Showing posts with label 29403. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 29403. Show all posts

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Queen Ruby’s Pirate Party Wed. May 24


Queen Ruby Handing out Pirate Booty
Queen Ruby’s Pirate PartyWed. May 24, 

  7 to 10:30 pm

Container Bar
2130 Mt Pleasant St, Charleston, SC
29403
On #20, Upper King Bus Route (Fare free)

Reserve your space on board now (Free, Eventbright). 

Container Bar will offer a half price discount or a single run drink to any person presenting one of Queen Ruby's pirate coins at the time they make the order. 

Most recent chapter in our evolving pirate drama. A Welcome Home Party for Queen Ruby. Come to the party prepared. 

Queen Ruby and her crew have magically arrived from year 1623. She’s evading  Pirate Anderson’s Cutthroat band who wants to rob her and the ladies in raiding of their ship and the magical key to the sea. Ruby is holding this party to start a Lowcountry pirate fashion trend in hopes of increasing her chances of keeping under the radar by filling Charleston with play Pirates, among whom she and her ladies can hide. 

Ruby's pirates have survived their first encounter with Anderson in this modern world, but life in the 21st century is becoming complicated. They're riding the bus because you can't rent or buy a car even with a handful of gold doubloons without an ID. A birthdate in the 1600s is bout to raise some questions down at the  DMV Ruby and the other lady pirates don't want to answer. 

Read the full, detailed back story. 

Pirate Party Games

Ruby has devised some party games to help build the Pirate fashion trend int he Lowcountry which will help her and her ladies hide. They may also identify people with sympathies and skills which might be useful in the future. 

Swordfight– Procure a partner. Show your daring do in our swordfight competition. Each team will be presented two foam Nerf swords and have two minutes to fight. Teams will be provided points based on costume (30%), hat (10%), choreography (30%) and drama (30%). 

Pirate Costume– Dress up and let your inner pirate out. 

Pirate Poetry- Present a short piratical poem. Must rhyme, 14 lines maximum. Must contain the words bus, booty and beach. 


Make buttons–
Produce a pirate pin to publicly portend  your propensity to push preconceptions of an ordinary summer overboard

Image, left- Best Friends of Lowcountry Transit marching to the sea at IOP from Mt. Pleasant in July 2015 to protest lack of public transit bus service to the beaches in Charleston, 98 degrees, The march took the same route the bus does now. 

For More Information- To become involved contact William Hamilton at 843-870-5299 or wjhamilton29464@gmail.com. Contributions to support the effort can be made through act blue. 




 

 

 

Sunday, September 25, 2022

Charleston, SC Brewery District Trolley, Fun, Free and Full

Charleston Brewery District Trolley, Fun, Free and Full

Stopped at Revelry Brewing

Charleston Brewery District Trolley is a free, fun addition to uptown Charleston’s diverse mobility menu used by locals and visitors that continues to grow towards success since returning to operation a year ago.

I rode the Trolley (actually a streetcar style bus) on September 24, 2022 as part of an afternoon which connected me with events across the city using the Brewery Trolley and #20 CARTA Bus Route. Both are free.

I reached Charleston on the CARTA #40 Mt. Pleasant Bus which arrived on time and tracked perfectly on the Transit App. Downtown I dismounted at the first stop on Meeting St., Just North of Huger and walked South and West around the corner to Palmetto Brewing on Huger. The Brewery District Trolley arrived five minutes earlier than expected because I had consulted an old schedule found online. A stop has been added and pushed pickup times on half the route forward five minutes.  Several outdated versions of the schedule persist online.  The current, correct schedule as of Sept. 24, 2022 can be found as an image in this blog.

The Brewery District Trolley picked up about ten passengers at Palmetto Brewing and dropped several off. It headed around the corner to Baker & Brewer for another busy stop.

Passengers included adults and children. There was a goody basket of treats by the door where people boarded. A poll of riders taken after a large group boarded at Edmund’s Oast Brewing Co. showed 20% of the passengers were from Charleston. 30% from other parts of the Lowcountry. 20% from other parts of SC and 30% from out of state, including on this occasion Alaska and Massachusetts. Everyone was in good spirits and friendly. There were two family events at the Brewereys that day and all these businesses serve food, so the presence of children wasn’t surprising. The kids were loving the bus.

