Regional Transit Authority of Southeast Michigan

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Regional Transportation Authority of Southeast Michigan
Overview
Locale Metro Detroit
Transit type bus, bus rapid transit, commuter rail
Chief executive Michael Ford
Headquarters Detroit, Michigan
Website Regional Transit Authority of Southeast Michigan
Operation
Began operation 2013

The Regional Transit Authority of Southeast Michigan (RTA) is the agency with oversight and service coordination responsibility for mass transit operations in metropolitan Detroit, Michigan. The counties of Macomb, Oakland, Washtenaw, and Wayne are included in the agency's jurisdiction.[1]

Overview

The RTA is governed by a 10-member board which includes two representatives from each county, one representative from Detroit, and one non-voting representative appointed by the governor who chairs the board.[1] The board hires a CEO to oversee the day-to-day operations of the authority.

Powers

The board is granted the authority with a 7/9 supermajority of the voting members the powers to:[2]

  • determine the rate of and place on the ballot a levy of an assessment for the funding of transit services and operations.
  • determine the rate of and place on the ballot a vehicle registration tax for the funding of tranist services and operations.
  • determine to acquire existing street railways and acquire, construct or operate planned commuter rail services in the region.

The board is granted the authority with unanimous consent the powers to:

  • determine to acquire a public transit provider in the region.
  • place on the ballot a question of assuming liability or paying legacy costs of an acquired public transportation provider.

History

The RTA has its beginnings in the Metropolitan Transportation Authorities Act of 1967 (Public Act 204).[3] A provision of the act specifically created the Southeastern Michigan Transportation Authority (SEMTA), but provided the authority with no additional means to levy taxes or fees to fund the operations for the transit providers it had acquired.

In 1974, facing a loss of funding from SEMTA and wanting more control of its transit affairs, Detroit's Department of Street Railways (DSR) restructured itself as the Detroit Department of Transportation (DDOT).[4] On December 7, 1988, Public Act 204 was amended to restructure SEMTA, reducing the service area from seven counties to three, and excluding the city of Detroit.[4] The new transit authority was named the Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transit (SMART), and began operation on January 17, 1989. To continue limited coordination and development of services between DDOT and SMART, however, regional leaders representing the three-county area and Detroit filed articles of incorporation to form the Regional Transit Coordinating Council on January 12, 1989.[4]

On December 19, 2012 Governor Rick Snyder signed Senate Bill No. 909 into law establishing the Regional Transit Authority (RTA), which included a provision allowing for the first time a way for such a regional transit authority to fund itself.[5] Almost one month later, US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood announced that the M-1 Rail Line would receive 25 million in federal funding as he had previously indicated such support was dependent on the creation of a regional transit authority for the Detroit region.[6]

Along with oversight and coordination responsibilities for the Detroit Department of Transportation, Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation, Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority, and the Detroit Transportation Corporation, the authority was also established to create a single mass transit plan for the region, including the development, funding and operation of rapid transit along four major corridors in the metropolitan area. The new plan used as its basis the Comprehensive Regional Transit Service Plan, which was adopted on December 8, 2008.[7] The RTA chose HNTB to assist in the development of the Regional Master Transit Plan in 2015.

Future services

In early 2015, the RTA retained Parsons Brinkerhoff and AECOM to study improved mass transit along the corridors of Gratiot and Michigan avenues. The authority also took over oversight of the Woodward Avenue Alternative Analysis Rapid Transit Alternative study,[8] which found BRT (bus rapid tranist) as the locally preferred alternative as the improved mode of transit along a 27-mile stretch of Woodward Avenue.[9] The RTA announced on April 7, 2015 that it was seeking a request for proposal for express bus service to Detroit Wayne County Metropolitan Airport as a demonstration project.[10]

See also

Transportation in metropolitan Detroit

References

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External links