIT IN SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED CITIES

Accession Number:

00470908

Record Type:

Component

Availability:

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Order URL: http://worldcat.org/isbn/0309046637

Abstract:

The changing federal involvement in supporting public transit is challenging every transit agency to develop creative solutions to a myriad of problems. Small and medium-sized systems face many of the same difficulties faced by larger systems but often experience proportionately greater funding shortages. One major reason for this is federal regulations and mandates that significantly increase transit deficits. A second reason is the type of federal assistance received by smaller systems compared with that received by larger properties. Although federal capital and operating funding has decreased over the years under the Reagan administration, the most significant reductions have been in the federal funds available for operating assistance. Traditionally, the larger transit systems received, on average, only 14 percent of their operating revenues from the federal coffers. On the other hand, the smaller systems require a much greater federal contribution to their operating ledgers, some approaching 50 percent. Therefore, with the proportionately greater decrease in federal operating revenue, the smaller systems have suffered a proportionately greater hardship. As a result of reductions in federal operating assistance, the smaller systems have been forced to request additional assistance from state and local governing bodies. This need has created new problems, but it has also generated some enlightening solutions to these complex problems. These solutions are the prime focus of this paper.

Supplemental Notes:

Distribution, posting, or copying of this PDF is strictly prohibited without written permission of the Transportation Research Board of the National Academy of Sciences. Unless otherwise indicated, all materials in this PDF are copyrighted by the National Academy of Sciences. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. This paper appears in Transportation Research Board Special Report No. 217, New Organizational Responses to the Changing Transit Environment, Proceedings of a Conference, Norfolk, Virginia, December 2-4, 1987.

Monograph Accession #:

00469492

Corporate Authors:

Transportation Research Board

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Authors:

Jenkins, Harold C

Pagination:

pp 97-105

Publication Date:

1988

Serial:

Transportation Research Board Special Report

Issue Number: 217
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
ISSN: 0360-859X

Conference:

Conference on New Organizational Responses to the Changing Transit Environment

Location: Norfolk Virginia, United States
Date: 1987-12-2 to 1987-12-4
Sponsors: Urban Mass Transportation Administration; U.S. Department of Transportation

ISBN:

0-309-04663-7

Media Type:

Digital/other

Uncontrolled Terms:

Old TRIS Terms:

Subject Areas:

Administration and Management; Highways; Planning and Forecasting; Public Transportation; I10: Economics and Administration; I72: Traffic and Transport Planning

Files:

TRIS, TRB, ATRI

Created Date:

Aug 31 1988 12:00AM

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