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Monday, October 7, 2024

RTD board candidates focus on better service, more riders

The Regional Transportation District board that directs public transit around metro Denver could gain two front-line bus drivers, bringing street smarts, and a 25-year-old who vows to make rides safer for a new generation after the November election.

Another candidate asking voters for a seat on the RTD’s 15-member board doesn’t own a car and says he’s fed up with waiting longer than expected for buses and trains. A transit political veteran is determined to activate rail links from Denver to Longmont and Boulder.

They’re part of a diverse slate for the Nov. 5 election that will inject seven new decision-makers into RTD’s mix — overhauling the governance of Colorado’s main public transportation agency at a time when state lawmakers and Gov. Jared Polis are demanding better transit as a necessity for urbanist housing redevelopment.

The 13 candidates vying for the seven seats (four competitive races) seek “reform” of the RTD, which has a $1.1 billion taxpayer-financed budget for helping people move around a 2,342-square-mile Delaware-sized area, one of the largest transit service areas in the nation.

The future depends on attracting “would-be riders” and “would-have-been riders,” said former bus driver Bob Dinegar, who’s running in a three-way race for the seat representing southeast central Denver.

“You need to be able to show up at a stop and not need a schedule and know you’re going to get whisked away to your destination within 10 to 15 minutes tops,” he said. “If we have the personnel, we can do that.”

Ridership falling

The declining ridership (down from 106 million in 2019 to 63 million) and complaints that RTD buses and trains are neither reliable nor safe has spurred increased scrutiny from state lawmakers. Gov. Polis has been interviewing the RTD board candidates, asking how they’d handle issues such as completion of a long-planned northwest rail link between downtown Denver’s Union Station and Longmont – a project that candidate Karen Benker, a former state budget employee who served on the RTD board two decades ago, strongly supports.

Colorado lawmakers who tried to restructure the RTD board legislatively this year to add political appointees are demanding better public transit as a key to reaching state climate goals and enabling housing development concentrated around bus and train hubs.

“The RTD has a culture of defaulting to ‘No,’” said Rep. Meg Froelich, leader of the House transportation committee. “Can we have some people on the RTD board who are going to figure out how to get to ‘Yes?’”

Denver leaders, too, are prioritizing mobility as they approve high-density apartments. “How are the policies we enact getting folks closer to meeting their basic needs? That should be what shapes our policy,” said Denver Councilwoman Shontel Lewis, who served as an RTD director from 2018 through 2022.

Delays, disruptions, reduced frequency

Bus and train frequency is a primary concern among candidates who suggest more frequency will mean more riders, which in turn would help control the violence and illegal drug use spilling into the public transit.

“When ridership is down, it affects everybody. You see a bus go by, nobody on it. That’s a waste of taxpayers’ money,” said Kathleen Chandler, who is running to represent Aurora where a trip downtown on public transit can take 1 hour and 40 minutes. Too many non-riders see RTD as “a boondoggle,” said Chandler, who directs a citizens involvement project for the Independence Institute think tank. “We’re not getting the service we paid for. The reliability and safety need to be fixed.”

Ahead of this year’s election, seven candidates signed a shared platform calling for “fixing” RTD, promising a new commitment to customer service and quality.

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