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nostalgia

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Posts posted by nostalgia

  1. Why would the N78/N79 be coordinated with the N24, as opposed to the N22, N22L and N22X? Varying traffic conditions would make it almost impossible to coordinate exactly. Passengers can take whatever bus to Hicksville that benefits them. It's impossible to coordinate the N78/N79 with all the different bus lines that go to Hicksville.

     

    The N24 is EXCRUCIATINGLY slow and usually takes well over an hour to get from 179th St subway just to Roosevelt Field mall during rush hour. And that's reverse peak without all the peak direction traffic.

     

    I may have misread the docket. According to the current map, the N22 doesn't operate along Old Country Road (OCR) between Hicksville and Roosevelt Field. With the planned N78/79 cutback, service would be lost along OCR. The N24 extension would cover the gap. That's how its advertised in the docket.

     

    Passengers can transfer now between the N78/N79 and N22 at Hicksville.

  2. Question. When is the Next schedule change? Is it April 8th or is it earlier? Also does anyone think that N78/79 Times are going to be changed. And What I mean is all 79's start at WWM at 10 after the hour 7 days a week.

     

    The main question is will the N79 schedule be coordinated with the N24 schedule? If the answer is yes, the N24 schedule will be built first and N79 second. If it doesn't make a difference, then the N79 can be scheduled at any time.

  3. Assuming that the MTA and Veolia had the same financial facts, its amazing how each decided to solve the problem. The MTA wanted to eliminate service but Veolia wants to adjust service, without eliminations. In fact, Veolia wants to increase service on some routes.

     

    From a financial standpoint, every company has fixed (indirect) and variable (direct) costs. Fixed costs are generally overhead (buildings, buses, and front office salaries and benefits) and variable costs are the direct costs of operating a trip (salary and benefits of the operator, gas, bus depreciation, etc.) Fixed costs are "fixed" because they don't change based on the level of service.

     

    By the county stating it saved millions of dollars leaving the MTA, this suggests that the county was paying a fortune in MTA overhead and Veolia overhead is much less. Spreading overhead is a mathematical exercise in allocation. Possibly, none of the bridges and tunnel surplus was directed to covering LI Bus costs. :)

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