Keep this option alive

Boarding a Greyhound bus in downtown Salem, Ore., in 1964.

Entrance to the South Station Bus Terminal, in Boston, one of the nicest such facilities in America. That it is next to a big train station makes it even better. Sadly, many downtown bus terminals have been closed in the past few decades, with new ones, with minimal amenities, built next to windswept parking lots on the fringes of cities. Bus service is particularly important to low-and-middle-income people because bus tickets are obviously much cheaper than ones for plane and train travel.

Adapted from Robert Whitcomb “Digital Diary,’’ in GoLocal24.com 

Speaking of deserts, reading a CNN report the other day about the dearth of bus terminals in America reminded me of how important bus lines are for millions of Americans, though the mass of our automobile-bound population doesn’t think about them much. Many bus passengers can’t drive because they can’t afford a car  or  their health doesn’t permit it. Others  just don’t want to drive a car,  maybe because they fear there are just too  many dangerously bad drivers on the road or because they can snooze and read on a bus.

Certainly getting more people out of cars and into public transportation would be very good for our air quality.

Where the private sector is unable or unwilling to step in, the Feds, states  and cities should subsidize the construction and maintenance of bus terminals because of their important social, economic and environmental roles. They remain an important, if unfashionable and old-fashioned, part of our transportation network 

I used to take buses a lot, first to get to school and then commuting in and out of Boston and other cities. It wasn’t as comfortable as taking the train but was usually less stressful than driving.  But being stuck in buses before smoking was banned there was nauseating. 

We’re lucky in southern New England in having much more access to trains than most other Americans. And after so many years in which train lines were killed, some have even been revived in the past couple of decades. One example is the train service connecting Boston’s South Shore that was closed in 1959, forcing commuters in and out of Boston to use the new Southeast Expressway, which swiftly became a miles-long parking for hours a day. I remember from when  I was a boy how much more pleasant it was to ride in those rattling old rail cars to Boston’s South Station from Cohasset than in claustrophobic buses with decayed suspensions; buses are generally much more comfortable now. Of course the buses would get stuck in traffic, too, even after the creation of bus lanes.

In any event,  a version of the train service was revived in 2007, to the relief of thousands.

Here’s that CNN story about bus terminals.

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