Nexis4Jersey Posted March 14, 2012 Share #1 Posted March 14, 2012 APTA has released its quarterly report on American transit ridership, and here are, as of 4th quarter 2011, the country's heavy rail systems ranked by average weekday ridership: 1. New York - 8,360,700 2. Washington (DC Metro) - 961,500 3. Chicago (CTA) - 713,500 4. Boston - 525,600 5. San Francisco-Oakland (BART) - 379,300 6. Philadelphia (SEPTA) - 342,800 7. Jersey City (PATH) - 259,600 8. Atlanta - 225,300 9. Los Angeles (Southern Calif. Metro) - 142,600 10. Miami - 63,300 11. Baltimore - 50,200 12. San Juan - 43,800 13. Lindenwold (Patco) - 36,600 14. Cleveland - 17,800 * 15. New York (Staten Island SIR) - 17,300 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
datDude Posted March 15, 2012 Share #2 Posted March 15, 2012 APTA has released its quarterly report on American transit ridership, and here are, as of 4th quarter 2011, the country's heavy rail systems ranked by average weekday ridership: 1. New York - 8,360,700 2. Washington - 961,500 3. Chicago - 713,500 4. Boston - 525,600 5. San Francisco - 379,300 6. Philadelphia - 342,800 7. Jersey City (PATH) - 259,600 8. Atlanta - 225,300 9. Los Angeles - 142,600 10. Miami - 63,300 11. Baltimore - 50,200 12. San Juan - 43,800 13. Lindenwold (Patco) - 36,600 14. Cleveland - 17,800 * 15. New York (Staten Island) - 17,300 NY first, DC a distant second is what its always been. I read somewhere about 3/4 of all subway rides in America take place in NYC. Its funny how Staten Island alone manages to be 15th, and PATH by itself is 7th. San Juan got a subway system? I never knew. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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