Fairfax County Characteristics - Virginia Association of ... · 12/11/2012 · County of Fairfax,...
Transcript of Fairfax County Characteristics - Virginia Association of ... · 12/11/2012 · County of Fairfax,...
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Transit Successes and
Challenges in Fairfax County
Virginia Association of Counties 2012 Annual Conference
November 12, 2012
Jeffery C. McKay
Supervisor, Lee District
Fairfax County Board of Supervisors
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Fairfax County Characteristics
• Population: ~ 1,096,000
• Households: ~ 394,000
• Jobs: ~ 572,000
• Land Area: 396 square miles
• VMT: 25.7 million miles
• Transit Trips: 49.3 million
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Transit in Fairfax County • Fairfax County is served by several interconnected transit
systems.
– Fairfax Connector primarily provides service within the County.
• Feeder service to Metrorail Stations
• Cross-County Service
• Circulator Service
– Metrobus primarily provides service between jurisdictions
– MetroAccess is a shared-ride, door-to-door, paratransit service for
people whose disability prevents them from using bus or rail.
– Transportation Association of Greater Springfield (TAGS) - shuttle
service that circulates throughout Springfield’s business district.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Transit in Fairfax County – Metrorail provides rail service throughout Northern Virginia,
Maryland, and Washington, D.C.
– The Virginia Railway Express provides commuter rail service
from Manassas and Fredericksburg through Fairfax County and
into Washington, D.C.
• Services share a common fare structure, fare media, telephone
information number and on-line trip planning.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Fairfax Connector
• Owned and operated by Fairfax County.
• Began Service in FY 1986
• In FY 1986, average weekday ridership was 3,550.
• FY 2013 Operating and Capital
Budget: $99.8 million
• In FY 2012:
– Average weekday ridership: 38,053
– Average weekend ridership: 21,583
– 10.9 million total passenger trips
– 253 buses; 475 employees; service provided by contractor
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Virginia Railway Express • Service from Fredericksburg and Manassas to Washington
• Number of daily trains operated: 29 trains
• Number of rail stations in Fairfax County: 5 (18 stations in system)
• September 2012 Average Weekday Ridership (system-wide): – Approx. 19,000
• FY 2012 Operating and Capital Budget: $87.7 million – Fairfax County’s Subsidy: $4.9 million
Metro – including Metrobus, Metrorail, and MetroAccess • Regional service provider (VA, DC, MD)
• Number of rail stations in Fairfax County: 5.5
• June 2012 Average Weekday Ridership (system-wide): – Bus: 434,191
– Rail: 787,128
– MetroAccess: 7,083
• FY 2012 Operating and Capital Budget: $2.6 billion – Fairfax County’s Subsidy: $108.7 million
Other Transit Service
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Regional Transportation Agencies • Northern Virginia Transportation Authority
– Prepares the unconstrained list of Northern Virginia regional transportation needs.
– TransAction 2040 estimates $950 million in annual unfunded transportation needs.
– Sets priorities for Northern Virginia's transportation projects and regional funding.
• Transportation Planning Board – Serves as the Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) for the region, including
localities within Northern Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia.
– Responsible for the region’s Federally-required Six-Year Transportation
Improvement Program (TIP) and the Constrained Long Range Plan
• Northern Virginia Transportation Commission – Collects and manages regional gas tax dedicated to WMATA.
– Appoints members of WMATA’s Board of Directors
– Coordinates transit services (Alexandria, Arlington, Fairfax City, Fairfax County,
Falls Church and Loudoun)
– Co-owns and oversees the Virginia Railway Express (VRE)
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Transportation Agencies • In Northern Virginia, transportation spending priorities are developed
in a collaborative manner and transit services are effectively and closely coordinated.
Transportation in Fairfax County
FCDOT
NVTA
DRPT
WMATA
TPB
NVTC
VDOT
VRE
• While the interrelationships of these agencies are complex, each
has well-defined and unique responsibilities. The agencies have
evolved into complementary and effective organizations.
• Little overlap between agency responsibilities.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Richmond Highway (Route 1) Corridor • Most heavily transit dependent area;
• very congested;
• economically disadvantaged populations;
• Ft. Belvoir located at end of corridor.
• Although transit is heavily used, service would be even
better utilized if pedestrian and transit facilities were
upgraded.
• Increased ridership will reduce roadway congestion and
promote improved economic vitality in the corridor.
• The County developed a $55 million Richmond Highway
Public Transportation Initiative to enhance transit in the
corridor. Since 2004, the initiative has upgraded bus
stops, improved pedestrian facilities at various
intersections, and filled in missing sidewalks. Work on this
effort continues, including the search for a location for a
new transit center.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Richmond Highway (Route 1) Corridor • Fairfax Connector serves more than 8,600 daily passengers in the
corridor - approximately 25% of the typical Connector system-wide
weekday boardings.
• Richmond Highway Express (REX), shortens the time it takes to
travel from Fort Belvoir to Metrorail Stations at the north end f the
corridor. REX stops only at 19 specifically designated bus stops. In
contrast, the Connector has over 40 stops and its routes are
designed to directly serve residential communities and facilities not
reasonably accessible from the major roadways.
