Metro staff propose service cuts

Photo by giveawayboy on Flickr.

At yesterday’s Finance Administration and Oversight working meeting, WMATA chief John Catoe and Chief Financial Officer Carol Kissal discussed potential “service adjustments”, i.e. service cuts, in order to close the remaining $73M budget hole for the 2010 fiscal year, which starts July 1.

During the previous FAO meeting, the Board committee instructed Metro staff to change some assumptions in the budget. Staff had estimated some revenues and expenses conservatively, and the Board told them to make their best guesses instead of erring on the side of caution. That closed some of the budget gap. Some of the adjustments are:

If some of these assumptions turn out to be wrong, it’s unclear what the fix would be. It’s possible in that situation WMATA could pass a mid-year fare increase, could cut back on service, place employees on involuntary leave, or request more money from jurisdictions.

After these and other changes, WMATA’s budget shortfall is $28.8M for the year, about a third of the shortfall from FY 2009 that required large fare increases in January of last year.

From there, WMATA staff proposed various service cuts. First, to save $10M they proposed eliminating some bus routes that “duplicate” other bus service. These don’t entirely duplicate each other but are merely lines that parallel each other for some distance:

Next, to save $3.3M, they proposed widening headways (time between vehicles) on buses. As part of this change, WMATA assumed no loss of ridership and therefore no loss of revenue. That’s unlikely. With fewer buses, some people will inevitably switch from transit to driving or other modes.

They propose saving $7.5M by reducing the frequency of trains:

Last, Metro would close some additional station entrances on weekends and earlier on weekdays, saving $700K.

The total savings for all the described service cuts is $21.4M, leaving only $7.4M of budget gap out of an over $500M subsidy.

From here, it’s possible that WMATA could do any of three things. They could send the $7.4M out as a request for increased subsidy. After all, it’s only about 1.5% of the budget. They could figure out a minor fare increase; approximately ten cents on rail or bus would probably do it. Or, they could come up with additional service cuts. Considering that $7.4M is about a third of the cuts they already made, the rest of the cuts would likely be to service that affects even more riders, an undesirable situation.

After these cuts and “service adjustments”, we’re getting very close to having a workable budget. The WMATA board meeting is next Thursday, February 26. I don’t think that any potential service cuts would be in a form ready for the Board to authorize public hearings at that time, but we’re getting close.

Note that the WMATA board doesn’t endorse these proposals, and really had no opportunity to vet these through their staffs before they were presented. These are WMATA staff proposals, not what the Board is endorsing.

According to the Examiner, Board members were pleased that staff have been able to plug the gap with fewer cuts, but want to see still more revenue increases or cost savings. Jim Graham suggested putting retail in the stations, charging for parking on weekends, and cutting some money from MetroAccess, which has no reductions in the proposed budget.