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Monterey–Salinas Transit

Monterey–Salinas Transit (MST) is the public transit system for Monterey County, California. Service is primarily to the greater Monterey and Salinas areas, but extends as far south as Paso Robles and Big Sur and as far north as Watsonville. Most lines follow a hub-and-spoke system, connecting at hubs in Monterey or Salinas. In 2023, the system had a ridership of 2,470,300, or about 8,100 per weekday as of the fourth quarter of 2023.

Monterey-Salinas Transit bus in Monterey in 2021
Founded1981
HeadquartersOne Ryan Ranch Road, Monterey, California USA
Service areaMonterey County and parts of Santa Cruz and Santa Clara Counties
Service typebus service, DRT, paratransit
Routes34
Stops954
StationsMonterey Transit Plaza
Salinas Transit Center, Marina Transit Center
Fleet133
Daily ridership8,100 (weekdays, Q4 2023)[1]
Annual ridership2,470,300 (2023)[2]
OperatorMonterey-Salinas Transit District
Websitemst.org

History edit

The first public transportation services for Monterey County were provided by Southern Pacific Railroad passenger trains, including the Del Monte to and from San Francisco along the Monterey Branch Line connecting Pacific Grove to Castroville. The Monterey and Pacific Grove Railway provided the first intra-county services using horse cars starting on August 5, 1891. Independent streetcar systems in Monterey (the Monterey and Del Monte Heights Railway Company, connecting Monterey to Seaside) and Salinas (the "Dingy" for Spreckels Sugar Company employees and their families) started around 1912.[3]: II-1, A-7, A-8 

 
Bay Rapid Transit Co. (replica) Fageol-Twin Coach bus, originally built in 1948 for Tacoma Transit Company; it was purchased by MST in 1983 and repainted in BRTCo. livery. It is currently owned and housed at the Pacific Bus Museum.

The first motorbus services began in 1918, provided by the Monterey-Carmel Bus Line; a younger upstart, Bay Rapid Transit, was formed in 1922.[3]: II-1  Bay Rapid Transit aggressively challenged existing streetcar lines, operating over the same routes and offering promotions and lower fares to attract passengers. The facilities of the Monterey and Pacific Grove Railway were destroyed in a mysterious fire and that streetcar line ceased operations in December 1923.[3]: A-8  Bay Rapid Transit expanded their coverage to Carmel in 1925 and other motorbus services started at this time, including East Monterey Bus Lines (EMBL, 1932), providing service to Seaside and Fort Ord.[3]: A-8  EMBL folded in 1947 after the wartime boom (providing transportation for sailors and soldiers at Ford Ord and Monterey) ended, despite booming Cannery Row sardine operations. Canneries began closing in the early 1950s after the sardine population collapsed and passenger traffic began to decline.[3]: A-9 

Meanwhile in Salinas, the Robb and Baily Transit Company were granted a franchise to service Salinas Airport in 1937 but filed for bankruptcy three years later; its assets were purchased by the Robb Transportation Company, which continued to provide public transportation services in the City of Salinas until 1953,[3]: A-8  when the privately-owned Salinas Transportation Company took over routes in Salinas and Alisal, starting from 1954.[3]: A-9 

By 1972, it was apparent that Bay Rapid Transit, like other privately-owned transportation services in California, would need public subsidies to continue operations. Monterey Peninsula Transit (MPT), formed as a joint powers authority by cities in Monterey County (initially Carmel, Del Rey Oaks, Monterey, Pacific Grove, and Seaside) and the County of Monterey,[3]: A-9  took over Bay Rapid Transit lines in 1973; Marina would join the MPTJPA in 1975.[3]: A-10  Pacific Grove operated its own system (Mini-Monarch Transit) briefly until 1978, when it was absorbed into MPT.[3]: A-10  In Salinas, the city took over operations from Salinas City Lines in 1976 and operated its routes as the Salinas Transit System. Monterey–Salinas Transit was formed in 1981 when Salinas Transit was absorbed into Monterey Peninsula Transit and Salinas joined the MPTJPA.[3]: II-1, A-10 

The JPA was dissolved and re-formed as the Monterey-Salinas Transit District on July 1, 2010.[4]

Governance edit

MST is governed by a board of directors, with one member and one alternate from each municipality (the listed cities); in addition, the County of Monterey has a member and alternate:[4]