• In response to the relocation of 21,300 personnel
to Fairfax County, because of the 2005
BRAC realignments the County has:
• Created New Transit Lines – Eagle Express
• Realigned Routes and Timetables of Existing Lines
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Economic Impacts of Transit • Transit boosts property values – WMATA has found that property becomes more
valuable as it gets closer to Metrorail stations - adding 6.8% more value to
residential, 9.4% to multi-family, and 8.9% to commercial office properties within a
half-mile of a rail station.
• Businesses locate near transit because it expands access to their pool of
employees and customers.
• The Texas Transportation Institute (TTI) has estimated that the region’s past
investments in transit have saved $726 million annually in reduced fuel use and
delay in traffic. TTI ranks our region #1 in delays due to congestion, with our
drivers wasting 74 hours and 37 gallons of fuel per year.
• Without regional transit, the region would need to add over 1,000 lane-miles of
arterials and highways to maintain current travel speeds, assuming people kept
choosing the same destinations.
• Many bridges would require 2 or 3 additional lanes in each direction.
• The U.S. Census found that of the 568,000 Fairfax residents that commuted to
work, over 50,000 used transit and another 61,000 carpooled.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
New Transit Opportunities • Dulles Rail
– 23-mile extension of the existing Orange Line
– Total Project Cost = $5.6B to $6B
• Fairfax County Funding = over $900M
– Constructed in 2 Phases
• Phase 1 – East Falls Church to Wiehle Avenue/Reston, (5 Stations, 1
Parking Garage) – Opens December 2013
• Phase 2 – Wiehle Avenue/Reston to Dulles Airport and stations 2
stations in Loudoun County, (6 Stations, 5 Parking Garages) – Opens
2017
• Tysons circulator service - A frequent internal bus circulator
system will provide a connection between the Metrorail stations in
Tysons and activities beyond reasonable walking distance.
• Reconfiguration of existing Connector routes
County of Fairfax, Virginia
New Transit Opportunities
• I-495 Express Lanes open November 17
– Effective transit on Beltway for first time
– New Connector service from Burke Centre, Springfield and
Lorton
– Initial route begins January 14
• I-95 Express Lanes
– Under construction
– Expected to open in 2015
– 3,000 new park-and-ride spaces included
– $195 million for transit operating and capital costs deleted from
project.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
New Transit Opportunities
• Countywide Transit Network Study
– Establish most effective way to serve the County’s needs to
accommodate planned growth over the long term by improving
public transit usage.
– Comprehensive Plan includes 9 “Enhance Public Transit
Corridors”
– Estimate service demand
– Identify specific modes as part of a
countywide transit network
– Identify station and support facilities
– Estimate costs
– Investigate revenue sources
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Countywide Dialogue on Transportation • This year, Fairfax County Board of Supervisors conducted a
countywide dialogue on transportation, including:
• 9 public meetings
• Survey started 9/24/12 and concluded 10/18/12
• 1,725 survey responses
• Survey Questions Included:
• What impact does traffic congestion have on your daily commute?
• Moderate, Significant or Very Significant Impact 82%
• Little or No Impact 18%
• Would you be supportive of a countywide effort to find a source of
revenue to address transportation needs?
• Yes: 85%
• No: 15%
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Current DRPT Transit Assistance
• Currently, DRPT allocates $269 million in
state transit operating and capital assistance
funds annually.
• Total capital funding is divided by total capital
requests to determine match ratio. Some
capital (bus replacement funded at 80%).
• Total previous year operating costs are divided by total available
operating funds to determine match ratio.
• State funding provides a fraction of total funding needed for transit
service. For the Fairfax Connector, the state provided $32 million in
2012 or 24.9% of operating and capital expenses.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Proposal Related to SJ 297 • General Assembly approved SJ 297 in 2011. It requires DRPT to
study transit related issues, including:
- performance,
- prioritization of capital projects,
- stability of state match ratios, and
- allocation of transit subsidies.
• The SJ 297 Report is recommending a new approach to allocating 75% of state transit funding.
• Systems divided into peer groups.
• System performance compared between peers
• Operating funding allocations based on performance compared to peers.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Proposal Related to SJ 297 • While the state funding is only a portion of the service’s needs, it is
still important.
• Having 75% of operating funds open to fluctuations based on annual
variations will bring significant uncertainty into what individual
systems can expect to receive from the state,
• Service decisions will be affected.
• The peer groups are problematic in three ways:
- they pit transit providers against each other
- they do not take into account the inherent differences between
transit agencies.
- significant change in one system will affect peers, even if peers
have not made any changes at all.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Proposal Related to SJ 297
• There are benefits to considering performance measures. However,
the proposed approach drastically changes the current transit
formula without increasing funding, thereby just reallocating current
limited funding among transit agencies.
• Fairfax County is opposed to changes to the transit formula that will
reduce the stability of statewide funds and reduce funding to the
region, unless new revenues are added to the Mass Transit Fund.
• Efforts to change the formula for spending current transit funds take
time from efforts to identify new transit funding.
County of Fairfax, Virginia
Questions?