With the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority poised to shake up its bus routes this weekend, Gunn High students who participate in after-school activities may need to look for new ways to get home.
The VTA is preparing to implement on Saturday, Dec. 28, its "New Service Plan," a shake-up of routes and schedules that will increase service frequency for buses on some of Santa Clara County's busiest arteries, including El Camino Real. This includes bus Routes 22 and 522, which extend from the Palo Alto Transit Center to the Eastridge Transit Center in San Jose.
The plan will also, however, limit options for riders in the less central parts of the city, including the neighborhoods in west and south Palo Alto that are currently served by Route 88. This includes Gunn High students who may need a ride home several hours after the final bell.
In the new system, the 88 line will be scrapped and replaced by three routes: 288, 288L and 288M. All three would start at the Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Medical Center and go through Gunn High before diverging as they make their way north and west, with 288 going along Charleston Road and Fabian Way before cutting left on Louis Road. The 288L would head north on Meadow Drive, turn west on Louis and terminate at Louis and Amarillo Avenue. The 288M would take Meadow to Waverley Street and end up at the intersection of Middlefield Road and Colorado Avenue.
All three routes would only run on school days, according to the VTA. And even on those days, the bus schedule would be compressed when compared to existing service, with the afternoon 288L and 288M buses operating only after the high school's dismissal time.
In the new plan, the first 288M bus will be departing the Palo Alto VA stop and head north to Gunn High eight minutes after dismissal time. It will be followed two minutes later by 288L bus and, two minutes after that, by the 288 bus.
The revised 288 bus schedule would run a single southbound bus in the morning on weekdays before Gunn High starts classes. The final northbound 288 bus would leave the Palo Alto VA at 4:10 p.m. and arrive at Middlefield Road and Colorado Avenue at 4:34 p.m. Under the current schedule, the 88 bus runs about once an hour, roughly between 6:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
The VTA sees the plan as a way to boost service countywide and increase ridership. It includes additional bus connections at the Berryessa and Milpitas transit centers, as well as a new orange line for light rail, stretching from Mountain View to the Alum Rock station in San Jose.
But the new route map has also irked some bus riders Palo Alto, who are lamenting the shifting bus services near Gunn High. Last week, the school's Parent Teacher Student Association submitted a letter to the VTA criticizing the agency for falling short in notifying the community about the change in transportation options. The VTA, according to the letter, notified the city just before Thanksgiving that it plans to implement the new schedule during the winter break. This, the PTSA claims, makes it hard for the city and the school district to plan for the changes.
"Given the timing over the holidays and lack of available public meeting time during that short period, it will be impossible for city staff to get approval to fill the service gaps this change will create, causing problems for Gunn High School school commuters," the letter signed by PTSA president Kimberly Eng Lee states.
Palo Alto is now exploring ways to fill the gap by introducing a new South Palo Alto shuttle, operated by the city. But despite years of discussion and general support from the City Council, the city's effort to expand shuttle service has proceeded at a crawl. On Dec. 16, in its final meeting of the year, the council approved a new shuttle contract with the company Transmetro. But the three-year, $1.1 million contract only pertains to the Crosstown Shuttle, which runs from the Palo Alto Transit Center to Charleston Road, via Crescent Park and Midtown, including along Middlefield Road.
Palo Alto's transportation staff expects to consider modifications to the route in the spring, largely to address VTA's gaps in service, according to a report from Office of Transportation. In the document, staff acknowledged that the VTA's changes in service "will result in changes to bus routes in Palo Alto."
Arthur Keller, Gunn High's public transit coordinator, criticized the city for not planning for these disruptions in the new bus contract. The VTA's realignment means that "Gunn High students who take the 88 bus — or now soon-to-be 288 bus — to school in the morning and do after-school activities will now not be able to take the bus home because there won't be a bus home."
"There will be a bus right after school and a bus an hour later, but not beyond that," Keller told the council's Finance Committee on Dec. 17. "That could have been filled by the South Palo Alto shuttle bus."
View maps of the new routes at vta.org.
Comments
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Dec 23, 2019 at 4:31 pm
on Dec 23, 2019 at 4:31 pm
This will put more traffic on our streets, particularly Arastradero and Charleston, just when we don't need it.
Gunn will be like Paly with fewer options for students in the south part of Palo Alto.
It is about time we stopped being part of VTA because they are not serving the needs of anyone in the north anymore. Trying to get to Foothill college is equally difficult.
Pathetic.
