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ACTION ALERTS

Daily News Article
on Service Cuts

La Opinión Article
on Service Cuts

NEW
MTA Staff Proposes Massive Service Cuts for June 2008!
21 lines to be eliminated, 24 others to be reduced. Click here to see proposed cuts.

Call MTA Board Members NOW - Call Mayor Villaraigosa, Supervisors Yvonne Burke and Gloria Molina, and Councilmember Bernard Parks. Urge them to WITHDRAW Service Cut Proposal!

Join us on Feb. 26th 8:00am to Protest the Service Cuts! Corner of Wilshire & Vermont. Click here for flyer.

Join Us

PROTEST Against the Service Cuts!
Tuesday, Feb. 26th, 2008 8:00am
corner of Wilshire & Vermont


MTA Board Meeting
Thursday, Feb. 28th, 2008
9:00AM
MTA Headquarters-
1 Gateway Plaza,
( Chavez & Vignes, behind Union Station)

BRU Monthly Membership Meeting
March 15, 2008
Immanuel Presbyterian Church
3300 Wilshire Blvd. (@Berendo)
(720, 20, 754, 204, Vermont Red Line Station)

 

BECOME A MEMBER TODAY!
(Click here for membership form)

 

post may 24th flyer

(click on image for PDF version)

Oprima aqui para version en español

 

BRU Slows Down Pro-Fare Increase Forces on MTA Board and Protects Senior Age at 62! Click here to learn more.



Writ of mandate under CEQA


Petition for
Temporary Restraining Order


October 16, 2007

LEGAL UPDATE

Bus Riders Union, Labor/Community Strategy Center, and Natural Resources Defense Council continues the fight to stop the MTA's fare increase by pursuing their CEQA lawsuit

"By increasing bus fares and reducing bus service for system-expanding purposes and then unlawfully claiming these actions are exempt from CEQA, MTA is depriving itself and the public of much-needed information on which to base a sound decision about the environmental impacts of the bus-fare increases and bus-service reductions. Further, MTA is depriving the public of its right to know and participate in decisions that are critical to protecting human health and the environment. This action challenges the decision by MTA to increase bus fares and reduce bus service in order to fund rail and highway capital projects without any environmental review."

-excerpt from Writ of Mandate under CEQA
submitted by Bus Riders Union and the
Natural Resources Defense Council

In the upcoming weeks the Bus Riders Union and the Natural Resources Defense Council will be heading back into court pursuant to our June 26th California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) lawsuit.

We want to thank our Legal Team at the Natural Resources Defense Council: David Petit and Timothy Grabiel.



BRU's Opening Brief




MTA's Answering Brief




BRU's Reply Brief

October 4, 2007

LEGAL UPDATE

Labor/Community Strategy Center submits last brief for Appeal before awaiting Oral Argument before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals

On September 4, 2007 lawyers from Public Advocates and Howrey LLP submitted the last brief, on behalf of the Labor/Community Strategy Center before awaiting Oral argument in front of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal. The appeal was submitted in response to an earlier ruling by the District Court in October of 2006 which rejected the Labor/Community Strategy Center's submission for an Extension of the Consent Decree and to hold the MTA in Civil Contempt. Oral argument is expected to be scheduled within the year.

We want to thank our Legal Team: Karen M. Lockwood, Ethan B. Andelman, and Katherine M. Basile from Howrey LLP and Richard A. Marcantonio and Angelica K. Jongco from Public Advocates, Inc. We also want to appreciate Brad Seligman from the Impact Fund for assisting us in our search for legal representation. We want to thank Lead Organizer Eric Mann in providing tactical leadership. We also want to thank the other members of our Civil Rights enforcement team: Manuel Criollo and Dae-Han Song.


 

City Council Deliberates on Wilshire Bus-Only Lane Proposal


 click to
access video


Media Coverage



Click to access
PDF File

Click to access
PDF file

 

August 14, 2007
Press Conference
on Bus Only Lanes

August 17, 2007

Exciting News:  Los Angeles City Council Approves a $27 Million Wilshire Blvd Peak Hour Bus-Only Lane!

