Saturday 18 May 2013

Use of bike racks on county buses doubles in 2011

cycling

Use of bike racks on Milwaukee County buses has doubled in 2011, and the Milwaukee County Transit System projects the total number of bikes on buses will approach 100,000 for the year.

Through Sept. 30, drivers recorded 68,541 bikes racked on buses, more than double the 33,615 counted in the first nine months of 2010. Use of the racks hit a high of 13,920 in August.

Critics of the racks, which cost $405,000 when installed in 2009, have argued the usage has been minimal and not enough to justify the spending.

The numbers released Wednesday show usage moving closer to the numbers advocates for the racks had predicted.

At 100,000 per year, the number of bikes racked on buses would meet the early projections from bus system managers, but remain short of the 200,000 touted by the Bicycle Federation of Wisconsin. The advocacy group led the lobbying for the spending and installation.

“Critics will be quick to point out that even 100,000 boardings is only half the original projection of 200,000 annual bicycle boardings,” said Kevin Hardman, Executive Director of the bike federation. “But those early projections did not factor in an economic recession of the magnitude we have been living with for the last few years.”

Hardman added that the down economy has resulted in a slowdown in driving cars as well, even though traffic engineers predicted much larger annual increases.

Providing riders an option of bringing a bike expands the reach of the bus system, according to Jacqueline Janz, spokeswoman for MCTS.

MCTS bus stops are within walking distance for 85% of county residents, and 99% of county residents are within biking distance.

With Bikes on Buses, MCTS is able to give customers a public transportation option that promotes a more sustainable and healthier lifestyle, Janz said. Bike racks make it even easier for MCTS passengers to leave their car at home for their workday commute, head out to explore Milwaukee County parks and bike trails, or enjoy a bike ride on their lunch break.

The usage is tracked by the drivers, who record each time a bike is racked on a bus. MCTS estimates the drivers undercount the total usage by about 15%.

In all of 2010, drivers recorded 47,995 bikes on buses. Through Sept. 30 this year, the drivers recorded 68,541 uses.

On a monthly average, usage increased from 3,999 to 5,711.

At that pace, usage for the year would hit roughly 85,000, short of the 100,000 MCTS officials touted in a release. That 100,000 figure would be reached if the monthly usage continues on a pace double that in 2010.

32 Comments for "Use of bike racks on county buses doubles in 2011"

  1. Where are you Conservative Nay Sayers? You are wrong on this just like you're wrong on High Speed & Light Rail!!! Oh they'll get used alright.

    boogen10 Oct 26, 2011 2:26 PM

  2. Whoooopie!!! Not even half (35%) of the 200,000 that was projected. Still a big waste of money and don't get me started on that light rail boondoggle. If the projections for the cost of that are as good then we can expect to spend 3 times the amount of money for something just as useless!

    khsruns Oct 26, 2011 2:38 PM

  3. I'd also like to know what the economy has to do with how many people will use the stupid racks.

    khsruns Oct 26, 2011 2:39 PM

  4. Ho hummmmm yawwwnnnnn....

    Diver Dan Oct 26, 2011 2:40 PM

  5. Yet another in a long list of projections missed on a governement project. They are so proud to be inching up on 50% of what was projected...... FAIL.

    Uncle Rico Oct 26, 2011 2:49 PM

  6. I'm almost 60 years old. I use the bike racks frequently. Sometimes I ride a partial way to work in the a.m., put my bike on the bus and then ride my bike home in the evening. I find the racks very useful! I also hope I'm setting an example to others: (ie: fun, saving money and getting some great exercise!) Not to mention a nice sense of community. Too bad there are so many negative people around who can't find goodness in simple things!!!

    Adamsrib Oct 26, 2011 3:11 PM

  7. Folks that don't have the brain power to look at the bigger picture:

    “But those early projections did not factor in an economic recession of the magnitude we have been living with for the last few years.”

    more people spending less, traveling less, working less. How do these factors NOT directly negatively effect a government projection.

    And when has a government projection ever been spot on?

    Tax Payer Oct 26, 2011 3:31 PM

  8. "At 100,000 per year, the number of bikes racked on buses would meet the early projections from bus system managers, but remain short of the 200,000 touted by the Bicycle Federation of Wisconsin."

    How are all of you misreading this article? The government isn't responsibly for the 200,000 projection, a bike advocacy group is. I suppose if you count "bus system managers" as our "government", their projection of 100,000 is a pretty accurate prediction.

    scottjk02 Oct 26, 2011 3:57 PM

  9. The 200,000 is a non-profit bike advocacy group projection, not a MCTS projection.

    scottjk02 Oct 26, 2011 4:16 PM

  10. The negative comments posted here amaze me. Oh wait.....I'm guessing 90% of those posting are OBESE.

    MustardSeeds Oct 26, 2011 4:20 PM

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