Showing posts with label UBER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UBER. Show all posts

Sunday, July 24, 2016

PSTA and Uber

Is PSTA closing in on a viable solution to the public transportation last mile problem?


St. Petersburg, Fl
Opinion by: E. Eugene Webb PhD
Author: In Search of Robin

Pinellas County's PSTA has reached an agreement with ridesharing company Uber for a new early-morning/ late-night service named TD Late Shift.

You can get more details from Janelle Irwin Reporter for Tampa Bay Business Journal in her article Pinellas transit expands one partnership with Uber, launches another.

There is more info from PSTA at TD Late Shift.

From the PSTA Web site: "PSTA first publicized its relationship with Uber earlier this year when the two transportation providers launched Direct Connect, a six-month pilot program that connects people to bus stops for a subsidized rate. Now, PSTA is expanding that program to span across the entire county offering unlimited, on-demand Uber and Taxi rides for approximately $1."

If you have not been to the PSTA WEB site, PSTA.net check it out. Note the Google Transit trip planner, which I have used, and it is really great.

These new initiatives are part of PSTA's ongoing efforts to resolve one of public transportation's major problems: the last mile connection, or more commonly stated as, "how do I get from my front door to the bus stop?"

PSTA will also use United Taxi and Care Ride for disable customers of the TD Late Shift Program.

I think these programs are great, and we should share the news so the people who need them know about them.

The growing connections between Uber and PSTA come at a time when Uber is continuing to struggle with local regulations, especially in Hillsborough County.  

How well will the PSTA and Uber connections work out? Who knows but that is what these trials are all about.

PSTA has done a remarkable job since the GreenLight initiative failed. They have been innovative and forward-looking and there are probably more programs like the Uber effort under consideration.

I for one hope the PSTA/Uber team is an outstanding success for both organizations and public transportation users.

What I would like to see is an end-to-end application where I can order a complete trip.

Pick up at my door, drop off at the bus connection, pickup at my bus destination and a ride to my final destination. All ordered, paid for and ticketed on one app, and a return initiated when I call for pick up when I am ready to return home.

The hardware is all in place. No infrastructure needed just some creative thinking and a little software.

My only word of caution is PSTA under Brad Miller's leadership has had a tendency to get carried away when they get excited about an effort or opportunity.

When you are playing with the likes of Uber, you are playing in the big time and PSTA, and the PSTA Board needs to follow these developments and agreements closely along with the relationships between staff and Uber.

Transparency is the key to success.

These are good ideas. It would be a real shame to have them fall victim to or become tainted by some poor judgment.  

E-mail Doc at mail to: dr.gwebb@yahoo.com or send me a Facebook (Gene Webb) Friend request. Please comment below, and be sure to Like or share on Facebook.

See Doc's Photo Gallery at Bay Post Photos.

Disclosures:

Friday, October 9, 2015

Commuter Rail may be an option

CSX would merely make the tracks available for lease through a deal with State the rest would be up to the local community.

St. Petersburg, Fl
Opinion by: E. Eugene Webb PhD
Coauthor of: So You Want Blog.

CSX has thrown its hat into the tumultuous ring of Tampa Bay area public transit. 

You can read the details in: Caitin Johnston's piece in the Tampa Bay Times, CSX's offer finally opens the door to commuter rail in Tampa Bay.

Carving an interesting path through Pinellas and Hillsborough Counties and connecting the down towns of Tampa, Clearwater and St. Petersburg, these CSX tracks could form a backbone to move commuters over fairly large distances.

For now, the CSX offers to make certain lines available do open a new and interesting window of discussion. The commuter rail system would, by its very nature, be inter modal requiring both bus and possibly light rail to carry short distance and last mile traffic.

There is a host of issues as Caitin Johnston points out, the most difficult overcoming the political parochialism that will always accompany an effort like the CSX offering proposes.

CSX would merely make the tracks available for lease through a deal with the State the rest would be up to the local community.