The Strategy Center and Bus Riders Union’s Clean Air, Clean Lungs, Clean Buses Campaign Wins a Breakthrough in the Struggle to Restrict the Auto
and Clean up LA’s Lethal Air

On Wednesday, August 15th, the Strategy Center and Bus Riders Union secured an important environmental and public health victory at the Los Angeles City Council – the approval of a $27 million project to implement peak hour bus-only lanes on Wilshire Boulevard.  The Wilshire Bus-Only Lane would run from downtown Los Angeles to Santa Monica and would operate from 7:00am-9:00am and 4:00pm to 7:00pm during rush hour. Wilshire Boulevard has the largest transit ridership in the county with over 90,000 boardings a day.  The bus-only lane is expected to reduce travel time by 20% for current transit users and would attract new riders to public transportation.   This vote prioritizes public transit and is a break from auto-driven public policy in the car capital of the world.

This is a step towards the implementation of a countywide network of bus-only lanes on all major bus transit corridors in Los Angeles County.   A countywide bus-only lane network would reduce the harmful emissions of auto tailpipe toxins that attack our children’s health and damage the environment.  As BRU Planning Committee member Jorge Alberto states, “this decision represents a challenge to the auto industry, but equally as important it’s an improvement in the mobility and public health for the primarily immigrant and working class of color transit dependent.” We also believe dramatic changes in transit policy are necessary to reduce greenhouse gases in order to begin to address our responsibility to the Third World and communities most devastated by global warming. 

Bus-only lanes are a way to utilize the existing infrastructure—roads and freeways—and use it more efficiently. By taking one existing lane of mixed flow traffic (cars, buses, etc.) and using it exclusively for buses we can triple or quadruple the lane’s utility, improve the speed of the buses, and help make public transportation an alternative to the auto. 
 
For the last four years, this project has been highly contested and faced many bureaucratic obstacles. We have had to directly pressure City Leaders to move beyond verbal support towards actually funding and implementing the project.  We would like to thank Councilmembers Wendy Greuel, Bill Rosendahl, and Jack Weiss, along with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa for the leadership they provided to help usher the City Council vote.

We would also like to thank our allies who have supported the fight for the Wilshire Bus-Only Lane: David Petit and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), Breathe California of Los Angeles County, Security Officers United of Los Angeles 2006 (SOULA2006), Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance, students and faculty from Camino Nuevo, Cleveland, and Westchester High Schools, and all the institutions, organizations and businesses that have endorsed the campaign.

We will be sending more updates, analysis, and next steps soon.  We look forward to working with you in our ongoing battle to curtail auto use and its lethal emissions.



(click here for more photographs)

June 16, 2007

Over 100 Allies, community members, and Bus Riders Union members gather to debrief on the current fight and plan next steps to stop the implementation of the Fare Hike in July, and to celebrate the movement building that brought 1,500 people to the May 24th Fare Hike Public Hearing and Final Vote.

MTA's New Fare Structure
(click on image for PDF version)

for HTML version click here

PHOTOS


Manuel Criollo, Lead Organizer with the Bus Riders Union, interviewed on
ABC 7 News.


Crowd cheering on the speakers.


Hundreds gather in MTA Lobby and outside of building once Board Room and overflow rooms are filled to capacity


Montserrat Iñiguez, Santa Monica City College student, challenges Gloria Molina on the fare hike proposal

(click here for more photographs)


MEDIA COVERAGE
(double click here or on image to access)

(courtesy of ABC 7 News)

KNBC Channel 4
(courtesy of KNBC 4)
FOX Channel 11

(courtesy of FOX 11)
KTLA Channel 5
(courtesy of KTLA 5)
CBS Channel 2
(courtesy of CBS 2)

(check in the near future for posting of spanish media coverage)


ARTICLES

May 24, 2007
1,500 Protest as MTA Considers Fare Hikes
(click here for full LA Times article)

MTA at a Crossroads with Fare Decision
(click here for full LA Times article)

Students Sign Petition Opposing MTA Rate Increase
(click here for full San Ferando Sun article)

L.A. Metro to Raise Fares 72% in 4 Years
(click here for full Long Beach Press-Telegram article)

 

May 25, 2007
Everyone Loses with MTA's Rate Decision
(click here for full LA Times article)

MTA Approves Steep Hikes for Bus, Rail Fares
(click here for full LA Times article)

Metro Raises Bus, Train Fares
(click here for full Daily News article)

Activists Assail Proposed MTA Fare Hikes
(click here for full Wave article)

ESPAÑOL
Aprueban Alza al Transporte
(oprima aqui para el articulo completo de La Opinion)

 

May 26, 2007
MTA Fee Hikes Still Leave Rail Plans Unsure
(click here for full LA Times article)

ESPAÑOL
En Marcha Demanda vs. Metro
(oprima aqui para el articulo completo de La Opinion)

 

June 4, 2007

The Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) Approves
Racist Fare Increases Despite Unprecedented Public Opposition
Where Does the Bus Riders Union and the Movement Go from Here?

