UPDATE: McKeesport BRT Meeting Rescheduled

There have been some changes to the schedule of BRT meetings. The McKeesport meeting has been moved from this Wednesday to next Monday, October 16th at 7pm at the Palisades (100 Fifth Avenue, 2nd floor).

Apologies for the confusion. Here’s the list of upcoming meetings/events for clarity:

  1. Letter delivery to Dom Costa’s office for Don’t Criminalize Transit Riders Campaign: Thursday, October 12th at 9:45am at Napoli Field in Morningside (near intersection of President Way and Antietam St.)
  2. McKeesport BRT Meeting: Monday, October 16th at 7pm @ The Palisades– 100 Fifth Avenue
  3. PPT October Meeting: Tuesday, October 17th at 7pm, location TBD
  4. Duquesne BRT Meeting: Wednesday, October 18th at 6:30pm at Duquesne City Hall (12 S. Second Street)

If anyone has any questions, please email chandana@pittsburghforpublictransit.org or call (718) 309-0853.

Thanks so much!

PPT October Meeting Postponed!

Hi all!

There’s been so much happening this past month! Thanks to the awesome work of residents and riders, the County and the Port Authority have scheduled three community meetings in Braddock, McKeesport, and Duquesne to address concerns around the BRT. Unfortunately, the upcoming one in McKeesport is happening at the same time as our scheduled October meeting.

In light of that, we’re going to be pushing back the PPT meeting to Tuesday, October 17th at 7pm, location TBD. If folks can instead make it to the McKeesport BRT meeting to support residents out there advocating against massive cuts to frequency on the 61 buses and loss of a direct route downtown, that would be awesome! Here’s more details:
MCKEESPORT BRT MEETING

7pm on Wednesday, October 18th at the Palisades (100 Fifth Avenue, 2nd floor)

In the meantime, please keep an eye out for our monthly newsletter later today for more updates on our campaigns and exciting upcoming events!

If you have any questions, please call (718) 309-0853 or email chandana@pittsburghforpublictransit.org!

Powerful Testimony at Port Authority Board Meeting Re: Policing on the T

September 29th, 2017

Great testimony today at the Port Authority board meeting about why we should not have criminal penalties and Port Authority police doing fare enforcement on the T! Speakers included representatives from The Women and Girls Foundation, Aryse, PIIN, Urban Kind, Fight for LIfers West, LCLAA, the Center for Independent Living and Beechview Area Concerned Citizens.

Additionally, groups that signed onto a letter of support for a civil enforcement process include:

The Hill District Consensus Group
Restaurant Opportunities Center of Pittsburgh
One PA
ACCESS Mob
Pennsylvania Immigration and Citizenship Coalition (PICC)
Bhutanese Community Association of Pittsburgh
Allentown CDC
Zone Three Public Safety Council
Bloomfield Livable Streets
Bike Pittsburgh

See the letter below:

To: Port Authority of Allegheny County

We are writing to demand that the Port Authority of Allegheny County halts the implementation of their fare enforcement policy – “the proof of payment system” – on the light rail, until public concerns have been adequately addressed.  

Our concerns for the implementation of the currently proposed proof of payment policy can be summarized as follows. For the black and brown community, we know that even police officers with the best of intentions practice racial profiling (selective enforcement). Across the country, requiring armed police to have thousands of extra encounters with the public a week has proven to result in unnecessary confrontations and use of force incidents. These disproportionately impact black and brown communities. There have been incidents involving Port Authority police in the past, including but not limited to the murder of Bruce Kelley, Jr. and a confrontation with Somali youth downtown. Many communities still remember the recent and tragic deaths of Oscar Grant and Chad Robertson at the hands of transit police in their own cities.

For the immigrant community: when police run their names to check for prior fare violations, this can trigger contact with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, and begin an unjust and destructive process of detainment and deportation. No one should be detained and deported for the suspicion of failing to pay a $2.50 fare. The recent case of Ariel Vences-Lopez having his immigration status questioned by Metro Transit Police in Minneapolis led to Mr. Vences-Lopez being detained by I.C.E. and scheduled for deportation.  

