REGION: Riders protest shuttle fare

SANDAG proposes $40 monthly pass for Sorrento Valley commuters

By DAVE DOWNEY - Staff Writer | Friday, May 30, 2008 6:09 PM PDT

A bus rider uses a day pass to board an NCTD bus at the Oceanside Transit Station Friday. The transit agency is proposing to raise fares. (photo by Bill Wechter - staff photographer

OCEANSIDE ---- A half-dozen Coaster riders on Friday protested a plan to begin charging them to take a shuttle from the Sorrento Valley train station to their workplaces.

Dubbed the Sorrento Valley Coaster Connection, the shuttle service has been in place since 1997.

Over the last 11 years, it has expanded to 10 buses that circulate every half-hour along nine routes serving major employment centers in the Sorrento Valley-Torrey Pines area. It provides 500 rides a day. And after buying Coaster tickets, riders don't pay any extra to hop on the shuttle bus.

That's about to change.

In a desperate bid to save the service after the region lost more than half the $1.1 million it spends each year to provide the shuttles, the San Diego Association of Governments proposed introducing a $1 one-way fare Sept. 1 and charging $40 for a monthly pass.

"Now, out of the blue, it is going from zero dollars a month to $40 a month, which is $480 a year," Susan Franke of Oceanside said at a public hearing Friday at the North County Transit District's office.

Franke, who works as a legal secretary for a state agency, said the increase could not have come at a worse time, given the struggling economy.

"We're watching our grocery bills go up," she said. "Our cost of living is going up. This is outrageous. Where do you get off proposing a $480 a year increase?"

Franke and other regular Coaster riders who work in Sorrento Valley warned the association's Transportation Committee, which presided over the hearing, that their shuttle rescue plan could backfire.

Donald Betts of San Marcos said ultimately the move could wind up slashing ridership on the Coaster train, which carries 3,000 commuters daily on its 41-mile run between Oceanside and downtown San Diego.

"I thought the point of public transportation was to get people out of their cars," Betts said.

Ann Balancio, a research technician for a biological research institute in Sorrento Valley, said, "This will drive a lot of people back into their cars."

Dan Levy, senior transit planner for the association, said something has to be done to shore up the service.

Levy said the shuttle this summer will lose more than $500,000 in funding from the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District, which is trying to shore up its budget, and nearly $200,000 in temporary funding from the California Department of Transportation that was awarded as a result of the Interstates 5-805 merge construction.

Levy said the proposed fare would recoup almost half the money. He said the association has applied for a federal grant to help close most of the remaining gap.

The Transportation Committee is scheduled to consider giving preliminary approval for the new fare and changes to existing fares June 6. The association's full board is set to take up the matter June 13.

The association has authority over North County bus and train fares under a 2003 reorganization of San Diego County transportation agencies.

The agency proposes to increase Coaster fares by 50 cents in July, to a maximum of $6, and by another half-dollar come January 2009, to up to $6.50.

The price of a monthly pass would rise from a maximum of $154 to $182.

Levy said that most of the riders getting off in Sorrento Valley would pay $170 for a monthly pass, or a total of $210 with the $40 charge for the shuttle. While that may seem high, he said it is reasonable, given that Metrolink riders pay $235 for a monthly pass that allows them to ride trains and transfer to buses. Metrolink is a six-county commuter train system that takes Southern Californians to jobs in Los Angeles and Orange counties.

Levy said the association is proposing to increase fares for North County's Breeze buses and the new Sprinter train from the existing $4 to $4.50 in July and $5 by January 2009.

The price of a monthly pass would rise from $54 to $59 in July; the charge for college students would go from $44 to $49.

Renee Stanton, an imaging manager at Sharp Mission Park in Vista, urged the committee to put all increases on hold.

"I am requesting that we don't change any fares until we fix what's broke," Stanton said.

Stanton said that every day, she takes the Trolley, Coaster and Sprinter from her home in El Cajon to her Vista job, and the trip takes more than three hours. It wouldn't be as bad, she said, if an eastbound Sprinter wasn't leaving the station the moment she arrives in Oceanside ---- at 7:33 a.m. ---- and she didn't have to wait a half-hour for the next train.

Karen King, North County Transit District executive director, said that the trains cross at the same minute because the agency's priority is to coordinate Coaster runs with Amtrak and Metrolink schedules on the coast. King said the lack of a second track along much of the coast and the inability to operate the Sprinter more often than every half-hour prevents better coordination.

"It is a system flaw, and it really can't be corrected with the current infrastructure," King said.

Contact staff writer Dave Downey at (760) 745-6611, Ext. 2623, or ddowney@nctimes.com.