Commentary by Eric Mann and Manuel Criollo

 Los Angeles, June 1, 2007

On Thursday, May 24, 2007, despite 1,500 angry bus riders taking time off work to come demand that fares not be increased but decreased, 9 out of 13 MTA Board members voted for a major increase in bus fares, led by board members Gloria Molina and Yvonne Braithwaite Burke.  The monthly bus pass will go from $52 to $62 as of July 1, 2007, to $75 on July 1, 2009 and $90.00 on July 1, 2011. Thus, two years from now, bus fares will increase by 42% while working people’s salaries will likely not rise at all. The daily bus pass, presently at $3, will raise to $5 on July 1, 2007—an increase of 67%.

This vote capped two months of one of the most public struggles in L.A. County, one that nearly everyone had been exposed to due to the Bus Riders Union’s work in spreading the word through a huge outreach campaign to the mass media and through our daily on the bus and in-the-high schools organizing. Our lawn sign campaign, “Mayor Villaraigosa: Stop the MTA’s Racist Fare Hikes” was as the Mayor said on TV, “all over the city.”  Our sustained media coverage during the last month of the campaign achieved one of our main objectives—first, “saturation” across L.A. county, and second, “consciousness-building,” that is, we got word to large numbers of people that there was going to be a “racist fare hike” and then we challenged them to decide what they thought about it and what they wanted to do about it.

The low-down:

  • The MTA approved fare increase is a major attack on the civil rights and lived daily experience of Black, Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, and all working class bus riders.
  • The MTA fare increase is a major attack on the environment and a significant setback for the movement to reduce greenhouse gases and reverse global warming.
  • The massive public turnout of 1,500 people, from the poorest bus riders to middle class “choice riders” but overwhelmingly Black, Latino, and Asian working class people was a major breakthrough for the movements of resistance in Los Angeles, and for a broad united front for civil rights and the environment.
  • The challenge for us all, is given the hostility of the MTA, and every other arena of government, and the reduced options in the federal courts, where does our movement go from here. How do we take a truly remarkable breakthrough in our organizing to keep people motivated and in a strategic and tactically relevant direction?

We at the Bus Riders Union wanted to take a minute to say thank you to all of the Friends and Allies that came to support bus riders last Thursday at the MTA, as well as all the great work that everyone did leading up to the MTA vote.  We also wanted to give you a first take on what happened, what passed and what are next steps.

What Happened on May 24th?

No doubt, the May 24th MTA fare increase public hearing is an important chapter for the movement of resistance in Los Angeles, where over 1,500 BRU members, allies, students, seniors and disabled activists, religious and environmental leaders and hundreds of bus riders stood up, loud and clear, against any MTA’s fare increase and transit racism.  Yet soberly, we are clear that at the end of the day, a MTA Board majority locked-in a multi-year devastating fare hike.  If not reversed, this will be a major blow on the civil and economic rights of Latino, Black, Asian and all working class bus riders and the environment.  Worse, the emboldened MTA majority, determined to undermine the major gains of our 10 year Consent Decree and our 2,500 new Compressed Natural Gas buses, is hell bent on building every rail line they can, cutting bus service, raising bus fares---even if it means bankrupting the agency. 

To begin with, MTA CEO Roger Snoble floated a maximum-pain plan with a proposed $120 a month bus pass. Eric Mann and Manuel Criollo warned the public in their op-eds in the LA Times and La Opinion that Roger Snoble was trying to set the bar of pain so high that anything less would seem like a “compromise.” But in fact, we have no illusion; the fare increase led by MTA Directors Gloria Molina, Zev Yaroslavasky, Yvonne Braithwaite Burke, Pam O’Conner and John Fasana from $52 to $62 to $75 to $90.00 is not a compromise. It is the draconian attack we feared, it is the essence of the Snoble motion. It is the attack on civil rights and the environment we most feared.

