[Nfbmo] The bus Saga Continues.

Bryan Schulz b.schulz at sbcglobal.net
Sat Feb 16 05:39:43 UTC 2013


hi,

if you want an example of a monopoly, a familiar state agency which uses a 
certain vendor 90% of the time, has put other vendors out of business, and 
sent one back to his original state is a monopoly!
Bryan Schulz


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <DanFlasar at aol.com>
To: <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Friday, February 15, 2013 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus Saga Continues.


> Strictly speaking, a municipal or state or  federal public service is not
> a monopoly since these are not   for-profit organizations.  If all the
> airlines combined into one big  private or publicly (in the sense of stock
> availability) -ownership, then that  would be a monopoly.   Or if Comcast 
> finally
> owns all the cable   networks, then they would be monopoly.  Classically, 
> a
> monopoly restricts  competition.  A government-managed utility or transit
> system is a different  category.  The big difference - we have a way to
> change or modify a  government utility - we have no way to do so with a 
> private
> company.
>   And yes, this all gets very complicated  and far from  clear.
> Dan
>
>
> In a message dated 2/15/2013 5:18:59 P.M. Central Standard Time,
> dickmorris at netzero.net writes:
>
> Hi,  Dan,
>
> As far as I know, most bus companies are monopolies. Even back in  the 
> day,
> although the Delaware Coach Company was privately owned, it had a
> franchise
> to run all bus service in Wilmington, Delaware. Another company  had the
> franchise to run buses out where I lived. And of course, you  couldn't
> transfer between bus lines (sigh). So even back then, bus service  was a
> monopoly. Of course now Delaware has a transit authority: there was  a
> three-month drivers' strike in 1967 (I don't recall the issue), and a 
> year
> after it was settled, Delaware Coach pulled out, and the city created  a
> transit authority which eventually became DART First State.
>
> I  think you'd have to go back to the early streetcar era to find a
> situation
> in which multiple companies ran transit services in a particular city. I
> don't know if there's a book that covers bus transit deregulation in the
> way
> that Hard Landing did for airlines.
>
> I guess it's obvious that  transit and transit marketing are two of my
> favorite subjects. And it's  probably also obvious that I should let this
> subject die until there's  more action in  Springfield.
>
> Dick
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From:  <DanFlasar at aol.com>
> Sent: Friday, February 15, 2013 3:38 PM
> To:  <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus Saga  Continues.
>
> So much for the idea that the Free Market solves all  problems.
>
> Without intervention by the will of the  people   (ie, our government),
> free market capitalism leads  inexorably to monopoly -  which is why
> government has had to intervene  so continuously over the years  - which
> leads to too
> much  regulation which leads to too much deregulation  which leads  to...
> You'd think we'd remember this.
> Dan
>
>
>
> In a message  dated 2/15/2013 3:25:42 P.M. Central Standard Time,
> dickmorris at netzero.net  writes:
>
> Matt and  Gary,
>
> At least Springfield and Columbia  have bus stations in town!  Matt, I 
> don't
> know about where you are.  But here in Tahlequah, the bus  depot sits
> abandoned; I don't know  when the last bus rolled through here,  but it 
> was
> before I came in  2004. Our closest bus station is Muskogee,  about 25 
> miles
> away, and  taking a bus from there is like flying out of  Springfield,  in
> that
> you'll go to a "hub" city like Tulsa or OKC and  change  there. And Tulsa 
> is
> sixty miles from here.
>
> Isn't  deregulation  wonderful? Just for grins, if you want an analysis of
> what   deregulation has done to the airline industry, read  Thomas
> Petzinger's
> Hard Landing. Petzinger writes for the Wall Street  Journal, and the book
> is
> both interesting and   readable.
>
> Dick
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From:   "Matt Sievert" <matt.sievert at gmail.com>
> Sent: Friday, February  15,  2013 3:10 PM
> To: "NFB of Missouri Mailing List"   <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus Saga   Continues.
>
> Now,
>
> Megabus and the michigan flyer have all  been  successes.
>
> Matt
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "Gary  Wunder"  <gwunder at earthlink.net>
> Sender: "Nfbmo"   <nfbmo-bounces at nfbnet.org>
> Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2013  15:03:59
