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BART releases platform video from July 3 officer involved shooting
The public will be able to see BART’s platform video that provides a partial view of the July 3, 2011 officer involved shooting on the platform of the Civic Center/UN Plaza BART Station. Today BART released the platform video, which contains what happened moments before the shooting, which killed 45-year-old
BART awarded transit security funds for Transbay Tube security improvements
The Department of Homeland Security today awarded BART $12.8 million in Transit Security Grant Program funds to enhance security and help protect the Transbay Tube, one of BART’s most critical assets. “These federal funds are critical in helping BART pay for needed enhancements to our existing robust security
BART partners with junaio to visualize transit data through augmented reality
Screenshots of the BART channel on junaio A new augmented reality application – junaio – is the latest example of the innovative products and services utilizing BART’s API (application programming interface) to help transit riders navigate and stay on top of train schedules. BART and junaio have partnered to
BART to show off new, TSA-certified bomb-sniffing dogs
Bomb-sniffing dogs will be ready to perform live on-the-air for morning shows Tomorrow morning, two of the three new members of the BART Police Department's bomb sniffing dog force will be ready to show off their explosive detecting skills live on the air for TV, radio and web casting morning shows. The BART
BART Board approves Collective Bargaining Agreements including wage increases
The BART Board of Directors today ratified Tentative Agreements to existing labor contracts that will result in wage increases for BART workers. The Board took the action as the highest rate of inflation in 40 years impacts BART workers and BART’s ability to recruit and retain qualified workers. “BART is
BART makes navigating to OAK Airport easier when trip planning
It’s almost holiday travel season and we are making our trip planning tools easier to use so you know which trains will take you to OAK or SFO airports. OAK is now listed as a destination for the Blue, Green, and Orange lines in our Trip Planner and Schedule by Station feature on bart.gov and our official app
Former BART attorney met the love of her life on San Francisco-bound train

The year was 2006. Nintendo was releasing its latest gaming console, the Wii. Pluto got a planetary downgrading. And every tween was belting “High School Musical” hits in the hallways.
Crystal Matson had just graduated from Spelman College with dreams of one day going to law school. Though she had never been to the Bay Area before, Crystal, adventurous spirit in tow, accepted a job in San Francisco and quickly found an apartment near Oakland’s Lake Merritt.
Crystal grew up in a small town outside of Houston, where public transportation was nonexistent. She’d taken Atlanta’s MARTA for a few airport trips, but it was hardly part of her daily routine.
Things changed when she moved to the Bay. Though she hadn’t used public transit much before, Crystal quickly became a bona fide expert on BART, which she’d take every weekday to her job in San Francisco.
On these daily trips to Embarcadero Station, Crystal began noticing a man on the Lake Merritt platform. The two often rode on the same train car, through the Transbay Tube and into the city.
“I probably saw him for a month, every day, waiting on the same platform,” said Crystal, who now works as an attorney at BART.
With only a few months in the Bay under her belt, Crystal was on the hunt for friends and community – “Definitely not a boyfriend,” she said. In fact, Crystal already had a significant other.
So, one day, Crystal decided to gather her courage and introduce herself to the mysterious, well-dressed man on the train.
“I said, ‘Hey, I see you on the train all the time, and I’m trying to meet new people. Can you tell me where all the young professionals hang out?” Crystal recalled.
The two had a casual conversation, with Crystal chatting about her time at Spelman as well as her youth in Texas. It turned out the man, an accountant named George, had grown up in Houston himself. Believing she’d secured a new friendship, Crystal handed him her business card and went on her way.
But the very next day at Lake Merritt Station, George was not on the platform, so Crystal got on the train. He wasn’t in the car, either.
“This went on for months,” Crystal said. “He vanished!”
Fast forward months later, and Crystal once again spied George on the platform. This time, he came up to her.
“He said, ‘Hey, how are you?’ And I go, ‘Why are you talking to me? Where were you?” Crystal said.
It turns out, George had a girlfriend who also went to Spelman College and overlapped with Crystal’s time there. He thought his then-girlfriend was setting him up.
“Instead of just saying he was in a relationship, he hid from me!” Crystal said, laughing.
The duo decided to meet for a friendly brunch at Le Bateau Ivre in Berkeley. At least Crystal thought it was friendly. George, she’d learn later, had other ideas. (Editor’s note: Both Crystal and George were single at the time.)
“Even if I had thought it was a date, when the bill came, he didn’t pay! We went Dutch,” Crystal said.
Alas, the two enjoyed each other’s company and began hanging out – as friends – regularly.
“Ultimately, over time, that friendship became a relationship,” Crystal said. “This was about six months after that brunch.”
Crystal recounted doing “everything” with George on BART. They joined the AIDS Walk, ran Bay to Breakers, picnicked in Dolores Park. Their favorite spot was a bar in the Mission District called Double Dutch.
“BART has always been a staple in our relationship,” Crystal said. “We’ve taken it everywhere to get around and explore.”
In 2009, three years after meeting on the BART train, George proposed at Le Bateau Ivre surrounded by friends. Crystal said yes, and the two married on a yacht in Newport Harbor in 2011.
BART has remained a seminal part of their lives. So much so that six years ago, Matson joined the transit agency as an attorney.
Even now, Crystal still remembers the way she felt taking BART around the region as a bright-eyed and bushytailed twentysomething.
“It was the way I got around everywhere,” she said. “It just felt like I was a grownup in the city, and that was exciting.”
BART officials discuss Earthquake Safety Program and early warning system
With earthquake safety awareness high after Sunday's Napa quake, BART officials reminded the public about how the transit system has been strengthened to increase safety and explained its cutting edge technology used to detect earthquakes before they occur. The Napa earthquake happened overnight Sunday at a
BART will close at 9 pm Monday-Sunday and open at 8 am Saturday-Sunday
BART is taking swift action to reduce operating costs as ridership levels have significantly declined as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and shelter in place orders. BART has done an exhaustive review of ridership and train car loads this week and will make the following changes to service until further
BART to run on Sunday schedule for July 4 holiday; extra trains for fireworks
BART will operate on a Sunday schedule for the Independence Day holiday on Monday, July 4, 2011, with service starting around 8 am. BART is also planning extra trains that evening to accommodate crowds attending the fireworks display along the Embarcadero, as well as longer trains for two baseball games that