Thursday, May 19, 2016

Changes To Metro

If you go onto Metro's website, you can read the plans for renovating the system, which is long overdue. It's going to be inconvenient for us riders, but it is a bitter pill that needs to be swallowed. I have to commend Paul Wiedefeld, the General Manager, for his willingness to take the bull by the horns, and make some very unpopular decisions regarding Metro. In the long run, I think things will be greatly improved.

There is going to be a lot of single tracking, closed sections of the rail with shuttle buses, and the Friday and Saturday night late night until 3 AM service is going by the wayside. Metro will now be shutting down at midnight seven days per week. Of course, I remember when Metro opened at 10 AM, and shut down at 6 PM on Sundays. That was when I first moved here in 1980. The 3 AM service had a great run, and hopefully, it will return someday when the bulk of the maintenance is completed. I can only think of two times when I've used the late night weekend service in the time that I have lived in the DC area. I can see how it might affect some of the nightlife businesses in the District. Of course, there is always the various bus lines, and some of them run very late at night in the city, and in Montgomery County. They don't over here in Prince George's County, which is a shame.

As a huge public transportation buff, I will always try to find a way to incorporated some form of public transportation into my transportation needs. Sometimes I will drive to a Metro station and park. Today, I drove to a parking garage in Silver Spring, MD, and then walked to the Paul Sarbanes Transportation Center, and rode the J2 bus to where I work. Coming home was the exact opposite. I had to work until 10 PM, and the last J2 bus is a 1:07 AM, so I was covered. I then drove the 9 miles from the garage to my house. It works OK, because at 9 PM they raise the arms in the parking garage, and you don't have to pay to park. In Bethesda, you have to pay until midnight. It's cheaper, taking into consideration the price of gas, to drive to Silver Spring and take the bus. IDEAL SOLUTION: maybe eventually there will be late night bus served here in College Park, MD.




Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Alternatives to Metro's Trip Planner

Metro's trip planner on their website is a great tool. However, it doesn't give you all your transportation options. There are many transit options that are available if you are willing to do a little homework, and do a little experimental travelling. I have found some alternative transit options.

Metro offers the option of using bus only, rail only, and bus and metro together. The results are good, but they don't give you the big picture. Here are some options that they don't give you:
  • Until recently, I was adjunct faculty at the Bullis School in Potomac, MD. After some experimenting, I would use this route going to the Bullis school from my home...take the 83 bus to the College Park Metro Station, then take the Green Line to Fort Totten, from there, take the E4 crosstown bus to Friendship Heights, and then take the T2 bus to the Bullis School. Going home, use the exact opposite in reverse, except that I would allow for the 86 bus, which actually brings me closer to home. This works quite well on weekdays. During the weekday rush hour, you save quite a bit of money taking the crosstown bus, as opposed to riding the Metro all the way around. It takes the same amount of time. It is an interesting ride, Yes, you are travelling through the upper middle class North West area of Washington, DC, as well as travelling through some not so upper middle class Kennedy Street NW neighborhoods, and the majority of the passengers on the bus are "little brown people," and African Americans, but come on...it's safe, and you get to celebrate diversity at the same time. I've had some wonderful conversations with some very interesting folks, that were on their way to their jobs as nannies, gardeners, or janitors. Do you hear that  public transportation supporting Liberals who insist on driving rather than taking the public transportation that  you supposedly and so vehemently support? Yes I know: Transit for thee, but not for me. My time is too valuable. I don't like the inconvenience. You might have to stand for a while. I'm way too important to ride a bus with those sub-standard humans from Central America, who are good enough to clean my house or my office, wipe my child's ass, or mow my lawn, and those stinky Black welfare recipients dragging their rolling grocery carts on the bus, after spending two or three hours going to the food bank, in order to get food to feed their families. OK. I had to get the hypocrite thing in there. I love rubbing peoples' noses in their phoniness.
  • I attend Mass every Sunday at the Basilica National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. I take Metro for most of the trip. Yes, I do drive the 2.5 miles from my house to the College Park Metro station, From there, I take the Green Line to Fort Totten, and then take the Red Line to Brookland/Catholic University. If it a good day for walking, I walk from the Brookland station to the Basilica, which is about 2 blocks. It's a beautiful walk through the campus of Catholic University.  Alternatively, I take the 80 bus from Fort Totten, or the H2 or H4 bus from Brookland to the Gibbons Hall stop, and then walk about 100 yards to the Basilica. 
  • When I catch up with friends after Mass in Montgomery, County, I take either the  H2 or H4 bus to a Metro stop in Montgomery County, and then take the Metro to Rockville or Shady Grove. Then you have access to the Q buses than run from there, and run until 11:40 PM. Parking at the College Park Metro station, means that I don't have to contend with the fact that the last Metrobus heading north from the College Park station on Sunday, leaves shortly after 5 PM. I'm going to try a more bus oriented route to Rockville soon. It's going to involve leaving the Basilica, taking either an H bus or the 80 bus to Brookland, or walking, and taking the Red Line to Silver Spring. From there, taking the Q bus to either Rockville, or Shady Grove. My bus adventure will all be part of a future post, as well as a possible article in the Greater Greater Washington website, if they will have me. 
What pisses me off more than anything else about public transportation, is the NIMBYism of a hue proportion of Liberals. I knew some people that lived in Silver Spring, that were totally against the Purple Line coming close to their back yard. One lady was so supporting of public transportation, that she said that because she was a Liberal with a PhD, she had a right to be a NIMBY hypocrite.

Personally, I can't wait for the Purple Line to be built and to open. It will  make my transit options more viable. I don't care if it goes through Langley Park. I'm going to enjoy riding it through that area, and I have no problem sitting next to "little brown people" on a bus, subway, light rail, or street car. More to follow...