The initial thought is to establish yet another regional board made up of elected officials to try to bring a plan together.

These Boards of elected officials have proven to be virtually useless. They accomplish little beyond talk are poor managers, they are prone to encourage corruption, if not among themselves, then among the organizational staffs they create and their hired consultants.

Public transportation would be better served if TBARTA were disbanded, and the Hillsborough and Pinellas County transit authority boards were reconstituted with a majority of non elected officials.

The real issue here before any of this ever gets off the ground is to make sure we don't have the same-old  people, political groups, consultants, influence peddlers and politicians who want to get their hands into the money flow running this effort.

If they do commuter rail will likely go the way of GreenLight Pinellas, Go Hillsborough and other transit initiatives.

E-mail Doc at mail to:dr.gwebb@yahoo.com or send me a Facebook (Gene Webb) Friend request. Please comment below, and be sure to share on Facebook. See Doc's Photo Gallery at Bay Post Photos.

Friday, August 28, 2015

The Four Forty Four - Much more than just a bus route

 St. Petersburg, Fl.
Opinion by: E. Eugene Webb, PhD
Coauthor of: So You Want to Blog

Wednesday was one of those rare days when I actually felt bad for the PSTA Board. Four bus routes were on the chopping block.


The PSTA Board room was nearly full.

Public hearings are often emotional when they deal with subjects that directly affect people's lives. This one really tugged at your heartstrings.

Speaker after speaker labored to get to the podium on crutches, walkers and in wheel chairs. Some spoke for others in attendance since it was just too difficult for them to speak in person.

Each told of how much the 444 bus route means to them. They used words like freedom, dignity and independence.

Others spoke of the 444 as their lifeline to get to and from work. Some had been riding the 444 for years.

Eliminating the 444 would disrupt their lives perhaps end their independence.

These were real people, with real fears and real tears.

The 444 bus route is the least used of all the PSTA routes. The route has just over 20 borders a day.

It runs through Pinellas Park and stops at the Wal-Mart on US 19. It is not a particularly efficient route as it meanders around. Getting back to one's original starting point can often take in access of an hour. However, that inconvenience pales into comparison with the benefits to a small group of riders.

The 444 has been on the chopping block before, but this time with PSTA facing a real budget crisis, and it looked like the 444 was doomed.

The PSTA administration is looking at a number of options, including conversations with UBER but the 444 riders didn't seem to be buying it.

In the end, PSTA Board was moved and saved the 444 for the moment.

They ask for more information about the options 444 riders will have and for an improved plan to make the riders more aware of their options. However, they also indicated that the days of the 444 are probably numbered as the PSTA evolves a new public transportation plan.

There are a lot of tough days ahead at the PSTA and lot more stories from people whose very existence depends on public transportation.

We all need to listen closely. When you don't depend on public transportation, it is easy to not appreciate how important it is to those who do need it.

The PSTA administration and the Board must come up real, sensible plans and when they do we, the voters, must make sure the funding is there to support those plans.

E-mail Doc at: mailto:dr.gwebb@yahoo.com or send me a Facebook (Gene Webb) Friend request. Please comment below, and be sure to share on Facebook and Twitter. See Doc's Photo Gallery at Bay Post Photos

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

The PTC and the Agents for the Status Quo

The Hillsborough Public Transportation Club Commission was in the news again continuing their jihad against Uber and Lyft in Hillsborough County.
Particularly popular with millennials, ride sharing services are in a constant battle against the Agents for the Status Quo.
The battle between technology and established rules came to a Tampa courtroom Friday as Uber and the Public Transportation Commission argued over whether the ride-sharing company could continue to operate in Hillsborough County.