The Mayor’s Compromise Motion
Mayor Villaraigosa and his three appointees Richard Katz, Councilperson Bernard Parks and Lee Alpert led a strong fight against MTA’s major fare increase proposal. We had wanted them to back our proposal for fare reductions but we had no votes on the board, and they were pushed hard by us but still felt they had to come up with some fare increase. The positives about the Mayor’s compromise proposal were:

    1. It increased fares by 5% a year, (still way too much) but significantly lower than Molina’s 20% every two years (remember the mayor’s would still be 10% every two years.)
    2. He also proposed to borrow funds to buy buses, by using “debt service” and bonds to do what the MTA does to buy and construct trains – which would have freed up funds for bus and rail operating money.
    3.  He also proposed—God forbid—cutting back on rail service, as close to a revolutionary idea that the MTA board had ever heard— much to the horror and outrage of the board majority.

The Mayor only got 5 votes for his proposal, and then one board member, Long Beach City Councilperson Bonnie Lowenthal, shifted her vote to the Molina motion and completing the 9 votes needed to inflict hell on bus riders. The Mayor fought for his position, but given his long history of being a great vote getter in the assembly, we wonder why he couldn’t get one more vote to block any fare increases. One reason is that virtually every board member, including the Mayor, is very committed to rail projects, so a vote to block any bus fare increases would be a vote to slow down rail construction considerably—thus, there are no other votes on the board to even “share the pain” let alone stop rail and build up the bus system which is what we demanded.

After five hours of gripping, moving and forceful testimony by hundred of riders, activists and advocates against any form of an MTA fare increase with over 400 speakers signing-up and over 350 speakers actually giving their testimony – the MTA Board majority, led by MTA Chair Molina and Board Member Yvonne Brathwaite Burke (each a beneficiary of the civil rights movement and now turning it on its head) introduced their proposal; not even a comma or a period was altered from their pre-agreed motion to increase fares.  Even after listening to the heart rending testimony of Black and Latino and Asian bus riders literally begging the MTA to not increase fares—saying that with family incomes of $12,000 to $20,000 they cannot make it on their present income, the MTA voted through their motion. Once again 500,000 daily bus riders are being asked to pay, through 60% fare increases and thousands of hours of service cuts, for the expansion of rail construction and operations.

Transit Racism – Alive and Well!
We are living in a period we call “the second counter-revolution” the system’s backlash against the Civil Rights movement, liberal social programs, and the anti-Vietnam war movement.  Institutional racism is being solidified in all aspects of society—with the rollback of civil rights laws and protections.  There is even fear among organizers working in Black, Latino, and Asian/Pacific Islander communities that openly using concepts like racism and national oppression, and demands like reparations, open borders, or in our case, an anti-racist demand to shut down all rail construction, will isolate them and generate a backlash.  This has led to the leadership of the Democratic Party abandoning anti-racist proposals, who have often conciliated to right-wing conservative rural and suburban voters.

In this context one of the achievements of our “Billions for Buses---Fight for Environmental Justice, Stop Transit Racism” campaign has been to re-open the marketplace of ideas, or to break down its doors, to inject a coherent, popular anti-racist discourse.  Many mainstream reporters (and you can get copies on our website) have been able to report,  “Today, the Bus Riders Union is opposing the MTA’s proposed fare hikes. They say this will punish low-income Black and Latino riders and subsidize the MTA’s expensive rail projects. The BRU contends that rail projects cater to a wealthier, white ridership and thus they call the fare increases racist.”

Even the Mayor had to respond to our lawn sign campaigns, telling the media, “The Bus Riders are putting up signs all over town saying Mayor Villaraigosa, Stop the MTA’s Racist Fare Increase and they are singling me out.”  While he did not like it, we were in fact not calling him a racist, but asking him to stop the MTA’s racist policies, and to give him credit, while he may not have liked the pressure, he did respond and did challenge the policy.

Ultimately, We are pursuing both a politics that is able to identify the structural source of the “problem” and at the same time call on our elected officials to combat a policy that will engrain institutional racism, such as a merciless fare increase that would be shouldered by 86% Black, Brown, Asian transit riders – this is and will be a racially discriminatory policy.  


The Final and Approved Fare Increase by MTA Board Majority

  • The MTA is moving to jack up fare cost rapidly -- the first increase of 20% will be in less than 5 weeks and within 2 years the total increase will be 42% and a locked in additional 24% increase in 2011, with an option for an additional increase for year eight.
  • Director Molina’s fare increase proposal also included that MTA staff “study” on restructuring service (euphemism for the cutting of service) on the 25 "lowest performing lines".  This lines aren’t bad lines, but according to MTA mathematical equations used to justify cuts, these are lines which only operate at 75% of capacity (30 passengers on each bus), verses the lines that now are operating at 125% or 150% of capacity busting from the seams, massively overcrowded and offer a more “worthy subsidy” of just pennies to carry Black and Brown bus riders on MTA larger lines.
  • Thrown out are the arguments for fare reductions, the expansion of bus service, or MTA coming to grips with the enormous subsidies that they provides to many half emptied suburban trains and rail lines, the bankrupt and racially discriminatory transit policy to emphasize rail construction over bus services, or the actual mass scale suffering that these increase will have on bus riders who are barely surviving with family incomes of $12,000.

