Google,
Facebook pay for shuttles to use San Francisco bus stops
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[August 02, 2014]
By Jennifer Baires
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Commuter
shuttles run by Google Inc, Facebook Inc and other Silicon Valley
companies began paying on Friday to make stops at San Francisco bus
stations after protests blamed them for gentrification.
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The private buses, which for years have taken tech workers from
San Francisco to their offices in Silicon Valley, have in recent
months drawn criticism from groups who say that by catering to
well-paid professionals, the buses lead to higher rents in diverse,
low-income neighborhoods.
Protesters also have said the vehicles get in the way of municipal
buses.
Under an 18-month pilot program that launched on Friday, the shuttle
services will be allowed to use bus stops at over 100 locations
throughout the city and in exchange they will pay at least $3.55
each time they pick up or drop off passengers, officials said.
The program has not completely quieted protests. A group of about
two dozen demonstrators gathered in the Mission District on Friday
to express continuing anger at the buses, which glided by them with
their new, bright green permit placards.
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) estimates
there are 35,000 daily trips made on the shuttles, and that through
this program it will raise $3.7 million to cover costs for making
sure they run smoothly.
“We're grateful to the SFMTA for taking the lead on the pilot and
look forward to working with the city and participating shuttle
operators to refine the program,” a Google spokesman said in a
statement.
Richard Drury, lead attorney in a lawsuit filed in May against the
city and a number of companies involved in the shuttle bus program,
said exhaust fumes from the buses are a concern in neighborhoods
where they operate.
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“The Mission District, a historically Latino area, is ground zero
for this program,” Drury said. “One of the main impacts of the
program is that it allows high-income people to displace low-income
residents in the Mission.”
His group is calling for the city to put more effort into studying
effects of the shuttle buses.
SFMTA declined to comment on the lawsuit.
“For many years now we’ve had commuter shuttles operating within the
city,” said SFMTA spokeswoman Kristen Holland. “They are large
charter buses that are regulated as vehicles themselves, outside of
our purview. We’re just regulating where they stop.”
(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis, Bernard Orr)
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