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BATA? You Bet!
It makes sense today, and even more sense tomorrow
October 26, 2007 | By Diane Conners
Great Lakes Bulletin News Service
I’ve always loved riding public transportation—the buses and trains that took me to work or to conferences in big cities, the people-watching, the time to read or think. Until recently, though, it’s been my big city thing. Get the Flash Player to see this player. Now, I take the Bay Area Transportation Authority’s Empire Village Connector bus from my home near Cedar to the downtown transfer station in Traverse City, population 15,000. So, instead of skyscrapers I see the blaze of autumn leaves. I skip white-knuckle driving on winter roads. And while I can’t watch people reading Chinese newspapers like I did once in New York City, I do experience something that I’ve cherished while growing up and living around small towns. Other riders get to know my name. They greet me when I get on. And we ask about each other’s families and work. Our region’s classic, small-town friendliness and sense of community also ride the BATA bus. On Tuesday, November 6, BATA is asking voters like me to approve a renewal of 0.35 mills to continue funding bus service in Grand Traverse and Leelanau Counties. It’s not a tax increase, but simply a renewal of what we’ve been BATA over the last three years. The owner of a $100,000 home, with a taxable value of $50,000, BATA says, will continue to pay $17.50 a year—about a nickel a day. For those nickels we get village connector fixed-route services like the one that gets me to work on time each day and links villages to each other and to Traverse City. We get in-town "Cherriot" fixed route. We get dial-a-ride services for those who need door-to-door assistance. Many of our students ride BATA to schools. And BATA serves community events, like the cherry festival, film festival, and Interlochen concerts. It Takes All Sorts For example, I remember the time our bus was full with eight riders and with five bikes on the exterior racks and the Back Storage Area. I’m one of those people who now often commutes by bicycle one way to work—14 miles for me, partly on the Leelanau Trail—and take the bus home. Then there’s my friend in Suttons Bay, who confidently puts her growing-up kids on BATA if they want to head into the "big city" of TC. And there was the day when our bus driver stopped at Tom’s West Bay market and helped an elderly woman with failing eyesight get her grocery bags on board. In other words, BATA’s serving us all, regardless of age, physical ability, and income. No wonder more and more of us are using BATA; word about its benefits is getting out. In 2003, when the last millage passed, BATA provided about 300,000 rides a year. Now, it provides nearly 500,000—a little over 200,000 are for people with disabilities, about 100,000 for senior citizens. That leaves 300,000 for folks like me, who can drive but don’t want to, for all sorts of reasons, from getting some exercise to cutting down on traffic congestion and air pollution to saving on high fuel prices. I’m old enough, too, to think about myself 30 years from now, when I’ll be in my 80s. I don’t like winter driving now; believe me, you don’t want me driving on winter roads when I’m 80. Assuming my bike riding keeps me healthy, I look forward to independent living when I’m a senior, thanks to BATA. Some Nice Numbers And it leverages quite a bit more than twice that amount in state and federal dollars which, with bus fares, brings the total BATA annual budget to almost $5.2 million. Without the millage, BATA says, the federal and state dollars would stop and BATA’s budget for services would plummet to $167,200. My independent future here as a vibrant little old lady would vanish. So, too, would BATA’s plan to invest in clean, quiet, energy efficient electric buses and a new wind turbine to make green energy electricity to charge up the those buses. Instead of improving its service, the village connectors would disappear. So I’d also lose the chance to have more experience like this: One day when I got on the bus, a young woman asked me, "Are you Diane Conners?" Then she lifted her sunglasses. Turns out, she’s the daughter of a friend from Manistee County; I hadn’t seen her since she was a girl; she had relocated to Maple City; and now she and her partner, Ray, take the bus to work in Traverse City. You can meet Ray in our video about the BATA millage. I’ll meet them both on the bus which, like the coffee shop and my dining room table, is a part of my town. Two bucks a ride and a nickel a day? You bet. Diane Conners coordinates the Michigan Land Use Institute’s farm to cafeteria program. She’s also a veteran journalist and a longtime northern Michigan resident. Reach her at diane@mlui.org.
I also like BATA because it helps all sorts of people in all sorts of situations—from bicyclists to young kids to elderly folks who need just a bit of help.
I look at BATA’s financial numbers and smile. My old farm house south of Cedar’s taxable value is about $50,000, which means I’ll keep paying that nickel a day if the Nov. 6 renewal millage passes. Better yet, that nickel, combined with the pennies or dimes or quarters that others might pay, raises about $1.8 million a year.