City to look at transit costs
Barbara Diamond
Festival trams and municipal buses were free during the summer, but
city officials are debating whether the cost to the city too high.
“We appear to be terminally ill and on financial life support,”
Councilman Wayne Baglin said at the Nov. 4 meeting. “We have to
figure a way to make the system self-sustaining.”
The City Council gave staff until March to come up with some
options, perhaps an impossible task.
“I know of no transit system in the country that is
self-sustaining,” said Steve May, director of the Public Works
Department.
Baglin said he could live with a transfer of maybe as much, but
certainly no more than $50,000 from the city’s general fund or the
parking fund. Government grants are fine.
“That’s just giving the resident taxpayers’ money back to them, so
that is good,” Baglin said.
The Laguna Beach Transit system is the only municipal bus system
in Orange County. Federal, state and county grants, transfers from
the parking fund, and passenger fares fund the system.
“I was [council] liaison to the Festival Committee when the
parking at ACT V was free,” Mayor Toni Iseman said. “We wanted an
incentive to get people to leave their cars out of town. Parking and
paying once and riding the Festival Tram without having to worry
about paying each time seemed logical.”
It worked. Parking dramatically increased at ACT V in the summer
of 2002, the last year fares were charged. An estimated 310,000
riders took the free trams last summer, an increase of about 60,000
over 2002. Year-round Mainline ridership, which totals about 90,000 a
year, showed a 3,000-rider increase last July, when summer fares were
eliminated for the first time.
However, the cost of operations for the Festival Tram service
skyrocketed when fares were eliminated. The cost of operations jumped
almost $200,000 when free rides began, and capital improvements
increased by more than $500,000. The $775,000 worth of improvements
included the purchase of three new trolleys.
The revenue from the parking fund transfer jumped almost $400,000,
21%, when the city eliminated summer tram fares in 2002, but is
budgeted for a smaller hit this year, an estimated $60,000 drop from
last year.
“We are using that fund for everything but parking,” said a
disgruntled Baglin.
ACT V parking fees partially made up for the loss of fare income
the past two summers.
“If people can afford to come to Laguna, they can afford to pay to
ride the tram,” Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson said. “I can’t support
it any longer.”
Additional service -- more buses running more often and farther --
and the elimination of fares contribute equally to the increase in
the cost of the city’s municipal transit service, Pendleton said.
“This comes down to a policy decision,” she opined.
Councilman Steve Dicterow supports the free trams.
“Is it subsidized? Yes,” he said. “It’s a trade-off for quality of
life, and it’s a trade off I am willing to make.”
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman said the city needs to think of ways
to save money, but not at the expense of the free trams.
“It is important to keep the free tram service,” Kinsman said.
“For some reason, people prefer free tram service and paying for
parking.
“The staff should figure out what we need to charge to make the
system pay for itself at the same level of service as this year and
report back to us,” she said. “I’m not saying we will use that
number, but I want to know what it is.”
City staff has tentatively scheduled a report for the Feb. 3
council meeting.
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