Bring Down MUNI Fares!

 

SOMCAN and Allies Rally to Demand Transit Justice

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Year after year, San Francisco’s remaining working-class community has bore the brunt of ever-increasing MUNI bus fares, declining reliability and safety, and sharp increases in traffic congestion and smog due to the privatization of the city’s transit system. Thus, SOMCAN’s transit justice campaign was initiated.

“Transportation is an essential part of community planning,” said Mary Claire Amable, SOMCAN’s Transit Justice Organizer. “Without affordable, accessible, and dependable transportation, children, youth, families, and seniors will be unable to move throughout the city in order to live their daily lives.”

Dubbed “Bring Down the MUNI Fares!”, the nascent campaign is informed by ideas of equitable planning, in which the financial investment in transportation systems are carried out with the needs of the most vulnerable community members in mind. Some of the people most impacted by fare hikes include working-class adults who take the bus to-and-from their jobs, and City College students who do not benefit from free programs like those at San Francisco State University and University of San Francisco.

In 2018, SOMCAN gathered 400 surveys from MUNI riders about how impending fare increases will impact them. We collected surveys from over 50 ZIP codes (with some even stretching outside Bay Area boundaries, showing how far people are coming from to work in San Francisco). Here are some of the highlighted survey results:

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With the proliferation of ride-shares and corporate shuttles over the last decade, conversations of transit justice have been happening all over the city in the last year. Recent studies have shone on a light on the linkages between gentrification and environmental issues.

On February 4, 2019, in observance of National Transit Equity Day, SOMCAN in partnership with allies from Mission Neighborhood Centers, Inc., the Taxi Workers Alliance, Senior and Disability Action, and the Democratic Socialists of America held a rally at the 16th and Mission BART Plaza calling for equitable changes to the municipal transportation system. Their collective demands include:

  • Free and reduced fares

  • 100% on-time performance

  • Equitable service to underserved neighborhoods

  • Equitable service for seniors and people with disabilities

  • Living wages for  transit workers

  • No private buses on red lanes

  • Community engagement and accountability

In 2020, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency projects fares to increase once again.  Single-way cash fares will go up to $3, while the monthly Adult A pass rises to $102. If you are a concerned MUNI rider looking to get involved with SOMCAN’s transit justice campaign, please contact Mary Claire Amable at mamable@somcan.org or 415-255-7693.

 
Feb 2019SOMCAN