For youth: many students ride the T to school and after-school activities everyday. If they forget their bus pass 3 times, they are subject to both a Theft of Services and Criminal Trespass charge, which will result in a $300 fine or arrest. In NYC, 70% of arrestees were 16-17 years old. This will worsen the school-to-prison pipeline, lead to constitutional rights violations and future ACLU lawsuits.

In regard to those with mental health challenges, or intellectual disabilities: those with disabilities often respond in ways that police have misinterpreted as threats or defiance, and police have unnecessarily responded with force, leading to injury and death.

Finally, for the poor: this proposal results in the criminalization of an everyday necessity.

We support a civil fare enforcement process, where a civilian “fare ambassador” checks for fare payment, and writes a citation if someone cannot prove payment after several offences. Those citations would ultimately go to a bill collector, similar to the process that the Pittsburgh Parking Authority and Southwest PA Turnpike Commission follow. In addition, we believe that the Port Authority should have a policy limiting coordination and communication with ICE, should implement rigorous racial bias training for Port Authority Police and fare ambassadors, and have transparency and accountability with enforcement data.

There is ample evidence that demonstrates that the U.S. cities that have civilian fare checkers- with non-police powers- do not have a high rate of fare evasion. Our coalition is not proposing to duplicate any of these example cities’ fare enforcement practices entirely, but follow the best proof-of-payment practices that the Transit Cooperative Research Program of the Federal Transit Administration identifies: namely, to have a customer service approach rather than a traditional policing approach. It is important to note that concern over fare evasion is not the reason why PAAC is considering implementation of Proof-of- Payment. The only goal of the proof of payment is to increase efficiency, by allowing riders to board at any door on the T, without waiting in line to pay the driver or off-board fare collector. This goal would be accomplished regardless of whether or not enforcement were performed by Port Authority police or civilian fare ambassadors, and whether or not fare evasion had civil or criminal consequences, without any of the harm we foresee happening under the Port Authority’s current policy proposal.

Sincerely,

The Hill District Consensus Group

Restaurant Opportunities Center of Pittsburgh

One PA

ACCESS Mob

Pennsylvania Immigration and Citizenship Coalition (PICC)

Bhutanese Community Association of Pittsburgh

Allentown CDC

Zone Three Public Safety Council

Bloomfield Livable Streets

Bike Pittsburgh

LCLAA

Fight for Lifers West

Pittsburgh has one of the highest uses of public transit in the nation: Bus lines are lifelines!

The US Census reports that Pittsburgh workers that commute using public transit is growing– in 2016 it went up to 18.1% of the population, which puts us 9th in the nation. If you include biking and walking, that’s 31% of Pittsburgh’s workers. And that’s JUST in the city of Pittsburgh, and among our working population (which doesn’t count retirees and students, the unemployed and the rest of the county). When you fund transit, people will use it! No Cuts to Our Bus Lines!

PPT joins the ATU at the Labor Day Parade!

Pittsburghers for Public Transit marched with the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) on Monday, September 4th for Labor Day. YES to strong unions! PPT supports a safe, affordable, accessible transit system operated by union drivers paid good living wages and working in safe conditions.

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When We Fight, We Win! Port Authority holds BRT meetings in Braddock, Duquesne, and McKeesport

WHEN WE FIGHT, WE WIN! In response to concerns raised by community members, riders, ACCESS mob, and PPT, The Port Authority will be holding three community meetings in Braddock, McKeesport, and Duquesne.

Check out the facebook event page for Braddock and information on time and location for all three meetings below:

BRADDOCK
October 2 – 6:30 p.m.
The Avenue Apartments
325 Braddock Ave.
Braddock, PA

MCKEESPORT
October 11 – 7 p.m.
The Palisades
2nd floor
100 Fifth Ave
McKeesport, PA

DUQUESNE
October 18 – 6:30 p.m.
Duquesne City Hall
12 S. Second St.
Duquesne, PA

PPT goes to Harrisburg to Oppose Budget Cuts to Transit!