  • Carmel-by-the-Sea
  • Del Rey Oaks
  • Gonzales
  • Greenfield
  • King City
  • Marina
  • Monterey
  • Pacific Grove
  • Salinas
  • Sand City
  • Seaside
  • Soledad

The members of the Board elect a Chair and Vice Chair. The Board of Directors appoints the General Manager, who oversees daily operations and maintenance activities.[5][6]

Service edit

 
Key intercity routes for MST[7]: 9  and passenger rail services (Caltrain Monterey County Rail Extension and Amtrak Coast Starlight) in Monterey County; note MST's 22 Big Sur was discontinued in September 2021[8]

MST currently operates 131 fixed-route lines, two demand-responsive transit services, free seasonal shuttles, and paratransit service, covering a service area of 295 sq mi (760 km2). Six of the fixed routes are long-distance intercity commuter routes that connect to destinations outside the county, including Santa Cruz, Paso Robles, and Templeton.[7]: 4  Supplemental service is offered on relevant lines during major events and is usually free for event ticketholders.

 
MST Trolley (2006)

During the summer and select holidays, the MST Trolley, formerly the Waterfront Area Visitor Express (WAVE), a free shuttle, serves Old Town Monterey, Cannery Row, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

MST's demand-responsive transit service, MST On Call, covers areas away from MST's standard routes. MST On Call Marina provides timed transfers at Marina Transit Exchange. MST On Call South County serves the cities of Gonzales, Greenfield and King and provides connections to the Line 23 serving the highway 101 corridor from King City to Salinas.

MST RIDES is a paratransit service available to persons who have a disability preventing them from using MST's regular fixed-route service. It operates under its own fare structure.

As of 2020, MST plans to construct a dedicated busway for the SURF! bus rapid transit service on the former Monterey Branch Line between Marina and Sand City.[9]

Hubs edit

 
Salinas Transit Center (2012)

The primary passenger hubs of the MST system are the Monterey Transit Plaza and the Salinas Transit Center, which serve most local and regional services. The Salinas hub will be relocated to Salinas station as the Salinas Intermodal Transportation Center in 2022 when Caltrain service is extended to Salinas.[10] Smaller hubs include Watsonville Transit Center, Marina Transit Exchange, Sand City Station, CSUMB, Del Monte Center, and Carmel Plaza.[11]

Operations edit

MST performs maintenance and refueling at four facilities:[7]: 15 

  • Thomas D. Albert Division, 1 Ryan Ranch Road (Monterey), fixed routes
  • Clarence J. Wright Division, 443 Victor Way (Salinas), fixed routes
  • South County Operations and Maintenance, San Antonio Drive (King City), long-distance intercity routes[12][13]
  • MV Transportation, 4512 Joey Lloyd Way (Seaside), paratransit service (owned and operated by contractor)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. March 4, 2024. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  2. ^ "Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. March 4, 2024. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Business Plan and Short Range Transit Plan, FY 2006 through FY 2008 (PDF) (Report). Monterey-Salinas Transit. June 2005. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Assembly Bill 644 | Chapter 460: An act to add Part 17 (commencing with Section 106000) to Division 10 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to transportation". California State Legislature. October 11, 2009. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  5. ^ "Board of Directors". Monterey-Salinas Transit. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  6. ^ "Executive Leadership". Monterey-Salinas Transit. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  7. ^ a b c Monterey-Salinas Transit District Innovative Clean Transit (ICT) Rollout Plan (PDF) (Report). Monterey-Salinas Transit District. December 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  8. ^ "22 Big Sur–Monterey" (PDF). Monterey-Salinas Transit District. December 11, 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  9. ^ "MST Making Headway with SURF! Busway Plans". 2020 Annual Report. Monterey–Salinas Transit.
  10. ^ "Monterey Rail Extension Phase 1: Kick Start". Transportation Agency for Monterey County – TAMC. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  11. ^ "Overview". Monterey–Salinas Transit. Retrieved October 12, 2021.
  12. ^ Denise Duffy and Associates, Inc. (August 1, 2017). "1: Project Description" (PDF). MST South County Operations and Maintenance Facility Project (Report). Monterey-Salinas Transit District. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  13. ^ "Monterey-Salinas Transit (MST) Plans Celebration For Completion Of Its South County Operations and Maintenance Facility In King City On Monday, October 11, 2021" (Press release). Monterey-Salinas Transit District. 4 October 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2022.