> To:  'NFB of Missouri Mailing  List'<nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Reply-To: NFB of  Missouri Mailing List  <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus  Saga  Continues.
>
> When I sometimes ride the bus I get the impression  they  will run their
> busses until they run no more and then they'll  stop serving  us all
> together.
> It is not the service-oriented  company I used to ride  regularly.
>
> -----Original  Message-----
> From: Nfbmo  [mailto:nfbmo-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf  Of Dick Morris
> Sent: Friday,  February 15, 2013 12:59 PM
> To: NFB of  Missouri Mailing List
> Subject: Re:  [Nfbmo] The bus Saga  Continues.
>
> Matt, the big problem with Greyhound is  that they have  had no real
> competition ever since they acquired Continental   Trailways in the early
> 90s,
> and thereby gutted the Trailways network.  It  reminds me of the old, 
> before
> the breakup, AT&T commercial  slogan, "We  may be the only phone company 
> in
> town, but we try not to  act like it." Epic  fail on the parts of both 
> AT&T
> and  Greyhound.
>
> Speaking of lack  of competition, think of what air  travel will be like
> once
> American and  USAir complete their   merger.
>
> Dick
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From:   "Matt Sievert" <matt.sievert at gmail.com>
> Sent: Friday, February  15,  2013 7:40 AM
> To: "NFB of Missouri Mailing List"   <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus Saga   Continues.
>
> Dick,
>
> Thank you for correcting me. Mrs. Cruise  did  the best she could with the
> bus
> system. She even ran multiple  buses on the  same route during holiday
> weekends, because the mall was  so backed up. I  never used access 
> express,
> because I didn't qualify,  so I can't speak for  that service.
>
> As for Norna Champion. She has  a school and a park named  after her.
>
> Greyhound is horrible for  everyone. For blind people, for 
> servicemen/women
> going to Fort  Leonard, and everyone in  between.
>
> Greyhound drives me to be a  more successful person. So I can  bypass that
> nastyness, by prtivate  leased car trips or airline  travel.
>
> I will NEVER advocate  greyhound to anyone. They really don't  care about
> their  customers.
>
>
>
> -----Original  Message-----
> From: "Dick  Morris" <dickmorris at netzero.net>
> Sender:  "Nfbmo"  <nfbmo-bounces at nfbnet.org>
> Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2013   03:45:09
> To: NFB of Missouri Mailing   List<nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Reply-To: NFB of Missouri Mailing List   <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus Saga   Continues.
>
> Matt, her name is Carol Cruise, and she has retired--but  she  was always
> willing to listen to her customers. From what Gary  tells me, the  buses 
> are
> full now, probably thanks to $3  gasoline.
>
> But...you are  absolutely right about the "second class  citizen" 
> attitude.
> Maybe you  remember Dr. Norma Champion. I had her  in several classes at
> Evangel when I  got my communications degree  back in the dark ages. As a
> state senator,  well...I was at a Jeff  City seminar, I forget which year,
> and
> of course I  met with her to  push NFB issues. One was a transit issue, 
> and
> her response  was that  public transit was for "someone like you". I think 
> I
> bit my tongue   till it bled. She was losing her vision due to macular
> degeneration, but  I  never could get her to see our side of things. Sad
> but
> true.
>
> And  which Greyhound station were you referring to?  The old one on St.
> Louis
> or  the new one on East Kearney? My problems  were more with rude 
> Greyhound
> drivers than anything else, but the  last time I rode the bus,  about a 
> year
> ago, I had a good  experience--except for a bus that was three  hours 
> late.
> Oh,  well...can't have   everything.
>
> Dick
> --------------------------------------------------
> From:   "Matt Sievert" <matt.sievert at gmail.com>
> Sent: Thursday, February  14,  2013 8:11 PM
> To: "NFB of Missouri Mailing List"   <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] The bus Saga   Continues.
>
> Sigh,
>
> I am glad I am not in   Springfield.
>
> Public Transportation in Springfield, Missouri has  always  been a
> "second-class" citizen issue. "only poor people and the  elderly ride  the
> bus." is what I heard from most folks.
>
> Also  seeing empty buses  driving around town didn't help any  either.
>
> Mary Cruse did a lot to  help out the transit issue. I  don't know where 
> she
> went, but obviously by  Gary's, account, things  have not improved.
>
> The only thing worse in  Springfield, Mo than  the public transit system, 
> is
