A Bid for Better Transit: Improving Service with Contracted Operations

Some of the best transit agencies in Europe, including London and Stockholm, effectively use competitive bidding to contract transit operations to private companies. Austin and Los Angeles are two progressive U.S. jurisdictions that show how to harness the profit motive to effectively provide bus service. Contract operators there vie with one another to earn the taxpayer subsidy that underwrites the service.

These leading cities provide high-quality service to transit riders while safeguarding transit workers’ rights to good working conditions and collective bargaining. By contrast, most U.S. transit agencies operate under a pure public sector monopoly model. The potential positive and negative aspects of contracting out in the U.S. are mostly obscured by ideological claims from the right that “privatization” is a panacea and from the left that private companies cannot effectively serve public interests. Ready to probe beyond bias?

This fall TransitCenter published A Bid for Better Transit, with contracting case studies from around the world. Join us and our panel of practitioners and experts for a candid examination of the benefits and pitfalls of competitive contracting for transit service.

Panelists:

Christian Löf – Business Strategist, Storsstockholms Lokaltrafik (SL), the public transit agency in the region of Stockholm, Sweden.

Michael McCall-Delgado – Strategic Researcher, Amalgamated Transit Union national headquarters.

Corinne Ralph – Chief of Transit Programs, Los Angeles Department of Transportation.

Neil Smith – Chair, Tower Transit Group, a contracted urban bus provider in London, England; and a Director of Transit Systems, a contract provider in Perth, Darwin, Adelaide and Sydney, Australia.

Dottie Watkins – Vice President, Operations for Capital Metro, the transit agency in Austin, Texas.

Moderator:

David Bragdon – Executive Director, TransitCenter











When: Tue., Feb. 13, 2018 at 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Where: TransitCenter
One Whitehall St., 17th Floor
646-395-9555
Price: Free, RSVP required
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Some of the best transit agencies in Europe, including London and Stockholm, effectively use competitive bidding to contract transit operations to private companies. Austin and Los Angeles are two progressive U.S. jurisdictions that show how to harness the profit motive to effectively provide bus service. Contract operators there vie with one another to earn the taxpayer subsidy that underwrites the service.

These leading cities provide high-quality service to transit riders while safeguarding transit workers’ rights to good working conditions and collective bargaining. By contrast, most U.S. transit agencies operate under a pure public sector monopoly model. The potential positive and negative aspects of contracting out in the U.S. are mostly obscured by ideological claims from the right that “privatization” is a panacea and from the left that private companies cannot effectively serve public interests. Ready to probe beyond bias?

This fall TransitCenter published A Bid for Better Transit, with contracting case studies from around the world. Join us and our panel of practitioners and experts for a candid examination of the benefits and pitfalls of competitive contracting for transit service.

Panelists:

Christian Löf – Business Strategist, Storsstockholms Lokaltrafik (SL), the public transit agency in the region of Stockholm, Sweden.

Michael McCall-Delgado – Strategic Researcher, Amalgamated Transit Union national headquarters.

Corinne Ralph – Chief of Transit Programs, Los Angeles Department of Transportation.

Neil Smith – Chair, Tower Transit Group, a contracted urban bus provider in London, England; and a Director of Transit Systems, a contract provider in Perth, Darwin, Adelaide and Sydney, Australia.

Dottie Watkins – Vice President, Operations for Capital Metro, the transit agency in Austin, Texas.

Moderator:

David Bragdon – Executive Director, TransitCenter

Buy tickets/get more info now