Registered user
Embarcadero Oaks/Leland
on Dec 23, 2019 at 4:46 pm
Registered user
on Dec 23, 2019 at 4:46 pm
Guess all our fine transportation committees, commissions, consultants, council members, city fact-finding missions etc. will have to work over-time recruiting more of the same to devise some clever slogans and new sales tax proposals.
Registered user
Midtown
on Dec 23, 2019 at 4:49 pm
Registered user
on Dec 23, 2019 at 4:49 pm
Saying that VTA fell short in terms of notifying the public is wildly misleading. VTA has been discussing these plans for years with numerous public meetings. I went to a meeting regarding the new bus system in early 2017. VTA has also been planning on opening the new transit system by the end of this year for many months (the news in November was that South Bay BART was delayed but the new VTA system would open anyways).
VTA has been open to feedback. They were gonna cut a bus route in South San Jose and cut overnight 22 trips, but they decided to keep both due to public feedback. Yes, the cuts are hard - VTA has a limited budget - but they have had a very open process over the past few years.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 24, 2019 at 3:36 am
on Dec 24, 2019 at 3:36 am
@ Midtown Resident
Look at the ads in the Palo Alto Weekly by the VTA. Tell me where in those advertisements it focuses on the services in Palo Alto being cancelled by VTA. A whole page is mostly devoted to light rail changes. One sentence addresses the 88 bus, and doesn’t even say what changes are being made. Even the signs posted at VTA 88 bus stops don’t specify essentially the cancellation of the hourly 88 bus pointed to VTA website that is still somewhat inaccurate. I’ve been working to notify Gunn High School students.
Those of us who were long aware of the changes were given about a month notice of its timing.
It was because of our protests in 2017 that the 4:10 pm run was added to the 288 route plans.
Note that the VTA didn’t announce their bus changes until a few months after the election to raise our sales taxes mostly to pay for BART to San Jose.
The fact is that the City of Palo Alto did not have enough notice of the timing of the change to budget for the backfill service of the South Palo Alto Shuttle.
The news in October was that the BART extension the Berryessa would be delayed again.
Finally, the Gunn school trippers exist now because of efforts I led in 2007, the previous time they tried to cut service in Palo Alto.
Old Palo Alto
on Dec 24, 2019 at 10:53 am
on Dec 24, 2019 at 10:53 am
How many rich kids from palo alto are taking the bus?
They _have_ other options. Ppl not owning vehicles and waiting for hours on end to come to Palo Alto to clean your houses don't have a choice.
Stop whining ppl.
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Dec 24, 2019 at 11:18 am
on Dec 24, 2019 at 11:18 am
Not to worry. There is plenty of extra traffic capacity on Arastradero for more cars, and lots of extra space in the Gunn parking lot for more cars. They should encourage all 16-year-old+ Gunn students to drive separate cars to school. Especially on rainy days. No problem.
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Dec 24, 2019 at 11:57 am
Registered user
on Dec 24, 2019 at 11:57 am
Why isn't the district providing transportation for students to get to/from school? Why is this VTAs problem, or even the city's problem?
PAUSD brings kids to school fom outside the city, so why can't they transport the ones that live in the district boundaries?
I understand there are many excuses, from a lack of money, to drivers, prop 13, etc... The district will never do anything that they are not forced to do, especially when someone else is paying.
Arthur, have you gone to the people who are responsible for educating the students to get them to provide transportation so their students can be educated?
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Dec 24, 2019 at 12:03 pm
on Dec 24, 2019 at 12:03 pm
The 88-line buses are generally empty--so dropping, or modifying the route would seem to be a "no brainer". What would have been more helpful in understanding this matter would have been ridership data from VTA, which would include the number of students using this bus to get to school. Without that data .. all of this hand waving isn't very helpful.
Given how much time and effort has been put into downsizing the Charleston/Arastradero Corridor for bicycle use-- why isn't the solution to have students start riding their bicycles to school, rather than using the polluting, fossil-fuel buses?
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 24, 2019 at 1:01 pm
on Dec 24, 2019 at 1:01 pm
@ John Q. Public
Years ago, high school students unrelated to each other could carpool to school. That is no longer legal.
Traffic delays increase exponentially when the road approaches saturation, so reducing traffic and smoothing out traffic can help. So getting Gunn High School students out of cars and onto bikes, into buses, and walking to school helps reduce congestion.
@ Samuel L.
It is my understanding that PAUSD reduced their school bus service in response to Proposition 13. They do run bus service by subscription for Gunn High School students from the Stanford campus housing and from Los Altos Hills.
@ Bikes-Not-The-Answer?