Trolley Schedule as of Sept. 25, 2022
For someone trying to reach the Brewery Trolley on CARTA Transit, the stop at Baker and Brewer and the Stop at Palmetto Brewing are the closest to stops on the #10 Rivers Ave. and #40 Mt. Pleasant CARTA bus routes. Covered shelters with seating can be found on Meeting with a walk of less than a block required to make the connection.

For those using the free #20 Upper King CARTA bus to reach the Brewery District Trolley from downtown, the Visitors Center and the hotel district, the best places to connect are at Palmetto Brewery on Huger, a half block walk from the #20 Bus on King Street.  You can also connect to the #20 at stops on the North part of that route including Stop ID: 460 at Rutledge Ave / Courtland Ave a half block (320 feet SSE) from Brew Lab or the stop with seating and a shelter a block further South in front of Rutledge Cab Company. Both of these stops are easy, fully sidewalked walk to Brew lab (for reasons I don’t understand, Google shows a walk under I 26 and Back, but it’s a very short walk directly down Rutledge to both stops).

I rode the Brewery Trolley around most of its route visiting Tradesman Brewing, Lofi, Munkle Brewing, and Fatty's Beer works. I arrived at the Conservation organization’s event at Brewlab Charleston. During this short 40 Minutes on Board about 60 passengers rode the bus. The driver said they often have many more.

Most passengers are on board the trolley for only a few stops. They appear to dismount when the brewery the bus arrives at appears welcoming and active. Those breweries which appeared deserted did not draw visitors off the bus.  

Boarding over 25 passengers at Btewlab
After visiting the event at Brew lab, I checked the Transit App and found the #20 was approaching in 12 minutes. I walked down to Rutledge Ave. to wait at the covered stop in front of Rutledge Cab Company. I could have had a shorter walk and waited at the stop at Rutledge and Cortland. The #20 took me down into the City to my stop near Queen Street, in the middle of the Tourist District.

On Saturdays in Charleston, SC, the Brewery District Trolley provides a great option for people who want to enjoy this newer part of the city and the varied options for food, drink and community activity found there now. It’s already popular and successful and sure to continue to be ever more so with locals and visitors. It benefits from the far less congested streets and roads it operates on and was keeping its schedule without a problem. There are good opportunities to connect to local transit, though it doesn’t go far enough South to connect to the free DASH bus system. It does however connect well to the #20 Upper King bus which is also free. It’s a great way to explore a new part of Charleston and the many events happening there on Saturday.

Brewing Up More Impact

Conservation Event at Brewlab Charleston
It would be great if there were a way to track the bus as it moves and signs for where the stops are located which note the stop time.

More awareness about how to reach the Brewery Trolly from the main tourism district on the #20 bus would benefit both transit services.  Event publicity for the many events at these businesses should mention the Brewery Trolley to attract more visitors and relieve their parking struggle. There is already a lot of community activity along this route, but its potential for large scale multi site events like Oktoberfest or a Holiday Festival is huge. We hope this blogpost will help.

We think the driver should have a cheerful trolley bell to ring at stops and a cool hat to wear. We had a great driver and her cheerful, positive attitude lit up the bus. 

If you are running a brewery on this Trolley route, it’s important to understand that the impression you make on a person sitting inside the bus is absolutely connected to making your money on Saturday. A welcoming presence of activity empties the bus. A deserted parking lot without color or seating leaves these fun seeking passengers unmoved. The big group which boarded at Edmond’s Oast emptied out when they saw the lively scene at Brew Lab. If I was running a brewery, I would send a smiling staff member out to wave and welcome the trolley, perhaps with a little tray of tiny snacks on toothpicks.

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Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Transit Equity Day, Feb. 4, 2020 in Charleston, SC

Transit Equity Day, Feb. 4 in Charleston, SC

Update- We need to interview people who were passengers on the bus service run by Esau Jenkins in Charleston, SC or on the sea islands  during the civil rights movement. If you were a passenger or know someone who was, please contact William Hamilton at (843) 870-5299 or email wjhamilton29464@gmail.com

Transit Equity Day is on Tuesday, February 4th to honor Rosa Parks on her birthday. Her act of resistance by refusing to give up her seat on the bus in 1955 was a catalyst for the civil rights movement. It affirmed that everyone has the right to equal access to public transit. The principles that guide our work for transit equity and justice today are set out in the statement below.