The commission issued a cease and desist letter in January, which Uber has largely ignored. Friday’s hearing was on the commission’s request for a temporary injunction barring Uber from offering rides in Hillsborough County unless it complies with local taxi-cab regulations.
It is not only Hillsborough that is blocking the adoption of technology.  Uber has recently announced they will withdraw from Broward County. New York Mayor de Blasio is embattled with Uber, trying to control access to the city streets. Huh? Uber responded with a "de Blasio" mode in their mobile app to show excessive wait times due to de Blasio's rationing plan in the city.

But de Blasio has a plan to reign in Uber.
A top de Blasio ally said City Hall also expects the city’s organized left — the labor movement and its outgrowths — will help organize opposition to Uber. They are the closest thing around to natural supporters for the mayor’s side, because it’s hard to imagine de Blasio rallying much of anyone to the yellow cab industry.
Align with the status quo unions to avoid the future. Not a force ready for change.

Image result for uber
Uber vs. status quo
Even Hillary weighed in as a Luddite, in her typical have it both ways style.
Speaking last week at the New School in Manhattan, presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said she wanted to help the hard-pressed middle class.
But she also attacked the freedom that produces dynamism.

She brought up what she called the “on demand” or “gig economy,” meaning upstarts like Airbnb, which lets people book their homes for short-term rentals, and such ride-sharing companies as Uber and Lyft. She said this development is “creating exciting opportunities and unleashing innovation, but it’s also raising hard questions about workplace protections and what a good job will look like in the future.”

She added that, as president, she would “crack down on bosses who exploit employees by misclassifying them as contractors.”
Speaking of "raising hard questions", Hillary's had enough problems figuring out her email lately. She would better serve us if she were to crack down on herself exploiting legal loopholes and misclassifying email she owes the people she wants to serve.

Talk about not getting it. Hillary, who last actually drove a car in 1996, likely has not been in a taxi since forever, is clueless about modern application of technologies... and economics, and personal choice and motivation.

I wonder what she thought about the iPhone when it was introduced.

On second thought, I don't want to know.

Uber drivers work when they want, stop working when they want. Uber has no control of their schedule. The drivers only get paid when they work. They are independent contractors. Welcome to the new world of the gig economy.

But with all her driving experience, Hillary knows better.

Meanwhile, taking a strong stand for a politician these days, Jeb Bush rode Uber in San Francisco recently.

Jeb's no technophobe.

According to this recent Wall Street Journal commentary:
Republican presidential candidates are having fun with all this. Marco Rubio,who last year sided with Uber over regulators in Miami, accused Mrs. Clinton of trying to “regulate 21st-century industries with 20th-century ideas.” Jeb Bushpointedly traveled by Uber for his visit to Thumbtack, a Silicon Valley startup. Meanwhile, Rand Paul says he would like our government to adopt the Uber model—more information and customer ratings—while Ted Cruz says his campaign will be as disruptive of politics-as-usual as Uber is of old business models.
At the state of Florida level, state Senator Jeff Brandes is preparing to take down the PTC again.
Led by state Sen. Jeff Brandes, a Republican from St. Petersburg, lawmakers have contemplated a number of bills over the past two sessions that would prevent local governments from over-regulating the ride-sharing companies. One pitched last session would have created a statewide regulatory framework for the companies that might have eliminated the local regulations constraining the companies. But the bills failed to pass.

Efforts by some state lawmakers over the years to eliminate the PTC altogether and hand the regulatory duties over to county officials have also failed. Brandes says he is determined to try again when the Legislature meets in August.
“There’s no reason for the PTC to exist,” he says. “It’s a red-tape factory.”

The commission’s regulation of Uber and Lyft limits opportunities for people wanting to earn extra cash and stymies innovation, he says. No other county in the state has an agency like the PTC.
Hillary, de Blasio, and the PTC are working against new transportation and work choices, while protecting the taxi industry, which they avoid in their chauffeur driven limos and SUVs.

They are the new Agents for the Status Quo, protecting a favored industry, the taxi club, who donates back to the Agents for the Status Quo for campaign donations. Yet another circle of money they use against the rest of us.