About half of Gunn HS students bicycle or walk to school and that percentage has more than doubled in the last two decades. There are also students bicycling to other schools along the Charleston-Arastradero Corridor.
Over 5% of Gunn HS students take the 88 bus to school. That number is higher in the winter and especially when it rains.
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Dec 24, 2019 at 1:39 pm
Registered user
on Dec 24, 2019 at 1:39 pm
Arthur,
PAUSD buses many students from EPA every day to all of the schools in PAUSD.
Property tax revenue increases every year for the district. We can't use a 30 year old law as the reason why we can't fund 2-3 more busses to get students to school. Teachers still get raises, Administrators tag along, and money is free flowing. Over the past 6 years property tax revenue has grown approximately 9%/year. It was 112M in 2011-12 and 177M in 2017-18.
PAUSD can afford to run a couple buses before and after school. That's why there's a bus yard full of busses. If they're not used to transport students, than why have them?
It's time for PAUSD to stop claiming to be indigent.
What is the actual cost to add a few busses for the students at Gunn? I would assume it's less than $1M. The highest paid bus driver in PAUSD makes $130K including benefits. You could hire 2 drivers where their sole job is to drive to Gunn in the morning and then from Gunn in the afternoon and it would cost approximately $250K plus bus depreciation.
Gunn High School
on Dec 24, 2019 at 4:24 pm
on Dec 24, 2019 at 4:24 pm
people here complaing should contact their very own VTA board of director member, mr adrian fine Web Link
VTA did do public community meetings regarding changing the bus routes, but held them during the week at an hour people were commuting home from work. they offered no public meetings on the weekends so people could actually go.
then there's "letting the public know" about these public meetings by which they did so by posting on VTA's website. to top it off, VTA's board of directors are city and/or county officials whom most likely did nothing to notify their constituents about changes in public transit that they WILL approve.
it's like VTA and the board of directors want this public transit system to fail.
Registered user
Embarcadero Oaks/Leland
on Dec 24, 2019 at 5:58 pm
Registered user
on Dec 24, 2019 at 5:58 pm
Interesting that Mr. Fine is on the VTA board of directors. I wonder if he was on it a few years ago when PA lost some VTA bus service because the PA shuttle routes were found to duplicate the VTA routes AFTER we approved some transit-oriented sales tax for which our city "leaders" lobbied hard.
PA dropped its "outreach ball" so VTA only learned of the duplication AFTER the tax hike was approved and we ended up paying more for less service.
Barron Park
on Dec 24, 2019 at 8:37 pm
on Dec 24, 2019 at 8:37 pm
Palo Alto has a lot of things going for it, but transit within the city is not one. It is not just Gunn students that are hamstrung by the VTA's desertion of our area; from South Palo Alto the North we feel the sting of abject failure by the city and county to invest in our infrastructure. In a city that prides itself on our ability to achieve great things, and on our desire for livability, this is unconscionable.
Where is the revitalization of the El Camino Real corridor, where business slowly crumbles while drivers speed by?
How about Middlefield Road, Charleston/Arastradero, and Embarcadero, beset by congestion as people travel across town for basic services?
We are left bereft of civic vision, at a time where slowly creeping density stretches our roads to capacity.
One cannot be content with the state of affairs from decades past; nor can collective ennui on the part of our leaders continue to hurt businesses and residents alike. I know development is somewhat of a tarred word in Palo Alto politics, and I agree. We do not need high-rise apartment buildings in Palo Alto; that only contributes to the problem. What we need is a permanent revolution in the way we regard growth in this city. We must prioritize a civic environment that harnesses development for good, supporting high quality local business and creating the vibrant focal points of community and economic engagement.
Everyone in Palo Alto should be able to walk to shops, restaurants, and other local conveniences; they should also be able to take reliable, frequent public transit up and down the major arteries that link us together as a city. Our public spaces, both green space and in our business districts, should be accessible to all without the use of a car, and subsidized as a public service.
In a time when the rest of the Bay Area is engaging in rapid urbanization, our sleepy, leafy neighborhoods are something special, and we hold them dear, as well we should. Yet we also expect more from Palo Alto, and we must expect more. We should want our city to be better than it is for all its residents, supporting a rising standard of living by increasing our quality of life.
This is not an economic impossibility; indeed, civic investment benefits our property values, our local economy, and stimulates business investment. Investment in infrastructure returns more in value per dollar spent to the taxpayer than any other civic program.
