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Research identifies three categories of benefits provided
by public transit: mobility, equity and efficiency.
Mobility benefits result from increased travel options for
people who cannot use an automobile. Transit provides mobility
to many people who do not have access to other modes of travel
due to age, disability or income. The expansion of accessible
conventional transit further improves mobility. With an aging
population and a greater emphasis on integrating persons with
disabilities into the community, transit's accessibility role
will become even more important.
Equity comes from removing travel barriers by giving all
citizens access to low-cost accessible transit. This provides
access to jobs, services and housing throughout the community.
Efficiency benefits result from reduced motor vehicle use.
This includes user savings, congestion reduction, parking
cost savings, reduced accidents, local economic development,
and environmental and social benefits.
Many growing communities throughout BC face major infrastructure
and congestion costs such as construction and maintenance
costs for expanded roadways and parking facilities, as well
as traffic control and enforcement costs associated with rapidly
increasing automobile use. By diverting growth in automobile
traffic to transit, particularly at peak travel times, significant
savings can be realized.
Many communities throughout BC, particularly the larger ones,
are in the process of developing new Official Community Plans
and Growth Management Strategies. Reduced automobile dependence
is a major theme in many of these plans, and transit will
play a key role in developing the more pedestrian-friendly
communities that the plans envision. Not only does transit
provide a travel alternative to the automobile, but it can
also be an important tool in shaping land use patterns in
the communities it serves.
These benefits are not automatic. An underutilized transit
service, often the manifestation of not meeting the needs
of the targeted markets be they seniors, students or
commuters can be an overall disbenefit to a community.
Thus, the importance of matching long-range community planning
with the transportation needs of the community to create a
strong relationship between land use and transportation.
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