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BART Board schedules Fiscal Year 2016 budget meetings

The BART Board has set the following calendar for discussion and adoption of the Fiscal Year 2016 Budget: May 14, 2015, 9:00 am: Preliminary Budget Overview: Sources, Uses, and Service Plan May 28, 2015, 5:30 pm: Public Hearing on FY16 Budget Resolution to Adopt FY16 Proposition 4 Appropriations Limit FY16

BART Board schedules Fiscal Year 2015 budget meetings

The BART Board has set the following calendar for discussion and adoption of the Fiscal Year 2015 Budget: May 8, 2014, 9am: Preliminary Budget Overview: Sources, Uses, and Service Plan May 22, 2014, 5pm: Public Hearing on FY15 Budget Resolution to Adopt FY15 Proposition 4 Appropriations Limit FY15 Notice of

BART Police release image of Fruitvale Station stabbing suspect

The BART Police Department today released images of a suspect being sought in connection with a stabbing that took place onboard a train at the Fruitvale Station on Friday afternoon. The incident happened at 2:48 pm on March 22, 2019. The pictured suspect was involved in a fight with another male on a

Local artists: We want your art on BART!

Photo of a blank ad space in a station with red text "Your Art Here"

 

Submit here

The BART Art Program is undertaking an effort to highlight even more local artists by inviting them to submit their existing artwork to be used in a variety of BART spaces, including stations, trains, and even BART Headquarters.

If you are a local artist aged 18+ and residing in one of the five BART counties -- Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, San Mateo, and Santa Clara -- we invite you to submit your work!

The art we seek should reflect the BART system and its integral role in all of our lives in the Bay Area. We are looking not only for images of the trains, tracks, and stations -- though we know we will receive beautiful ones -- but also art that represents what makes BART the Bay and the Bay BART. How does the diverse geographies, geologies, and ethnographies you encounter on BART intertwine? How has BART influenced or inspired you as an artist? 

Submissions must be made through our Submittable platform by March 23 at 11pm PDT. The total number of applications will be limited to 400 (applicants not images), so we encourage you to apply early to ensure consideration. BART will be licensing the images; this is not an artwork purchase program.

What: Request for local artists to submit their BART-esque artwork

More info/rules: Request for Submissions

Submission portal: Submittable

Deadline: March 23, 11pm PDT, or until 400 applicants have submitted

Read about the BART Art Program at bart.gov/art. 

BART Board eases commute bike restrictions for extended trial

The BART Board of Directors voted tonight to modify existing commute period bike rules for an extended 5 month trial period from July 1-December 1, 2013. The move represents the next phase of testing to observe the impact of allowing bikes on board during busy commute periods. Starting July 1, bikes will be

Safe Trips to BART: An Action Plan for Safer Roadways

SafeTripsToBART_Asset 1.png
OverviewRiding rail transit like BART is 18 times safer than traveling in a passenger vehicle (1) – and now, BART wants to make getting to and from th
20240712 Safet Trips to BART Timeline.jpg
 Potential Safety ImprovementsResources and MaterialsFact SheetFrequently Asked Questions (FAQ)Hoja Informativa del ProyectoPreguntas Frecuentes項目情況說明

BART fares increased 5.5% on January 1, 2025

BART fares will increase January 1, 2025, to keep pace with inflation so that the agency is able to pay for continued operations and to work toward restoring financial stability. BART's current funding model relies on passenger fares to pay for operations. 

Fares will increase 5.5 percent on New Year’s Day. The increase is tied to the rate of inflation minus a half-percentage point. It’s the second such increase – the first took effect January 1, 2024.

The average fare will increase 25 cents, from $4.47 to $4.72. BART's fare calculator and Trip Planner have been updated with the new fares for trips with the date 1/1/25 and beyond. Riders can learn how the increase will affect their travels by entering a 2025 date for their trip.

“We understand that price increases are never welcome, but BART fares remain a vital source of funds even with ridership lower than they were before the pandemic,” said BART Board Vice President Mark Foley. “My Board colleagues and I voted in June 2023 to spread necessary fare increases over two years rather than catching up all at once. At the same time, we voted to increase the Clipper START means-based discount from 20 percent to 50 percent to help those most in need.”

The fare increase is expected to raise about $14 million per year for operations. Combined with the previous year’s fare adjustment, BART will use this $30 million per year to fund train service, enhanced cleaning, additional police and unarmed safety staff presence, and capital projects such as the Next Generation Fare Gates project. 

Discounts available for those who are eligible

The regional Clipper START program is an important resource for low-income riders of BART and other Bay Area transit systems. The program is for adult riders with a household income of 200% of the federal poverty level or less. Administered by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, program participants receive a personalized Clipper card that cuts half the cost of fares on more than 20 transit systems.

Regular, predictable increases a long-term strategy 

January’s fare increase is the latest adjustment in a strategy to provide BART funding while providing riders predictable, scaled changes to the costs of riding. In 2004, BART first implemented this inflation-based fare increase program that calls for small, regular, less-than-inflation increases every two years, allowing fares to keep up with the cost of providing reliable and safe service. 

BART is also much less expensive than driving on a cost per mile basis. The Internal Revenue Service standard mileage rate for driver is 67 cents per mile; BART riders pay an average of 27 cents per mile, 60% less than the cost of driving.

Outdated funding model

BART's current funding model relies on passenger fares to pay for operations. Even with the fare increase, BART is facing a $35 million operating deficit in FY26 and $385 million in FY27. Since BART’s outdated model of relying on passenger fares to pay most operating costs is no longer feasible because of remote work, the agency must modernize its funding sources to better match other transit systems throughout the country that receive larger amounts of public funding. BART needs a more reliable long-term source of operating funding and continues to advocate at the federal, state, and regional levels for the permanent funding needed to sustainably provide the quality transit service the Bay Area needs.  

Addressing BART’s ongoing financial crisis will take a variety of solutions including securing new revenue and continuing to find internal cost savings. BART costs have grown at a rate lower than inflation, showing we have held the line on spending. We have implemented a service schedule that better matches ridership and we are running shorter trains, reducing traction power consumption and maintenance costs.


This article was first posted on November 26, 2024.

 

BART seeks public help in finding lost, elderly woman

Fremont woman with dementia and diabetes l ast seen at Fremont station BART Police is urgently seeking the public’s help in locating a 92 year-old Asian woman who desperately needs insulin. Lai Ying also has dementia and her family says she has the mental capacity of a four-year old. Ying is 5 feet tall with

Missing teen now home safe thanks to BART employees

Two alert BART employees at our Fremont Station this week played a critical role in finding a missing 15-year-old East Bay girl and getting her back to her family. On Wednesday, Station Agent Rachelle "Mimi" Powe was giving a foreworker trainee a tour of the Fremont Station when she saw a teenage girl in