It starts with transit--we must free ourselves from the yolk of the VTA, which takes our tax dollars, and our transit improvement measure funds, and spits in our face. It must not end there, though--across our city we must increase municipal spending, and undertake bold initiatives to make Palo Alto the best place on the Peninsula to live.
another community
on Dec 25, 2019 at 4:25 am
on Dec 25, 2019 at 4:25 am
It has been public knowledge for two years that VTA planned to cut the 88 and replace it with the 288 routes. Where were all these people during that process? If I knew about the change and don't even live in Palo Alto, I'm not sure what to say about how uniformed Palo Alto residents are...
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 2:54 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 2:54 pm
VTA ridership is down, especially over the last several years. Web Link The article also talks about the VTA offering free rides from December 28 to 31.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 3:02 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 3:02 pm
@ David
We knew about the changes for several years but didn’t know about their timing. The idea was to have the City of Palo Alto backfill the loss with the South Palo Alto Shuttle. But because the VTA timed the change with too little notice of the timing, the City could not coordinate its increase in service to be seamless. The
How many times did VTA delay the opening of BART to Berryessa and the bus changes? They were linked until the VTA decided in November to unlink them.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 3:38 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 3:38 pm
I run the website Web Link with information about the 288 bus route and a reference to a mailing list for schedule change announcements.
Midtown
on Dec 25, 2019 at 4:52 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 4:52 pm
Interesting to hear that P.A. did not have time to develop a city shuttle as an alternative to the 88. What a shame that seniors such as myself will be struggling in winter weather. We will be partly because other seniors at the JCC and Stevenson House so rarely used the 88. Admittedly, the other day, on the first run of the morning, about 7 from Stevenson House took the 88 to El Camino. In general, though, seniors and low-income staff in these places failed to take the 88 in any numbers. WHY? The JCC was located there partly because of the 88.
Another group is also affected. Midtown residents working at the VA will have to drive or face long walks.
I am so upset over the loss of the 88 that I am considering leaving the area. It will be hard for the city to replace the 88; I doubt it ever will.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 5:51 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 5:51 pm
@ senior
We tried to reach out to the senior communities at Stevenson House and the JCC when VTA was proposing its cuts to the 88 bus back in 2016. We got interest but little support and help.
The South Palo Alto Shuttle is mainly in the late afternoon after the 288 runs. If there is ridership, it could be expanded.
Also, if a business license tax adopted by the City, it could provide funding for additional shuttles, as well as Caltrain grade separations and building affordable housing.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 6:04 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 6:04 pm
@ Samuel L
If PAUSD ran school buses to serve Gunn, they would likely not run them late enough to support after-school activity. As it is, the VTA does run school tripper bus service to support Gunn students right before school and right after school and at 4:10pm, and will continue to do so. Even the VTA considers this service successful, so it will continue.
There's a natural tendency in a network for usage to be mainly in the center of the network and for it to drop off at the edges. So usage is less in Palo Alto and so is VTA service. SamTrans provides more transit lines into Palo Alto than the VTA does.
It seems suboptimal to me for the 522 bus in Santa Clara County to be separate from the ECR bus in San Mateo County. Why can't they be combined for continuous service from Santa Clara County to the BART station in Daly City? This is but one example of the inefficiencies from having the VTA governance be overweighted from San Jose.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 6:07 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 6:07 pm
P.S. To be specific, other than express lines running at the beginning and end of the day, SamTrans runs more lines into Palo Alto than VTA does. And VTA is even cutting some of the express lines into Palo Alto with this change.
Why isn't the Research Park providing funding to continue the VTA express lines being cut?
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Dec 25, 2019 at 8:31 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 8:31 pm
The problem with PAUSD running a school bus service is that it would be for students only. Some similar to the Google buses, the problem is that it limits ridership rather than allowing anyone to ride.
A much better service would be to run for the students but allow others such as seniors or those needing to get to the VTA to be able to ride also.
In other words, a city shuttle or private company running a public shuttle that would suit students makes more sense, as far as I can see.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 10:24 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 10:24 pm
By the way, the 288 series of buses are school trippers designed to serve the needs of Gunn students. But anyone who pays the fare may ride them.
And anyone may sign up for updates on the 288 bus at the list at http://288bus.org
Also the South Palo Alto Shuttle has not yet started and is not funded. It might be funded for the next fiscal year (starting in July), particularly if there is a groundswell of support to the Palo Alto City Council. Contact them at city.council@cityofpaloalto.org
@ Resident I agree with that problem for PAUSD-run buses. I have heard interest from others to get to the VA (Veterans Administration Hospital), not to be confused with VTA (Valley Transportation Authority).