In Charleston our observance will focus on recognizing our own local Transit Heros: Mary Bowers, who forced desegregation of Charleston’s horse drawn streetcars in 1867 and Esau Jenkins, who operated a transportation system with buses during the Civil Rights movement that brought rural residents to educational and employment opportunities and provided lessons in voting rights and citizenship on board.

Some transportation agencies mark a seat with a sign remembering Rosa Parks on this day, making her a symbolic presence on one of their buses. We hope CARTA will consider doing this.

National Transit Equity Day Declaration 

Public Transit provides basic mobility for many in our communities.  It is also essential infrastructure – just like roads, bridges, tunnels and utilities – that is crucial to the economic, social and environmental well-being of all regions.

Everyone has a right to a public mass transit system that includes:

  1. Safe, reliable, environmentally-sustainable and affordable transit that is accessible to all, regardless of income, national origin, race, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, religion, or ability.
  2. An affordable public transit system that reliably connects people in all communities to the places we need to travel: home, work, school, places of worship, shopping, health, and recreation in as efficient, and timely a manner as possible. We must ensure that all communities have access to transit. No community should be left behind. Providing public transit in rural, less densely populated communities poses special challenges that must be addressed in any master transportation plan.
  3. Living wages, benefits, safe working conditions, and union rights for transit workers, including those who manufacture transit equipment, and access to family-sustaining transit jobs and training opportunities for people from underserved communities.
  4. A just transition for workers and communities who are dependent on our current automobile and highway-centered transportation system, to ensure that no one is left behind as we transition to a more public, accessible, and cleaner transit-based system.
  5. Rapid transition of our transit systems to electrified, non-polluting transit powered by electricity from renewables. This transition should be made for school buses also.
  6. Safe, healthy and livable neighborhoods that are connected by public transportation and by bicycle pathways and sidewalks, and that are planned to expand safe access to transit and reduce single occupancy vehicle miles traveled.

For more information contact: William Hamilton, wjhamilton29464@gmail.com or
(843) 870-5299.

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Runoff for Rapid Transit in Charleston- Choose the Faster Mayor

Image, right, the signatures of both candidates appear on the community commitment to transit signed three years ago.

Note- You can now download a printable flyer of this content similar to the one being handed out in Charleston.  This blog contains the same content, but with hyperlinks to detailed background. Please consider the issues carefully and vote for the candidate of your choice on Nov. 19. Don't forget about the City Council Dist. Runoff race if you live in that part of the city. These issues apply there. 

The two men competing to become the next Mayor of Charleston in the Nov. 19th. runoff have both has exceptional influence over the quality and future of our transit service. Both have served on the CARTA board. Mayor Tecklenberg appoints three members to the CARTA Board. Councilman Seekings has served as CARTA board Chairman for over three years. Both men are active in the planning process of planning our inexcusably delayed and long promised Lowcountry Bus Rapid Transit line that’s start date is currently threatening to slip back another year to 2026, ten years after voter approval.

Indianapolis voted to build their Bus rapid transit system the same day Charleston County did in November 2016. The Indianapolis red line began running in September 2019, two years and ten months after voter approval and currently carries over 7 thousand riders a day. The ten years the BCD Council of Governments claims it needs to built a bus rapid transit line is over twice the amount of time needed to build a BRT type system anywhere on Earth in the history of the world. With costs rising over a million dollars a month, these delays of endless, repetitive planning that’s beginning now receded twenty years into the past cannot be reconciled with a good faith effort to get the job done.

Four Critical Transit Questions for Charleston's Next Mayor


Please ask the men who want to be the next Mayor of Charleston these four questions. They already know the answers to these questions. The only question is will they provide an honest response and commit to a responsible role in the process for the power they seek to hold.

  1. Will you commit to having the Bus Rapid Transit line between Summerville and Charleston completed during your next term of office and to commence operations on or before November 1, 2023?  Overview of the Bus Rapid Transit line project.
  2. Will you commit to run the rapid transit line into the City of Charleston on the old CSX rail line beneath I26 as part of the Lowline project between Mt. Pleasant Street and Line Street instead of attempting to operate rapid transit in the congested traffic of meeting street?
  3. Will you reject and repeal the secretly approved “Pay Go Plan” which has diverted over 25 million dollars in funding to improve regular CARTA and LINK Bus service in Charleston in Charleston County into an interest free loan fund for suburban road construction and to implement the bus route service frequency  improvements called for by the Charleston Area Justice Ministry in their 2019 Nehemiah Action?
  4. Will you commit to funding an effort by public and private partners to increase transit ridership in the City of Charleston by not less than 20% before the end of your next term and hold the persons responsible accountable for their performance  in that effort by publication of details of their efforts and route ridership figures? Stop the decline in our quality of life caused by rising congestion. 
Image,
right, Mary Smith, costumed at Syphide the Spirit of Motion. She died last month due to health problems aggravated by inadequate transit services after eight years of working for better transit. On occasions she waited in the rain for overdue buses at unsheltered stops getting soaking wet, while the inside of her body felt like it was on fire.

