Impact of COVID-19 on Public Transit Accessibility and Ridership

Author:

Wilbur Michael1ORCID,Ayman Afiya2,Sivagnanam Amutheezan2ORCID,Ouyang Anna1,Poon Vincent2,Kabir Riyan1ORCID,Vadali Abhiram1ORCID,Pugliese Philip3ORCID,Freudberg Daniel4ORCID,Laszka Aron2,Dubey Abhishek1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN

2. University of Houston, Houston, TX

3. Chattanooga Area Regional Transportation Authority, Chattanooga, TN

4. Nashville Metropolitan Transit Authority, Nashville, TN

Abstract

COVID-19 has radically transformed urban travel behavior throughout the world. Agencies have had to provide adequate service while navigating a rapidly changing environment with reduced revenue. As COVID-19-related restrictions are lifted, transit agencies are concerned about their ability to adapt to changes in ridership behavior and public transit usage. To aid their becoming more adaptive to sudden or persistent shifts in ridership, we addressed three questions: To what degree has COVID-19 affected fixed-line public transit ridership and what is the relationship between reduced demand and -vehicle trips? How has COVID-19 changed ridership patterns and are they expected to persist after restrictions are lifted? Are there disparities in ridership changes across socioeconomic groups and mobility-impaired riders? Focusing on Nashville and Chattanooga, TN, ridership demand and vehicle trips were compared with anonymized mobile location data to study the relationship between mobility patterns and transit usage. Correlation analysis and multiple linear regression were used to investigate the relationship between socioeconomic indicators and changes in transit ridership, and an analysis of changes in paratransit demand before and during COVID-19. Ridership initially dropped by 66% and 65% over the first month of the pandemic for Nashville and Chattanooga, respectively. Cellular mobility patterns in Chattanooga indicated that foot traffic recovered to a greater degree than transit ridership between mid-April and the last week in June, 2020. Education-level had a statistically significant impact on changes in fixed-line bus transit, and the distribution of changes in demand for paratransit services were similar to those of fixed-line bus transit.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference35 articles.

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