I'd assume you don't mean it this way but it comes off as if 1,819 drivers were always active or on standby to drive the buses. That is not the case and is just the roster of employed bus drivers. The T only has about 1079 buses total with also not all of those in-use at once. The construction of new busways such as the Columbus ext to Ruggles, Blue Hill Ave, and Alford/Broadway in Everett will serve to allow the same or better headways with less buses on route due to shorter trip times from less traffic.
Overall, making schedules more consistent and predictable results in more/better service with less total drivers, and less redundancy or empty bus moves means less extra drivers that are on the cock only to perform them. A total smaller roster
BNRD was originally supposed to begin in 2023, and
the MBTA was originally
going to raise bus operator hiring to fill in a total of
1,923 positions to cover
Round 1 of BNRD, up from 1,819 positions pre-COVID. After the announcement that BNRD was postponed to December 2024, the MBTA
slashed the bus operator ceiling from 1,923 positions to 1,867 positions. While we don't know what the current bus operator ceiling is for FY25, since the most
recent update to the board in May 2024; we do know that the
T has always historically always had 1,750 - 1,800 active bus operators in the most recent year prior to COVID-19, despite a slightly higher ceiling of 1,819 operators.
For example, the 65 currently operates every 10min at peak and drops off to hourly midday. This means the bus drivers required to operate this service goes from 6+ to about 2.
Now that shift to all day ~25min service does mean a decrease in peak usability but brings a big boost to off-peak usability
This is one of the most FRUSTRATING things about the COVID-19 and
SUMMER 2023 SERVICE CUTS, and how the T has responded to restoring service in Fall 2024.
The 65 in Brighton and Brookline had
ALREADY BEEN operating
20 - 30 minute midday headways PRE-COVID. The service was a lot more balanced. Every 10 - 20 during AM/PM peak, every 20 - 35 middays. It sounds like the 65 is being described as "always having been hourly" but this
is NOT true.
Comparing the 65's Fall 2019 schedule (left) and the
Fall 2024 schedule (right). On the right you see 6 - 14 minute peak headways with off peak service of hourly or worse! Where pre-COVID there were 7 trips between 9:40 a.m. and 1:40 p.m., now in Fall 2024 there are only 3 trips during the midday hours.
This is NOT about service improvements under BNRD. This is about
OFF PEAK,
MIDDAY and WEEKEND SERVICE the
T PREVIOUSLY ALREADY HAD BEEN RUNNING PRE-COVID,
taken away from us.
Here's Saturday service on the 108 bus dating back to 2009 (total number of scheduled trips).
The 108
ran every 30 - 35 minute service during the day until 7:30 p.m. in 2017. Then in 2023, the first thing under Eng, after he came into office, was a bus service massacre to "right size the schedules" to operator headcount, due to hundreds of vacant positions leaving the inability to run the published schedules. The 108 was
reduced to 55 minute service middays and Saturdays under GM Eng, and it's still like that today, at 66% of pre-COVID Saturday schedules. The weekday schedule for the 108 today contains the same number of trips as the Saturday schedule of the 108 from Fall 2014.
Take the total number of trips scheduled per week across the North Washington Street Bridge (92/93 buses, Mon-Fri x5, Sat x1, Sun x1). Pre-COVID it was consistent around 700 trips per week that ran across the North Washington Street Bridge dating all the way back to 2009, 120 trips on weekdays, 80 Saturdays, and 25 Sundays.
Service ran every 20 minutes durng the middays and Saturdays, every 7 - 8 rush hour, and every 30 - 60 minutes on evenings and Sundays in 2017. In late 2019,
rush hour frequency was reduced to every 9 - 13 minutes in order to increase evening frequency from every 30 - 60 to every 30 - 40 minutes, maintaing 20 minute frequencies midday/Saturdays.
Route 92 was shortened in order to increase
frequency from every 40 - 60 to every 30 -40 minutes frequency during middays, evenings, and Saturdays for a more balanced off peak schedule and to offset the loss of some rush hour service on the 93.
ALL of these OFF PEAK FREQUENCY IMPROVEMENTS HAPPENED PRE-COVID, in 2019.
Today,
what was once every 7 - 20 minutes pre-COVID is now
hourly service at best. So demoralizing and frustrating. And this is for
OFF PEAK service that got slashed. Not just peak service.
The service cuts are so bad it's
only at 50% of the pre-COVID weekday service.
Only half as many buses run across the
North Washington Street Bridge compared to pre-COVID.
Much worse than
Braintree Branch service cuts. There are fewer weekday trips (42 trips) in 2024 today than the 49 Saturday trips scheduled back in 2012.
Route 7 serving South Boston
once ran every 20 minutes middays in 2019. Now it's
every 45 minutes, only half that of pre-COVID. The 101
ran every half hour on Sundays in 2019. Now it's
hourly or worse.
Route 57 Saturday service
in 2019 and
2024. Route 39 Saturday service in
2019 and
2024. What was once 10 minute headways is now every 15 - 20:
All of these
OFF PEAK service improvements HAD ALREADY EXISTED IN 2019. In 2021 and AGAIN under Eng 2023, the T
SLASHED OFF PEAK service. The T has responded since by restoring mostly peak service instead of off-peak service.
All of the
2024 schedules are that of the
Fall 2024 rating, allegedly the LAST rating before BNRD takes effect.
Why should the industrial pit wasteland of 2nd Street in Everett get 15 minute headways, while bus riders saw their bus routes go from
every 15 - 30 minute frequencies in 2013 - 2019, to
hourly service in 2024? That seems
very cruel to today's bus riders whom have ridden the bus system both in 2019 and in 2024. It is very reasonable to be frustrated, demoralized, and concerned about what happens next with the T after the T's actions since 2020. It is especially the case under GM Eng in how the MBTA is treating bus riders and responding to restoring and cutting bus service, relative to Eng's swift action in justifiably restoring subway service relatively quickly (compared to bus service), since Eng took office in Spring 2023.
The 65 being hourly service middays is only a new development since COVID. It is very misleading to omit the fact the 65 ran 30 minute headways middays in 2019, as that was what the 65 bus did in 2019. Hence the need to debunk this misleading statement and state what actually happened. In late 2019 the T has already made progress in becoming less peak oriented. It is true, howver, that the unfunded BNRD will likely flatten service levels even more, for a more balanced approach to peak and off peak service, compared to 2019, as 2019 was still relatively peak heavy in terms of service levels.