Demand Answers, Vote

Voting in this year’s municipal elections was anemic. It reflects a lack of public interest and confidence in the democratic process. While failure in city planning, education and traffic may be accepted, Best Friends does not accept or enable failure in the area of transit. We seen third world countries like Bangladesh and Ethiopia enjoying superior transit service to what we have in the Lowcountry. They can take a bus to the beach, while the ocean remains inaccessible to local workers who depend on the bus. This runoff is the time to make the impact of the transit rider vote felt in the holy city.




Ask Seekings and Tecklenberg to answer these questions. Let us know what they say. Make your choice. If you live in the Council District with a runoff between Candidates Lewis and Sakran, pleae ask them these questions as well.

Contact Best Friends of Lowcountry Transit, Inc. 

You can support our work by making a tax deductible contribution through Act Blue.

William Hamilton, Executive Director, Best Friends of Lowcountry Transit, Inc.
171 Church Str. Ste. 160, Charleston, SC 29401 c (843) 870-5299, (843) 577-5231, wjhamilton29464@gmail.com


Thursday, August 22, 2019

Bus Stops Safe and Clean for Everyone

The Transit centers at CARTA Superstop in N. Charleston and the Mary Street Transit Mall downtown near the visitors center connect many of the trips made on CARTA every day. Thousands of people wait and these locations to board, transfer and dismount as part of the critical daily trips which connect them with work, education, medical care, shopping and home. Recent problems with trash and threatening behavior at these stops much be resolved.

For our transit system to function and survive for the people who need and use it, our stops must be and remain a safe place for transit riders to connect with bus service.

Both transit centers have been improved over the last several years. Superstop has new seating, a paint job, better lighting and cameras. Mary Street has additional seating and cameras. Both centers benefit from the real time internet accessible data on bus routes and ETAs which can be obtained through the transit app and Google Transit.

Stops Plagued by Trash and Trashy Behavior

Unfortunately the Lowcountry's long, seemingly unfocused attempt to deal with homelessness and housing now burdens both stops with people who have nowhere else to go. In a better Charleston, these people would be working and taking short, efficient transit trips to affordable housing nearby. Gentrification, however has eliminated that option. The available shelters no longer house everyone needing a place to sleep, bathe or find a meal. The homeless camps which provided an alternative have largely been cleared. Many homeless people are now wandering the landscape, moving from place to place. Some of them have chosen to settle in our transit hubs, attempting to work out their problems with homelessness, mental illness and a lack of access to facilities for bathing and laundry in these, limited, critical spaces.

Some of their behavior is, often deliberately, threatening to others. It drives transit users away from our stops. This reduces ridership on our routes, which leads to the cancellation of service.

We continue to emphasize to every government official we can reach that Transit and affordable housing have to work together. Charleston's tourism economy will become impossible to sustain if we don't have affordable housing which is on transit lines which allow people to connect their homes, jobs and needs. Charleston already has several restaurant spaces which are dark because people can't be found to work there. The math of finding a place to live and getting to the job simply is impossible. We are unable to explain how the thousands of expensive, new apartments being opened solve this problem. The massive international corporations owning them aren't going to slash rents and devalue the capital value of their investment. The simple supply and demand model doesn't account for the realities of an investment model driven by both regular income and appreciation.

We do known that unless a lot of those new apartment residents take transit, their cars and Uber trips will lock up city traffic, making transit less functional in the process.

In recent rides on the #10 and #11 buses, the conditions at these two transit hubs have become the #1 concern of riders, rising above the traditional constants of more service and reliable operation. Transit stops full of garbage and bizarre, threatening behavior will drive riders away and strangle our transit service.

Taking Action August 21

On August 21, we asked the CARTA Board to act on this problem, which has been a recurring problem in the past. Representatives from both the City of Charleston and North Charleston promised to communicate with their police departments about the problem.