University South
on Dec 25, 2019 at 10:46 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 10:46 pm
In 2017, the city staff presented a plan to backfill the VTA Route 88 with a new Palo Alto Free Shuttle route, The council was more interested in talking about subsidizing Lyft/Uber rides and autonomous buses than finding funding for this route. Watch the video. Everyone complaining about this should direct their attention squarely at the incumbent council members.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 11:13 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 11:13 pm
@ Reality Check
Was that led by Adrian Fine? In 2016 Web Link he said, "And the other side of transportation is, here in Palo Alto, we’re at the center of this transportation revolution in terms of services like Uber and Lyft, autonomous vehicles, and new parking technologies, so we have the opportunity to harness those services and systems to make better use of our existing transportation and parking resources." I understand Vice Mayor Fine now works for Autonomic, a subsidiary of Ford Smart Mobility.
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 11:19 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 11:19 pm
Uber and Lyft have done wonders to increase congestion in SF. Web Link
Adobe-Meadow
on Dec 25, 2019 at 11:26 pm
on Dec 25, 2019 at 11:26 pm
Autonomous vehicles may also increase congestion. Web Link Web Link Web Link
Registered user
Greenmeadow
on Dec 26, 2019 at 7:48 am
Registered user
on Dec 26, 2019 at 7:48 am
Arthur, thank you for all of your work on this issue. My understanding is that you don’t currently have children at Gunn, but you continue to advocate for Gunn students. We appreciate your ongoing dedication to this issue!
It’s unfortunate that we are being left without the earliest bus with such short notice. Many students do zero period PE and need to be at school by 7:15am. Add to that rainy weather, instruments, and occasional posters or other large items they are being asked to bring to school, and suddenly a bike isn’t feasible.
Let’s hope City Council makes finding a solution a priority.
University South
on Dec 26, 2019 at 11:14 am
on Dec 26, 2019 at 11:14 am
City council places a high priority on virtue signaling, like banning gas and talking about limiting development.
They are weak on accomplishing things that benefit the populace: see the inability to get housing developed, the fumbling over Cubberley, the hand wringing over grade separations, and the foot dragging on transportation solutions (shuttles, etc).
The public needs to replace the debaters with action-oriented leaders.,
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Dec 26, 2019 at 4:11 pm
on Dec 26, 2019 at 4:11 pm
Posted by chris, a resident of University South
>> They are weak on accomplishing things that benefit the populace: see the inability to get housing developed,
Housing is not developed by the city. Private for-profit and non-profit entities develop housing, not the city. For-profit entities are only interested in developing high-end housing.
>> The public needs to replace the debaters with action-oriented leaders.,
Right-action or wrong-action? We don't need "leaders" who are working to do the wrong thing. The city continues to allow office-space development, which makes the jobs/housing imbalance worse. I would prefer it if the city would do nothing, rather than allow continued development of more office space, which we do not need.
Esther Clark Park
on Dec 26, 2019 at 8:37 pm
on Dec 26, 2019 at 8:37 pm
@Samuel L: Pausd won't provide buses for Gunn students b c every dollar possible must go into the salaries and benefits for teachers, administrators, and staff! Don't you know that? That's why there is no funding for any extracurriculars and why parents must finance everything. It's a big money grab.
Registered user
Midtown
on Dec 27, 2019 at 7:01 am
Registered user
on Dec 27, 2019 at 7:01 am
Seattle is wetter, cooler, and hillier than here; yet bicycle commuting seems more common.
Fairmeadow
on Dec 27, 2019 at 12:42 pm
on Dec 27, 2019 at 12:42 pm
Palo Alto has about !4,000 owner occupied housing units. There are about 700 home sales every year. So about half of Palo Alto's units have sold in the last ten years. New sales are taxed at current property tax rates, not protected taxes from years ago. Residential tax revenue is rising (even under Prop 13), going through the roof! There's plenty of money. Ask City Hall and city management where it's all going.. Waste all around.
Palo Verde
on Dec 27, 2019 at 2:22 pm
on Dec 27, 2019 at 2:22 pm
^ You sure it's not the same 700 homes selling every year?
Midtown
on Dec 29, 2019 at 9:00 pm
on Dec 29, 2019 at 9:00 pm
This is really bad for me. I have used the 88 bus for nearly 18 of my 22 years to go to work in Mountain View, and now it seems I will have to ride with school kids on the new 288 bus, just as I did 14 years ago. What's even worse is since I have to follow Gunn High School's dismissal schedule, some of the buses that come to Fabian Way and Charleston will be at different times each day. I find that this kind of bus cut isn't necessary, and I am hoping VTA will make some changes by spring of next year.