Muni News: New BART chief, Peskin slams Central Subway, Muni even less on-time

Muni J Church
Photo by Lynn Friedman

  • Time to probe the use of lethal force on BART (SFGate)
  • Grace Crunican Named New BART General Manager (SF Appeal)
  • Central Subway Denounced by Former Supporter, Aaron Peskin (SF Weekly)
  • Wild Muni robbery ends in arrest by SFPD (SF Examiner)
  • BART Protesters: Five Other Causes They Should Take Up (SF Weekly)
  • Hundreds Pay Their Respects to Emily Dunn, Woman Killed by Muni Driver (Streetsblog SF)
  • Muni on-time performance hits lowest mark since 2008 (SF Examiner) || (SFGate)

‘Back Door!’ Muni-Themed Art Show

A few weeks ago, we told you about the opening of a Muni-themed art show at Fabric8 in the Mission. We were unable to attend the opening of “Back Door!” but we stopped by one day last weekend. We were pleasantly surprised at how charming Andy Stattmiller‘s Muni art is, and we snapped some pics that want to share with you.

As the show’s page explains, “Whether infrequent rider or relentless commuter, every Muni passenger has a memorable experience on the bus. Drivers with character, colorful passengers, hectic city streets, and general mayhem vary from route to route, yet always seem to possess that uniquely San Francisco flavor. With Back Door!, Stattmiller presents a truly entertaining overview in 27 illustrative vignettes that capture the feelings that only Muni can evoke.” We couldn’t have said it better ourselves.

The show will remain up until Sept. 12 (one week from Monday), so be sure to stop by and peep the art for yourself.

Info:
Fabric8 (follow @fabric8)
3318 22nd Street (between Guerrero and Valencia)
Take the J-Church, 12, 14, 49, 48, or the 67 to get close

Does Muni Engage in Equitable Fare Inspection?

MUNI cop makes a fare bust.
Photo by Rick Audet

Fare inspection is many people’s pet Muni topic. “UnemployedDragon” sent us this gripe concerning what he feels is an uneven distribution of TFIs (transit fare inspectors):

I’m really wondering about the distribution of fare inspection across the Muni system. I’ve had reason to ride both the light-rail and buses a great deal this summer. I’ve only been subject to fare inspection on the T-Third. I’ve regularly ridden the 22-Fillmore, the 47-Van Ness, the 45-Union/Stockton, the 14-Mission, the 9-San Bruno, and the 33-Stanyan. I’ve never seen fare inspectors on any of those buses. Even on the T, I’ve only seen fare inspectors in the very middle of the day, never at night.

Where were the fare inspectors this past Tuesday at around 2pm, as a hoard of people got on the back door of the 49 at Market and Van Ness (and there was not anyone boarding using the lift for wheelchairs, I checked). Where are the fare inspectors when elderly passengers don’t tag their Clipper cards, when I’ve seen younger people frequently asked to to produce their Clipper card to be checked? Where are the fare inspectors on the F Line (my guess is that the city doesn’t want to hassle tourists…bad move).

All of this leads me to think that the likelihood of being subject to fare inspection is greater on the light rail, and the T specifically, than it is on the buses. This is not right…fare inspection should be a likely occurrence on any Muni vehicle.

Good points are raised here. So we asked the folks at SFMTA for more information about whether and how TFIs are spread out throughout the Muni system. All they had to say was, “Without getting into specific deployment strategies, our TFIs are deployed by police district. They coordinate with SFPD as they patrol the system.” That’s it?

We still want to know:

  • Are TFIs deployed proportionally to the number of fare evasions in specific police districts?
  • Does it depend on staffing abilities of the district?
  • Is there an effort to deploy TFIs to all lines and districts?

Thieves pull woman off T-Third by her purse

T-Third: Mariposa Station (northbound)
Photo by throgers

SF Weekly reports that a woman was approached on the T-Third last night by two men. One of them grabbed for the woman’s purse when the T stopped. She resisted, and eventually ended up holding onto her purse so strongly that they dragged off the Muni vehicle. Once on the ground, the thieves got the purse and fled.

Seriously everyone, be careful out there.

Read the entire story on SF Weekly’s website.

Entire Muni Routes, Vehicles Visible on NextBus Site

A few months ago, we told you about the redesigned NextBus Live map, which showed little F-Market streetcar icons mulling about the city in real-time.

Well, we’re not sure whether this is a new feature for the site, or maybe we just missed it. But now on the NextBus site, you can select any Muni route (by clicking “Select Routes …”) and see entire bus routes, complete with stops and current vehicles in operation. They move in real time, too.

This is an enhancement of a feature NextBus has offered for quite some time now. It looks and works way better now. We find it helpful to see the entire route a Muni line takes, for example.

We tested the site on our Android phones (we don’t have iPhones, what?), and found that it hasn’t been customized for mobile phones yet. It works on mobile, but not fully, and not elegantly. We were able to select a different route by checking a box, but then that route didn’t load on the map, for example.

Still, any enhancement of NextBus is welcome by us. Now if only they could solve the “3 minutes … 1 minute … 17 minutes …” conundrum.

Back-Door Boarding Coming to Muni?

door out of service
Photo by Casey Hussein Bisson

Could it be? It’s been talked about since before the wheel itself was invented: Will Muni officially allowing passengers to board its buses via those ever-popular back doors?

Sure, you’ll say, plenty of upstanding citizens already use the back door to board buses. Hell, on Muni Metro light-rail vehicles, it’s legal and often encouraged to speed up the boarding process.

Now, SFGate reports, “transit officials are looking at whether to expand all-door boarding to the bus fleet.”

Streetsblog SF has explored the topic numerous times. Here are a couple of good reads: “To Reduce Delay and Fare Evasion, Muni Considers All-Door Boarding” and “Speeding Up Muni By Letting All Aboard, Through Any Door.”

What do you think? Could it work to speed things up? Would you immediately begin taking Muni up on its offer to board the back door of a bus when there’s a logjam up front?

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