This not a right vs. left issue. David Plouffe, formerly Obama's campaign manager, is working for Uber. Hillary and de Blasio are on the left, but much of the Hillsborough PTC leadership are Republicans.

Locally, the Hillsborough Commissioners have started the process to sell us on a new sales tax to improve transportation. Yet three Republican commissioners on the PTC board - Ken Hagan, Victor Crist, and Al Higginbothom, seem to spend more effort trying to run Uber and Lyft out of town than they are exerting political leadership on the flawed GoHillsborough plan.

The left hand does not know what the right hand is doing.

Meanwhile, Uber continues to invest in the state of Florida, having just announced their Miami headquarters.

One of the world's leading tech innovators, Uber, is investing in Miami where they are allowed to operate, rather than locally in Tampa, where we talk about Innovation Alliances and Destinations. But won't walk the walk.

Uber noticed. Will others innovators notice?

If the Republicans were smart, they'd start to use this "gig economy" with Uber and Lyft as an issue at the national level, since it is a favorite of millennials. Hillary won't be able to defend her position with more dissembling. Then perhaps millennials will listen to who's really pro-innovation, and who's the Agent for the Status Quo.  Hopefully our local sheep politicians will then get the message and stop acting as enemies of the future.

Is Uber the future? Let's find out.
“Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded — here and there, now and then — are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty.
This is known as "bad luck.”

Robert A. Heinlein

Thursday, November 20, 2014

To Uber or Not to Uber That's the Question



Uber and Lyft, are ride-sharing companies that provide an alternative to taxi cabs. Both companies use a high tech model that allows customers to order a ride using a smart phone AP.

Customers see a picture of the driver, a rating from other riders, and via GPS can watch the progress of the ride as it approaches. The customer can reject a proposed ride and ask for an alternative.

The rate is calculated at $1.20 a mile and 13 cents a minute and the ride fee is processed through the rider's smart phone.

The issue created a firestorm in Tampa as the local taxi cab companies cried foul, and the City struggled with issues like licensing, and passenger safety.

If you would like to know more about how these ride sharing companies work you can check out an article in the Tampa Bay Times by Caitlin Johnson 10 things to understand about Lyft and Uber.

The question is now moving to St. Petersburg as the City begins to work on an Ordinance dealing with ride-sharing companies. Janelle Irwin has a good overview in stpetersblog St. Pete to consider ordinance making way for Uber and Lyft.

The ride-sharing companies are already providing some service in St. Pete so timely action is critical.

With St. Pete in hot pursuit of millennials and a vibrant central core, services like Uber and Lyft are essential to support the life style. These services, which will provide low cost transport between venues in the downtown area, are also essential to the continuing downtown development and expansion to the West.

Some are now thinking that ride-sharing may be a critical component to public transportation. Given the recent GreenLight results it looks like it will be a while before the public transportation is changed or fixed on a large scale.

City Council would be wise to listen to the Cab companies, regarding safety concerns and licensing. Cabbie concerns about competition are really irrelevant. Competition is competition and the Cab companies need to figure out how to compete.

The other pitfall to avoid is looking at ride-sharing as a municipal cash cow.

The real benefits of ride-sharing are not only low fares but easy access which may keep some cars at home and some drivers that should not be driving off the road. A significant level of regulation or licensing costs will defeat the purpose.

Let's not let ride-sharing get bogged down by the entrenched interests like the food truck thing did with hearings, meetings, reports and the ever popular consultants.

This is a simple issue with any number of municipalities already addressing the issue. We don't need to re-invent the "wheel" let's just get a good common sense Ordinance on the books and move forward.

E-mail Doc at: dr.webb@verizon.net. Or send me a Facebook (Gene Webb) Friend request. Twitter@DOCONTHEBAY. Please comment below, and be sure to share on Facebook and Twitter. See Doc's Photo Gallery at Bay Post Photos