How does bustitiution work? Where does the T get so many bus drivers on such short notice? Do they just call in drivers that have the day off? Do they have a pool of part time drivers or contractors they can call in? Or do they just pull drivers from active lines and short those lines a bit during the bustitution?
Anyone know what they're actually doing at Haymarket this weekend? Usually they're pretty braggy on social media showing what's going on in weekend closures but it's been complete silence so far.
They did eventually post what the improvements were - new tiles, paint, lighting, and signage. Overall, definitely an upgrade over what was there, but you wouldn't be able to tell based on the replies. I'm not sure how well this PR-tweeting is working anymore. Some people just can't take anything for granted. Bless those that man the MBTA twitter.
I think the one that annoys me the most is the "Looks like you just painted the tunnel walls black. I could have done that for a lot less than $8b." Recently there have been several twitter accounts (this one included) created to heckle the MBTA twitter nearly 24/7 about every issue, major or minor, and exaggerate some of them to great extents, sometimes to the point where its just spreading false information.
I think what needs to be done is the MBTA needs to revamp its projects web page to be extremely clear on what's happening and how the riders will be affected, service wise. Everything from behind the scenes projects to projects similar to the Haymarket. I've lost count of the amount of times I have seen "great, now fix the singals system that cripples the red/orange line" when the T tweets out something about the new Orange Line cars, when there is in fact an entire signal system overhaul planned and being contracted out. Maybe get something honest and clear posted in the Globe, Herald, etc, and as has been discussed before, solidify their marketing campaign/terms used.
T needs to get some students interested in monitoring and 'promoting" what is going on
When I was an undergrad at MIT in the early 70's I was doing some of that -- I got to meet with T people about plans and progress, few rides on work underway [e.g. very early ride on Quincy Line when it opened]
In exchange for the access we published some stuff as Student News and Features -- as official student MIT publications [paper of course]
Today -- it would be much easier with digital photos and social media --- could be a weekly student run [T monitored Blog on the T engineering and construction and re-construction, etc]
If I was the T -- I'd cultivate some students at a couple of U's during the school terms to do the Blog and then perhaps hire one or two in the Summer as interns to do some through documentation [e.g. construction of the GLX and its early operations] and presentation on web or social media -- good for the students careers and even better for the T as an impartial, connected source of a good story to tell
You grossly underestimate the determination and drive of students at spreading things -- either good or badThey have run student tours of GLX. Every school in Boston and greater Boston with an AEC-related major was invited in the spring, and if everything goes according to plan, there will be another set of tours this upcoming spring. Universities just don't want to publish that kind of stuff anymore. They're more interested in posting about materials research breakthroughs and big money grants.
I don't think students would make an impact in the promotion to the general public of how well the T is doing. That news might circulate around schools' civil engineering departments for a week or two then settle. The T needs some big push toward the general public to show how its getting better.
(The MBTA also runs a moderately-updated Flickr account.)
Not surprising, really. Few cities in the US have anything close to the T's service levels and comprehensive geographic coverage. I mean, we all know the T' could be much better, but relative to other domestic systems, it's actually very good.WalletHub has ranked Boston's public transportation as the country's second best. How is this possible?
Full article: 2019's Cities with the Best & Worst Public Transportation
Exactly.Yeah, this is more a reflection on how bad mass transit is in the US rather than how good the T is.