Harrisburg pic 1Harrisburg Trip Pic 2

On September 13th, House Republicans voted to pass a budget which approved cuts of $11.3 million to transit in Allegheny County. The budget then moved to a vote in the Senate, and PPT, along with the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) headed to Harrisburg to say “NO” to more cuts to transit!

Transit lines are life lines, and thousands of residents rely on public transit every day to get to doctor’s appointments, work, school and many other daily necessities.Transit is not a luxury or a privilege. It’s an absolute necessity!

Harrisburg Pic 3Harrisburg Pic 2

Mifflin Estates Transit Celebration!

MET Celebration1 MET Celebration2

The Mifflin Estates Transit Campaign celebrated the hard work they put in over the past year, with over 50 residents, bus drivers and PPT activists coming out to eat and find out more about the schedule and service. Thanks to their fight, the 55 will now be running through the community all day and on weekends! There was a shout out in the Trib about the restoration of service and the leaders that made it all possible. Thanks to all who made it such a success!

It is tragic, however, that Mifflin Estates residents had to celebrate in the midst of another attack on transit funding by far right PA legislators in Harrisburg, some of whom voted to defund their own districts’ bus service. Reporter Ryan Deto at the City Paper did an excellent job highlighting the impacts of the proposed budget on our Mifflin Estates campaign and on the potential for bus restoration in places like the North Hills, where community leaders have been pushing for additional transit for the last two years.

 

BRT Press Conference

Pittsburghers for Public Transit joined residents of Braddock, Duquesne, and Rankin, ACCESS Mob, and transit advocates to tell the Port Authority “No!” to mandatory transfers and service impacts to the disability community.

From the WESA coverage of the event: “The monetary and physical costs of switching buses take a toll on these communities, which tend to be older and have higher concentrations of poverty, said Tina Doose, president of Braddock Borough Council.

‘Going into Oakland, getting off one bus and getting on another bus and waiting for that to happen, that’s a real inconvenience,’ she said. ‘And when you have mobility impairments it’s more than inconvenience, sometimes it’s an impediment to be able to get where you need to go.’”

Picture: Residents and riders gathered around outside. MC Tony Buba is in the center with a microphone. Some residents holding signs that say “Bus Lines are Life Lines” and “Transit is a Right.”

 

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Thanks to everyone for turning out, and for the powerful speakers Braddock Municipal President Tina Doose, Mayor Elect Nickole Nesby of Duquesne, Gabriel McMoreland on behalf of ACCESS Mob, Braddock Resident Edith Bell, PPT’s own Chandana Cherukupalli, and Filmmaker Tony Buba for MC’ing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pictures: (right) Braddock Council President Tina Doose speaking (left) PPT members Sue Scanlon and Emily De Ferrari, holding signs with quotes from residents.

After PPT’s press conference and rally about the impacts of the BRT on communities in the Mon Valley, the Port Authority announced that they will hold the first public meeting in Braddock to lay out information about the impact of the BRT and answer questions. We are encouraging all those who will be impacted by changes to the 61 buses in Rankin, Braddock, Duquesne and Mckeesport to attend.

The meeting will take place at the senior apartment building located at 325 Braddock Avenue on Monday October 2nd at 6:30pm.

Affordable Housing and Access to Good Transit

“The city has talked the talk about affordable housing and talked about a commitment to access and mobility, but here’s the opportunity to actually prove it,” said Crystal Jennings, organizer of the Penn Plaza Support and Action Coalition.

“The Lexington site is next to the best transit in the city — the [Martin Luther King] East Busway. Residents displaced from the city in the East End and North Point Breeze and Homewood should have the right to return to affordable housing in the neighborhood, and it should be built there.”

From the Post Gazette article: Affordable housing eyed as part of East End site redevelopment