External links edit

  Media related to Monterey–Salinas Transit at Wikimedia Commons

  • Monterey–Salinas Transit

monterey, salinas, transit, public, transit, system, monterey, county, california, service, primarily, greater, monterey, salinas, areas, extends, south, paso, robles, north, watsonville, most, lines, follow, spoke, system, connecting, hubs, monterey, salinas,. Monterey Salinas Transit MST is the public transit system for Monterey County California Service is primarily to the greater Monterey and Salinas areas but extends as far south as Paso Robles and Big Sur and as far north as Watsonville Most lines follow a hub and spoke system connecting at hubs in Monterey or Salinas In 2023 the system had a ridership of 2 470 300 or about 8 100 per weekday as of the fourth quarter of 2023 Monterey Salinas Transit bus in Monterey in 2021Founded1981HeadquartersOne Ryan Ranch Road Monterey California USAService areaMonterey County and parts of Santa Cruz and Santa Clara CountiesService typebus service DRT paratransitRoutes34Stops954StationsMonterey Transit PlazaSalinas Transit Center Marina Transit CenterFleet133Daily ridership8 100 weekdays Q4 2023 1 Annual ridership2 470 300 2023 2 OperatorMonterey Salinas Transit DistrictWebsitemst org Contents 1 History 1 1 Governance 2 Service 2 1 Hubs 2 2 Operations 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe first public transportation services for Monterey County were provided by Southern Pacific Railroad passenger trains including the Del Monte to and from San Francisco along the Monterey Branch Line connecting Pacific Grove to Castroville The Monterey and Pacific Grove Railway provided the first intra county services using horse cars starting on August 5 1891 Independent streetcar systems in Monterey the Monterey and Del Monte Heights Railway Company connecting Monterey to Seaside and Salinas the Dingy for Spreckels Sugar Company employees and their families started around 1912 3 II 1 A 7 A 8 nbsp Bay Rapid Transit Co replica Fageol Twin Coach bus originally built in 1948 for Tacoma Transit Company it was purchased by MST in 1983 and repainted in BRTCo livery It is currently owned and housed at the Pacific Bus Museum The first motorbus services began in 1918 provided by the Monterey Carmel Bus Line a younger upstart Bay Rapid Transit was formed in 1922 3 II 1 Bay Rapid Transit aggressively challenged existing streetcar lines operating over the same routes and offering promotions and lower fares to attract passengers The facilities of the Monterey and Pacific Grove Railway were destroyed in a mysterious fire and that streetcar line ceased operations in December 1923 3 A 8 Bay Rapid Transit expanded their coverage to Carmel in 1925 and other motorbus services started at this time including East Monterey Bus Lines EMBL 1932 providing service to Seaside and Fort Ord 3 A 8 EMBL folded in 1947 after the wartime boom providing transportation for sailors and soldiers at Ford Ord and Monterey ended despite booming Cannery Row sardine operations Canneries began closing in the early 1950s after the sardine population collapsed and passenger traffic began to decline 3 A 9 Meanwhile in Salinas the Robb and Baily Transit Company were granted a franchise to service Salinas Airport in 1937 but filed for bankruptcy three years later its assets were purchased by the Robb Transportation Company which continued to provide public transportation services in the City of Salinas until 1953 3 A 8 when the privately owned Salinas Transportation Company took over routes in Salinas and Alisal starting from 1954 3 A 9 By 1972 it was apparent that Bay Rapid Transit like other privately owned transportation services in California would need public subsidies to continue operations Monterey Peninsula Transit MPT formed as a joint powers authority by cities in Monterey County initially Carmel Del Rey Oaks Monterey Pacific Grove and Seaside and the County of Monterey 3 A 9 took over Bay Rapid Transit lines in 1973 Marina would join the MPTJPA in 1975 3 A 10 Pacific Grove operated its own system Mini Monarch Transit briefly until 1978 when it was absorbed into MPT 3 A 10 In Salinas the city took over operations from Salinas City Lines in 1976 and operated its routes as the Salinas Transit System Monterey Salinas Transit was formed in 1981 when Salinas Transit was absorbed into Monterey Peninsula Transit and Salinas joined the MPTJPA 3 II 1 A 10 The JPA was dissolved and re formed as the Monterey Salinas Transit District on July 1 2010 4 Governance edit MST is governed by a board of directors with one member and one alternate from each municipality the listed cities in addition the County of Monterey has a member and alternate 4 Carmel by the Sea Del Rey Oaks Gonzales Greenfield King City Marina Monterey Pacific Grove Salinas Sand City Seaside Soledad The members of the Board elect a Chair