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12 comment(s)[-]Go to Top

Walt wrote on May 30, 2008 6:56 PM:Join the real unsubsidized world transit riders! Monster buses and trains use $130/barrel oil too. BTW: $1.1 million shuttle cost per year means $8.5 per rider. How will $1 per rider recover half the deficit?

Jim wrote on May 30, 2008 7:41 PM:Yeah, wake up and smell the coffee. Only royalty gets free rides all the time. And you ain't royalty.

Senior Rider wrote on May 30, 2008 8:33 PM:What happened to the formation of assessment districts for the industrial areas along the Coaster route. The money was supposed to be used to cover needed shuttles? Then it was free...so nobody tried to get the service covered.

With Sandag's invasion of North County Transit....we are left with extra costs to cover our expenses and Sandag's employees...thank you retired Senator Steve Peace...aka Consultant for Transportation issues in San Diego.

HERB wrote on May 31, 2008 5:38 AM:Several cliches come to mind: "Don't shoot yourself in the foot," "Can't win for losing," and "You got it, and I'm going to take it," the $40.00 a month that is.

Karl wrote on May 31, 2008 6:33 AM:"Donald Betts of San Marcos said ultimately the move could wind up slashing ridership on the Coaster train,". You've got to be kidding. Given the price of gas someone is going to quit using the Coaster over a $1 a day fare for the shuttle? Let's see $1 is about 1/4 of a gallon of gas, in my car that's about 7 miles, enough to get me from Escondido to Vista.

Incensed wrote on May 31, 2008 7:46 AM:I am furious that these people have the temerity to demand I pay (pause while I sip my $5.50 Latte)a dollar more to ride the shuttle to work! It was subsidized by taxpayers and free to me, and I liked it! Now I may pay $80 to fill my gas tank and just drive instead? Right...

John E wrote on May 31, 2008 8:17 AM:Why is the Sprinter leaving right at 7:33, missing the obvious connection with the northbound Coaster? To prepare for the Sprinter, numerous Coaster and bus runs were retimed, precisely so that they could mesh with the Sprinter. Since the Sprinter is double-tracked, it would not terribly upset the order and flow of the universe to delay this particular run by 3 minutes to enable commuters to make this vital connection, but evidently NCTD is unwilling to think outside the box.

The Coaster needs its reverse-flow commuters, who pay full fare and ride on otherwise empty dead-heading trains.

Senior Rider wrote on May 31, 2008 10:52 AM:John E....NCTD could and would not think outside the box for anything to do with reasonable transportation..once Steve Peace was added to the mix and he placed Sandag over the whole transportation scheme......the box is so far away....we will never reach reason.....

RealWorld wrote on May 31, 2008 10:53 AM:I hope everyone who's complaining is registered to vote. Go to the polls and vote for candidates who are willing to make tough choices about our infrastructure. The Coaster shuttle has never been a "free" service. It's been provided through taxpayer funding. One dollar a ride seems a fair price to pay. $40 a month is an even better price.

Bo wrote on May 31, 2008 11:15 AM:I may buy the monthly bus pass if I continue to use the Coaster, but the Sprinter schedule needs to be changed to mesh with the Coaster schedule.....they are 25-30 minutes apart for most runs so a trip from Rancho Del Oro to Sorrento Valley takes about 1-1/2 hours. There is also talk of raising the Coaster passes by $15 per month, which would mean an total increase of $55 per month, putting the total monthly costs at over $200. Even if gas is $4.50 a gallon I can drive my Honda to Sorrento Valley for about the same $ or less, without the 1-1/2 hour each way trip time. Where's my incentive to leave the car home and use the transit system?

Oceanside Chris wrote on May 31, 2008 11:51 AM:I helped with the Sprinter when it started in December ... err January ... drat, MARCH. One of the promises the NCTD said on the Sprinter is it would coordinate with the Coaster. WRONG! I used to take the Sprinter to Oceanside and then to the Coaster. After my commute doubled, good bye Sprinter. As for the Coaster connection in Sorrento Valley, the math doesn't add up as Walt pointed out (first post). Mass transit only works when it benefits the customer not SANDRAG. Remember who pays and keep your hand on the pocketbook, they thieves from SANDRAG have your eye on it (as do the TryCities, et al).

Walt wrote on May 31, 2008 2:24 PM:For John E.: Sprinter is single tracked. There is a plan to double track it and extend to NC Fair for only $669 million more. That might mesh schedules? Speaking of double tracking the coastal routes discussions recently publicized; Coastal double tracking cost estimate is $1,350 million. Add $1,004 mil if you want tunnels under Del Mar and UTC. Then there is $603 mil for new stations and centers, $545 mil to give transit priority over cars. And considering how successful Sprinter has been, only $1,008 mil more to shift from bus service to Light Rail for service from Old Town to UTC. These are capital costs over and above the operating costs to which fares make a small contribution. A $billion here, a $billion there--------!

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