The police can't do this job without the assistance of transit riders. Please report problems to CARTA and the relevant police agency when you see them by callint 911.  If you can take discrete pictures or video, please do so.

Keith Benjamin, the director of Traffic and Transportation at the City of Charleston is already working on conditions at the stops in Charleston and building improved stops with shelters and welcomes your input.

Both Charleston and N. Charleston have municipal elections in November. When you meet the candidates for Mayor and City Council during the campaign, please make sure this issue gets their attention.

We'll report on progress on our Facebook feed. If you have questions or ideas, please contact William Hamilton, Executive Director of Best Friends of Lowocountry Transit by Email or call (843) 870-5299.

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Tour the Lowcountry's Futurescape

We met a tour guide working in downtown Charleston today who lives in the Summerville area. 30 years ago, Charleston's tour guides lived downtown, walked to work and often were lifelong residents. 
As Charleston's status as a residential community for the people who work there fades into memory, the Bus Rapid Transit System's significance as an opportunity to create and maintain a connected community core for the Lowcountry rises in importance. Without a somewhere of connected people who share a landscape, the entire Lowcountry will become a nowhere of people trapped in their cars between garden apartments, cul du sacs and Walmart. At the center of it will be a historic theme park without a well executed Disney Princess greeters program or an underutilized Star Wars area.

In the 1980s, most people working in tourism lived downtown. They walked to work or used one of several frequent, reliable bus lines including the now vanished Beltline, Rutledge Grove and much changed King Street Citadel. A transit trip anywhere within the city seldom too more than 40 minutes, door to door. bus fare was 50 cents.

Rent downtown was affordable. With the minimum wage at $4.25 an hour and rent for a one bedroom or studio apartment around $175 to $250 a month, a week to 8 days wages a month generally covered rent which at the time often included utilities. One job was enough.


Shopping was easily accomplished near home. The city had two more supermarkets than it does today. It had three more hardware stores. A Woolworths and Kress offered discount shopping on King Street. Local Department Stores such as Kerrisons and Condons offered affordable clothing. All of this was local, staffed by lifelong residents who knew each other.
Downtown's civic and cultural life were concentrated in the urban center. Community meetings were often held at the Old Library (which was open until 9 pm) or in many of the historic meeting spaces which are now used exclusively as rented event spaces.

Downtown Charleston was a place where a cook dishwasher, maid, a young professional just starting work or a teacher could live and work downtown, often without a car. They could and did attend community meetings together and were often on a first name basis with elected officials. Racism, class division and urban decay were real problems but a diverse network of real people were concerned about them. Struggles were common, but the city had a collection of leaders who knew each other and a lot got done.  I do not want to indicate that it was perfect. This system did, after all, fail to stop the disaster of gentrification.
Transit was an integral part of this city. The Isle of Palms bus offered a way to reach the beach. The routes crossing the city allowed working class people to make quick, short trips to where they needed to go. As gentrification has driven the city's working class from downtown, many of these routes have seen declining ridership and were cancelled. The West side of the City has very little transit now and only in the Medical complex area and on the routes connecting to James Island and West Ashley.

To remain downtown now requires long transit trips to reach a department store. Many downtown residents now travel to a Walmart West of the Ashley on the St. Andrews Bus or East of the Cooper on the #40 to reach a Walmart. The city, to its credit, has helped maintain the #20 bus line which connects people thought-out the city to the Food Lion Supermarket up town. The City's department stores have all been converted to other uses with most shopping downtown gravitating towards the tourist market.
Ironically tourism has reduced the quality of life of people working in our tourism industry who live downtown. Fewer and fewer hospitality workers live downtown and they're often older. This is probably the last generation of Charlestonians who grew up here who will work in our tourism industry. . The 4, 10, 11, 30 & 301 buses now bring thousands of hospitality workers on hour long trips to work from the declining stock of affordable housing in the suburbs.
Rent for a studio apartment downtown now exceeds 1200 dollars in most places. The minimum wage is $7.25 with most downtown tourism jobs now pay a little more. Paying the rent on a one room apartment uptown, in a far less desirable area than those available 20 years ago, now takes over 100 hours of work. this is twice the amount of time it took to earn rent a generation ago and the locations available are not as good. Many of those 200 dollar a month apartments were found South of Calhoun Street at the time.