Building the Strongest and Broadest Coalition in Our History

  • We constructed one of the most strongest and broadest coalitions against the MTA fare increase – which included civic and religious leaders such as Reverend Lewis Logan of Bethal AME, Father Bill Delany from Saint Agnes Church, Andy Lipkis director of Tree People, Michelle Prichard from Green LA, Reverend William Monroe Campbell from Mount Gilead Baptist Church, Nativo Lopez from the Mexican American Political Association, David Petit from the Natural Resources Defense Council, leaders and members of SEIU SOULA 2006, SEIU 6434 Home Care Workers, the Korean American Federation, Maternal and Child Health Access and scores of ally organizations from LA Community Action Network to Communities for Better Environment to LA CAUSA Youth Build to KIWA to SCOPE/ AGENDA to AWARE to Community Coalition to IDEPSCA to name only but a few, all the while Westchester High School and Cleveland High School led dozens of students and teachers from across the city taking over MTA lobby that included students and teachers from Camino Nuevo High School, LA City College, Central High School and Washington Prep High School.
  • The MTA palatial building was shut down by the Los Angeles Fire Marshal as several hundreds filled the MTA main board room, the overflow rooms, and the MTA lobby packed with 200 people chanting and demanding their right to enter the MTA board room and speak.  BRU leaders and organizers led a people’s public hearing at the MTA lobby in two languages.  The messages were loud and clear, not a penny more, stop transit racism, stop MTA’s rail obsession and instead of raising fares, lower fares. 
  • An important breakthrough in expanding our message and reach through very meticulous media work, bus organizing and e-organizing work.  These last two months, we opened an important front in our organizing plan through media work – we were able to build momentum, shape public debate and build a master narrative for the public through dozens of news stories from TV, radio, print, blogs – you name it.  Our bus organizing and mass outreach through flyers, posters, banners and those pesky “Mayor Villaraigosa: Stop the MTA’s Racist Fare Increase!” lawn signs – we reached critical mass in saturating neighborhoods in South LA, East Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley and Pico-Union/Westlake.  Our e-organizing through our website www.busridersunion.org, weekly e-mail blast, opening new fronts in myspace and youtube, all to reach the critical mass and build momentum for our movement. 

What NOW?

We are pursuing every civil rights and environmental response, including legal challenges.  We are working with the Natural Resources Defense Council and Howery LLP to explore our legal options on MTA’s latest move to increase fares.  Howery LLP is representing us, as we prepare to present to the Ninth Circuit in June.  Our lawyers are in the final leg of finishing our legal arguments and presentations to reverse last year’s decision to not extend the civil rights Consent Decree to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal.  This challenge is to stay MTA’s hand in their attempt to destroy the gain of the Consent Decree.  We will exercise all our option to stop MTA’s plans.  

More importantly, we will be building from our momentum on the buses – how all this will play out will be the next phase of the struggle through intense internal discussions inside our leadership bodies and discussions that we will be engaging with our allies and our base on the buses of Los Angeles. 

We made history on May 24th – now we have to move to our next phase of struggle – collecting legal testimonies from bus riders – documenting the irreparable harms these fares will have on their families and calculating the amount of possible ridership loss and increase auto use that will be triggered by this hikes.   We will of course be gauging the riders outrage at these new approved fare hikes and look at all tactics to reverse this outrageous and painful increase.


Where You Come In – Join us for our Citywide Meeting on Saturday, June 16th

We are in for a long hot summer of action in the courts and out in the streets.   First move, we hope you will join us for “Where Do We Go From Here” Citywide meeting on Saturday, June 16th at 9:30 am at Immanuel Presbyterian Church to continue growing this movement.  There are many organizations and activists that we have never worked so closely with as we have during this fight. We need to continue and expand this work to stop and reverse these fare increases.  We are continuing to explore a girth of options and will keep you up-to-date.  Again the 500,000 daily bus riders and their families thank you.

 

 
  (Click here to see past updates ...)