and Vice Chair The Board of Directors appoints the General Manager who oversees daily operations and maintenance activities 5 6 Service edit nbsp Key intercity routes for MST 7 9 and passenger rail services Caltrain Monterey County Rail Extension and Amtrak Coast Starlight in Monterey County note MST s 22 Big Sur was discontinued in September 2021 8 Main article List of Monterey Salinas Transit lines MST currently operates 131 fixed route lines two demand responsive transit services free seasonal shuttles and paratransit service covering a service area of 295 sq mi 760 km2 Six of the fixed routes are long distance intercity commuter routes that connect to destinations outside the county including Santa Cruz Paso Robles and Templeton 7 4 Supplemental service is offered on relevant lines during major events and is usually free for event ticketholders nbsp MST Trolley 2006 During the summer and select holidays the MST Trolley formerly the Waterfront Area Visitor Express WAVE a free shuttle serves Old Town Monterey Cannery Row and the Monterey Bay Aquarium MST s demand responsive transit service MST On Call covers areas away from MST s standard routes MST On Call Marina provides timed transfers at Marina Transit Exchange MST On Call South County serves the cities of Gonzales Greenfield and King and provides connections to the Line 23 serving the highway 101 corridor from King City to Salinas MST RIDES is a paratransit service available to persons who have a disability preventing them from using MST s regular fixed route service It operates under its own fare structure As of 2020 update MST plans to construct a dedicated busway for the SURF bus rapid transit service on the former Monterey Branch Line between Marina and Sand City 9 Hubs edit nbsp Salinas Transit Center 2012 The primary passenger hubs of the MST system are the Monterey Transit Plaza and the Salinas Transit Center which serve most local and regional services The Salinas hub will be relocated to Salinas station as the Salinas Intermodal Transportation Center in 2022 when Caltrain service is extended to Salinas 10 Smaller hubs include Watsonville Transit Center Marina Transit Exchange Sand City Station CSUMB Del Monte Center and Carmel Plaza 11 Operations edit MST performs maintenance and refueling at four facilities 7 15 Thomas D Albert Division 1 Ryan Ranch Road Monterey fixed routes Clarence J Wright Division 443 Victor Way Salinas fixed routes South County Operations and Maintenance San Antonio Drive King City long distance intercity routes 12 13 MV Transportation 4512 Joey Lloyd Way Seaside paratransit service owned and operated by contractor See also editMonterey County Rail ExtensionReferences edit Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023 PDF American Public Transportation Association March 4 2024 Retrieved March 14 2024 Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023 PDF American Public Transportation Association March 4 2024 Retrieved March 14 2024 a b c d e f g h i j k Business Plan and Short Range Transit Plan FY 2006 through FY 2008 PDF Report Monterey Salinas Transit June 2005 Retrieved 1 September 2022 a b Assembly Bill 644 Chapter 460 An act to add Part 17 commencing with Section 106000 to Division 10 of the Public Utilities Code relating to transportation California State Legislature October 11 2009 Retrieved 6 September 2022 Board of Directors Monterey Salinas Transit Retrieved 6 September 2022 Executive Leadership Monterey Salinas Transit Retrieved 6 September 2022 a b c Monterey Salinas Transit District Innovative Clean Transit ICT Rollout Plan PDF Report Monterey Salinas Transit District December 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2022 22 Big Sur Monterey PDF Monterey Salinas Transit District December 11 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2022 MST Making Headway with SURF Busway Plans 2020 Annual Report Monterey Salinas Transit Monterey Rail Extension Phase 1 Kick Start Transportation Agency for Monterey County TAMC Retrieved 30 June 2019 Overview Monterey Salinas Transit Retrieved October 12 2021 Denise Duffy and Associates Inc August 1 2017 1 Project Description PDF MST South County Operations and Maintenance Facility Project Report Monterey Salinas Transit District Retrieved 6 September 2022 Monterey Salinas Transit MST Plans Celebration For Completion Of Its South County Operations and Maintenance Facility In King City On Monday October 11 2021 Press release Monterey Salinas Transit District 4 October 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2022 External links edit nbsp Media related to Monterey Salinas Transit at Wikimedia Commons Monterey Salinas Transit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monterey Salinas Transit amp oldid 1180502212, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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