Falling Transit Ridership: California and Southern California

Project ID:

LA1714

Year Completed:

2018

Funding Source:

Statewide Transportation Research Program & Southern California Association of Governments

Project Description

In the last ten years transit use in Southern California has fallen significantly. This report investigates that falling transit use. The project examines patterns of transit service and patronage over time and across the region and considers an array of explanations for falling transit use: declining transit service levels, eroding transit service quality, rising fares, falling fuel prices, the growth of Lyft and Uber, the migration of frequent transit users to outlying neighborhoods with less transit service, and rising vehicle ownership. While all of these factors probably play some role, the research concludes that the most significant factor is increased motor vehicle access, particularly among low-income households that have traditionally supplied the region with its most frequent and reliable transit users.

Michael Manville (PI)

Professor

mmanvill@ucla.edu

Research Team

Brian D. Taylor, Evelyn Blumenberg, Tiffany Chu, Hannah King, Ryan Kurtzman, Joseph Marynak, Trevor Thomas

Program Area(s):