Now most of the people in our tourism industry just visit the historic city for work. It's a huge loss, since the deep social and historic knowledge full time residents have is no longer being presented to visitors. The visitor's experience is less real and tourism's capacity to support maintaining local knowledge in an organic basis declines. Since a tour guide license is no longer legally required, even the formal accreditation and training program is now optional. Rising rents, declining social and shopping opportunities for residents, school problems and weak transit are slowly hollowing out downtown Charleston. 

Very little progress has been made maintaining and creating affordable housing downtown. Though many organizations have spent years and hundreds of thousands of dollars in grant money on downtown affordable housing, it is disappearing faster than it is being created. The massive number of new apartments being constructed in Charleston will be expensive and they're already struggling to fill them at the rents charged. However the massive national companies financing these buildings won't be slashing rents. Unlike the little landlords of 30 years ago, who need rent to pay bills, they can draw on a massive store of resources and credit to maintain the book value of their properties on the balance sheet. From their perspective, renting half the building at 1200 dollars a month is better than renting it all at 600 dollars a month or even more.

Bus Rapid Transit and the Future of the Lowcountry


The Bus Rapid Transit line presents the opportunity to connect an entire region where affordable housing, cultural opportunities, political involvement, shopping, healthcare and employment can all be connected without resorting to an automobile. The people living within walkable distance of the 23 mile long line can work downtown if they like, however on the existing #10 bus line which runs on the same corridor and has aver 90 thousand passengers a month. More and more people are traveling North to work. While the line will help downtown, it will have to compete for workers. This future connected Lowcountry will connect to Charleston but it won't be dependent on it. However without it, downtown won't be able to function at all. 

A quick, reliable trip to the old city center is a life or death issue for downtown as a tourist destination, educational hub and medical center. this is why utilizing the old railroad line beneath I26 for quick, uninterrupted transit access to the city is so critical. 

Colleton County and a Message from the Future

The Colleton County council ended support for the bus which took 50 people from Walterboro to work on Hilton Head because they felt employment opportunities for those people could now be found in Walterboro. 
We believe Colleton County should use those resources to create transit opportunities for those residents so that they have choice and freedom. If they don't those people and people elsewhere in our region will eventually relocate to places which do. The assumption that the Low-country can continue to ignore the quality of life of ordinary working people forever because they have not options is no longer valid. 

We're planning a presence at the next meeting of Colleton County Council on Sept. 10 to being helping that community consider what transit should be doing for their residents. 

Affordable Housing
Without the Rapid Transit line, the Lowcountry will be unable to offer a competitive quality of life for working class people anywhere. The costs of housing and maintaining a car in many of the jobs available here has become unsupportable. As Hilton Head has discovered, you can't neglect the people who make your community work and leave them with a two hour bus trip to work forever. 

There are many opportunities along the transit line to create affordable housing in safe, walk able communities, Not everyone is waiting to do something. Metanoia is building affordable housing in this area now.  State Rep. Marvin Pendavis is championing opportunity zones and working to be sure the Old Navy Hospital site is redeveloped with affordable housing. 

New Shelters in N. Charleston. 

A four year effort to build more and better bus stop shelters in N. Charleston is now putting new shelters on the ground along the existing #10 bus route in the area. Many people contributed to this effort including the City of North Charleston and State Senator Marlon Kimpson. Regular bus service which connects to the surrounding area is an essential part of making the new rapid transit system work and shelters are necessary to make transfers safe and comfortable.

The Bus Rapid Transit Line, well executed, offers us the opportunity to create a linear urban corridor for the entire region where some of what downtown Charleston used to do for the Lowcountry can be recreated and with the use of regular transit routes connected to it enrich life throughout the region.

Friday, March 8, 2019

Don't let the Low Line Sideline our Transit Line while Residents Wait in Line

We cannot afford to spend our limited rapid transit fund on a "line to nowhere" while an irreplaceable transit corridor is turned into a dog walking park and playground for Charleston's pampered rich and tourists.

Update, June 19, 2020- Planning for the Bus Rapid Transit line has been accelerated during the Covid-19 epidemic when real public meetings can't be held. County Council has already been told by the Council of Governments that they've received 1500 online visitors to their "virtual meeting" with no negative comments. Please go to the "virtual meeting" make your comments and document them to us so we can challenge this false narrative. The deadline for comments on the LCRT plan is currently July 10 and a rush to approval can be expected shortly thereafter. There are major problems with the current plan which seem to be grounded in the understanding that a real, efficient and comfortable transit system might erode the stability of the areas political structure, which is already under serious strain.