> the Greyhound  station.
>
> My  primary means of transportation in Springfield, Mo was a  cab or
> walking.
> Only when I worked at St. John's was the bus useful, that  is  because the
> #2
> S. National went past the hospital on weekdays, and  the  #5 went by on
> weekends. Besides that, the bus was a headache I  did not  want.
>
> Matt Sievert
>
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at  9:02 PM, Dick  Morris  <dickmorris at netzero.net>
> wrote:
>
>> Good job, Erin and   Gary! I wish I were still in Springfield so I could
> be
>> part of  this.  You're dooing the right thing in trying to  garner
> publicity;
>> sometimes  the only way to get action is to  embarrass somebody. Go for
> it!
>>
>> Dick
>>
>>   --------------------------------------------------
>> From: "Magoon  Erin"  <magoone at gary-springfield-mo.net>
>> Sent: Thursday,  February 14,  2013 6:11 PM
>> To: <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
>>  Subject: [Nfbmo] The  bus Saga Continues.
>>
>> The Bus Saga  Continues.
>>
>>  Gary and I went to the City Council meeting  on Monday.  He spoke about
> the
>> fixed route buses and I spoke  about Access Express.  Access  is the
>> para-transit door to  door service that I'm riding for now  because of my
>> surgery last  October.
>>
>> It is getting  pretty rediculous trying to get a  ride on Access.  They
> will
>> only  let you schedule a ride  up to one week in advance and it's getting
>>  difficult to do  so.  They also have a 20 minute window either side of
> your
>>  pick-up to come and get you.  I had a pickup at 6:00 pm and  they 
>> didn't
>> have
>> the person come on duty who was going to get   me until 5:55 so he didn't
>> arrive until 6:20.
>>
>> I  had  another person drop me off at the wrong entrance to my building
> in
>>  my
>> apaartment complex. I couldn't get a ride home  from my job  developer
> until
>> two hours after the end of my  appointment.  I  couldn't get a ride home
>> from
>> the  gym at all, I could get  there but not home.  I also called one 
>> week
> in
>> advance of the  City Council meeting to schedule my  ride.  I scheduled 
>> it
>>  for
>> 10:30 pm because I didn't  know how long the meeting would go and  they
> set
>> it
>>  up.  The lady called me back ten minutes  later and said she looked  at
> the
>> schedule wrong.  "It's written  in military time and  I have trouble
> reading
>> and understanding  it.  The latest  we can get you is 8:30 not 10:30."
>>
>> I told  the Council  most of what I've just told you and they sent the
>>  following  questions to City Utilities telling them they wanted answers
> by
>>  Friday, February 22.
>>
>> 1. Why did you make the bus  route  changes?
>> 2. Why didn't you have the schedules and maps ready   before the changes
>> took
>> effect?
>> 3. Why didn't you  hold  a public hearing or have public comments before
> you
>> made  the  changes?
>> 4. Why did the routes change 3 and 4 times after  you made the  original
>> changes?
>> 5. Is it true that you  didn't want the  passengers to know the changes
> were
>> coming?  If so, why not?
>> 6.  Why are people having so many difficulties  scheduling an Access
> Express
>> ride 6 and 7 days in  advance?
>>
>> I called the  City Council yesterday to find out  what was the next step,
>> that's when  I got told those questions  were sent to City Utilities and
> as
>> soon as  they received a  response they'd call me.
>>
>> Today a reporter from  The  Springfield Newsleader called.  He talked to
>> both
>>  me  and Gary about what has been going on.  I told him all about  Access
> and
>> that some of the buses arrive downtown five minutes  early now  because 
>> of
>> the
>> new schedule, and the bus route  that was added  sits in the Social
> Security
>> parking lot for 15  minutes.  No one  has explained why this is.
>>
>> The  paper got a report from City  Utilities telling them that the 
>> number
> of
>> riders on Access has  increased and that they have 5  buses.  I told the
>> reporter that  several people I have  spoken to said they are taking
> Access
>> because of  all the route  changes.
>>
>> He said that City Utilities has  responded to  City Council and said: "We
>> should have had the bus maps  and  schedules available when we made the
>> route
>> changes, we   will hold public hearings in the future for any change we
> want
>> to  make  whether it's small or big."
>>
>> I noticed that they  didn't answer  any of the questions City  Council
> asked.
>>
>> The article is  supposed to run in  tomorrow's paper.  I hope it makes a
>>   difference.
>>
>>   _______________________________________________
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