Make Your Comments Here- You can copy your comments by cutting and pasting them into the comments section on this Blog Post. We're anxious to meet with other social justice groups locally on this issue. We'll deliver what is posted here to County Council and other local governments, as well as the CARTA board on paper, with video documentation in a way which will force them to make it part of the public record. You should also communicate your concerns to them directly by telephone call, in a civil manner but forcefully.

Since the first round of public participation meetings on planning the Bus Rapid Transit System in January offered no real opportunity for public input on critical issues like the line's location between Mt. Pleasant Street and the City Center and we anticipate the private closed door planning process to largely be presented sometime in the next six months as a completed product, Best Friends of Lowcountry Tranist will be opening public dialogue critical issues ourselves.
I26 Alt Proposed BRT Line

A Change in Plan

For over 20 years plans for Charleston's Transit System used the historic rail corridor running South along and beneath I26 to the City.

Current Plans for the alignment of the Bus Rapid Transit Line (BRT) (the actual plan fades in out out of reality depending on who you are talking to and what they believe you know or will believe) take the main line off it’s dedicated bus way at Mt. Pleasant Street (Near the Longshoreman’s Hall) and would put our new, state of the art vehicles in the middle of clogged Meeting Street traffic for 1.4 miles to the end of the line at Line Street (Just North of the Post and Courier).

There are also proposals to end the transit line at Mt. Pleasant street and rely on shuttle buses (again locked up in City Traffic) to reach downtown Charleston.

The exiting railroad corridor runs all the way to Line Street, just North of the post and Courier building. It runs adjacent to several new apartment buildings which would have back door access to nearby stations if the old railroad line were used. It is even possible the line could even get all the way to Spring Street, two blocks further South, closer to the College of Charleston and city center. Twenty years of studies and plans for the Charleston transit line to Summerville planned to used the railroad right of way for that purpose. Running the uninterrupted transit line all the way downtown puts over 10 thousand more people and workers withing walking distance of an uninterrupted BRT trip on a dedicated transit line. Instead others, most of whom don't ride transit now believe the rail line would be used for the proposed Low Line Park.

If you visit the actual location, you'll find plenty of space for both the park and the tranist line. We visited a few weeks ago. There's been a walking trail there for over 40 years and neglected, existing community spaces are found along the line. Basketball Courts under I26 once had lighting, but now only have security cameras. 
Lowline Plan Sidelines Transit. Note how the hub is no longer in downtown Charleston.

It's alleged that the decision to move the BRT line from the old railroad track running between Mt. Pleasant Street and Line into the congested traffic of meeting street was made in a phone call from Charleston City Hall. We'll be trying to find out who made that call and where, when and how it was allegedly approved. We expect the existence of this alleged phone call will be denied.

Note the many intersections the buses will be blocked at on Meeting Str.
Compatible Uses
Bus Rapid Transit line (which in our case would only have one vehicle passing every 5 min during peak commute) share linear parks with walkways and bike paths successfully all over the world.  The Cambridge Busway in England is one such example, See Cambridge Busway Video.

The Railroad line was purchased by the City with financial assistance from private donors. it was alleged that the rail line would still be available during the purchase process for transit. Planning for the "Low Line Park" has been proceeding under private control since. Negotiations between a private group and the city about how the park will be controlled and designed continue in private.

Why We Can't Do It in the Road

In the congested conditions of six or more years from now, it could take 15 minutes or more to cover that last 1.4 miles. Fortunately the abandoned railroad right of way beneath I26 offers the opportunity for a faster trip downtown and space for functional stations to connect with free DASH bus service, regular CARTA bus service to Mt. Pleasant, West Ashley & James Island, Bike Share and services like Uber. All of this can be combined with a pleasant, useful linear park and bikeway using the rail line and space in the existing, but little used "park" under I26..

There is no space in the Meeting Street right of way to put stations and locations for other transit services to transfer passengers. Most likely, they would propose ending the rapid transit line at Mt. Pleasant street and using in traffic shuttle bused to reach downtown as the DASH service does now. the #20 Upper King St. CARTA bus makes this trip now and takes 31 minutes during the Friday commute to go from Mt. Pleasant Street to Charleston City Hall, a distance of 3.3 miles. It runs on the slightly less congested upper King Street for most of that trip. Times on Meeting Street would be worse and adding transit operations to this street would slow traffic.

Why Shuttle Buses Won't Work

Shuttle buses seem like a simple alternative, but experience elsewhere shows there will be problems. the Current Buses being used on the DASH and HOP routes have a passenger capacity of about half of the large articulated buses used on the BRT line, meaning it will take at least two shuttle buses to pick up transfers from each arriving bus. It costs about $100 an hour to operate a transit bus, so these two additional buses will increase costs to operate the system while generating little or no revenue. At peak, the system is designed to bring six large vehicles an hour into the city, requiring as many as 12 shuttle services to connect a Mt. Pleasant Street station to the city.

A trip or to James Island, West Ashley or Mt. Pleasant, which could connect directly to the BRT line further South would likely require two transfers, one to a shuttle and a second to the bus going to James Island or West Ashley. Mt. Pleasant would either either have to send it's connecting buses a mile North to the BRT station through city traffic or connect to shuttle buses in the city, or both for trips South.  Even if the existing DASH, HOP and #20 Bus services are combined and integrated, it's likely shuttle bus operations will increase the total operating cost of the transit system by 600 an hour or more during the commute to create a system which relies on multiple transfers and connections with lots of waiting as buses struggle to keep a schedule in heavy congested traffic. All of these buses will need to stop to load and unload passengers on city streets.

It's likely that due to cost and the impact on city streets, shuttle services will be cut back over time. Waiting time at the remote Mt. Pleasant Street station will grow. Food, Beverage and Hospitality workers, who often work multiple jobs, won't be able to make their trips in time.

While business in the Transit served high Tech Neck areas North of Mt. Pleasant Street would grow, the established downtown business district along King, Market and Meeting would find itself choked off from local trade and regional transit enabled visits leaving it utterly dependent on tourists for survival. Downtown residents would have to rely on slow, traffic bound shuttle buses to reach the rapid transit line.
North end of right of Way at Mt. Pleasant St.

A Line Which Has to Work

With 30 thousand people moving into the neck area's new Tech Center and housing and NoMo between Line Street on the South and North Charleston,  our transit line needs to be as fast and efficient as possible. This many people try to drive and Uber their way around town, traffic will be as standstill.

Our BRT shouldn’t be fighting cars for space on Meeting Street while a few lucky people walk thier dogs where our transit line should have been.  Unless the BRT wins the race against the car, everyone loses. Only a faster system gets enough cars off the road for driving cars and riding transit to both get better. BRT lines, bike paths and linear parks share old railroad right of ways around the world. See video on the Cambridge Busway. With an existing city park under I26, the total amount of space available can successfully accommodate both uses.

Some powerful people apparently wanted the transit line moved, probably away from their homes so they could have a quiet place to walk their dogs? Is that reason enough to cripple the only rapid transit project likely to be completed in our lifetimes? Should we accept another failure resulting from Charleston's invisible "privilege politics" which always favors the interests of the rich and powerful over the needs of the city's working people and future?

Politics like that have already given the Lowcountry schools which don't work; planning which has failed to preserve or create affordable housing; and covered the countryside with sprawl development now choking on its own traffic congestion. It's produced a culture of failure in transit which we voted to spend 600 million dollars of half penny sales tax money in November 2016 to end.

Right of way near Romney St.
A transit line will actually make the park us better. The BRT vehicles bring people, human attention and a human presence to the Lowline park robust enough to discourage crime. No criminal wants to risk the appearance of 50 people and a bus driver with instant access to law enforcement over a radio to a place he or she would like to feel secure in planning criminal activity. Bus Rapid Transit is bad for drug sales and inconvenient for muggings.

What you can do

Tell members of Charleston City Council that you want the only Rapid Transit Line likely to be completed into the city in most of our lifetimes to run along the old railroad line, which has been in use to bring people into Charleston since the Best Friend of Charleston ran on it on Christmas Day, 1830. Tell the Members of the Board of private group involved in the Low Line Park project that you believe including the rapid transit line and incorporating an improved version of the existing under I26 City Park in the plan will produce the best space for all these compatible uses.

It's possible that interested parties plan to delay discussion of this issue until after the next election for Mayor and City Council in November 2019. It's essential that open, public discussion of this issue and clear stands by the candidates running for office be obtained before people vote.

Let’s be sure the proposed Low Line Park truly connects and accommodates all the community’s needs. Let’s Have Fun Making the Future work for everyone in Charleston.