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Joint BART, AC Transit Board meeting
Members of the BART and AC Transit Boards of Directors and staff from the respective agencies are meeting on Thursday, September 14, at 2:00 p.m. to discuss ways to coordinate services and improve transit in the East Bay. The meeting will take place in the BART Board Room located on the third floor of the
BART Connects: BART and the African-American Shakespeare Company “help each other grow and succeed”
Sherri Young stands outside the Civic Center Station entrance across from the Orpheum Theatre.
Lifelong BART rider Sherri Young took a major gamble in 2015 when she transferred the African-American Shakespeare Company from a 200-seat theater about a mile from BART to a series of big venues in Downtown San Francisco.
The performance spaces she chose – the Herbst Theatre, Taube Wilsey Atrium, and Marines Memorial Theatre – are nestled in the heart of the city’s vibrant theater and arts district encompassing parts of Union Square, the Tenderloin, and Civic Center. The area is home to iconic venues like the War Memorial Opera House, the Orpheum Theatre, the American Conservatory Theater, and the Orpheum, among many others. All of these historic theaters are a short walk from BART or, in the case of the Orpheum, just steps from the station.
Weighing the pros and cons of moving her company, Sherri calculated if people could take transit to the company’s performances, she just might be able to fill all the seats in those giant theaters.
“You have to meet the community where they are,” Sherri said. And if community members don't live near Downtown San Francisco, they most likely lived by BART or agencies that connect to it. You can’t go to the theater, she thought, if you don’t have a means to get there.
Sherri is the Executive Director and Founder of the African-American Shakespeare Company. In September, it celebrates 30 years of classical theater produced and performed by artists as diverse as their audiences.
“I founded the company because there weren’t a lot of people like me on the stage, and there were even fewer in Shakespeare and works of that nature,” Sherri said. “It was a missed opportunity because the stories are wonderful – they're about being human. I asked myself: What if we told the story in a different setting with music and cultural icons that my community would be able to grasp better and feel compelled to come see?”
The organization’s cornerstone production is “Cinderella,” created by Sherri and company members and performed every December at the Herbst Theatre -- a 10-minute walk from Civic Center/UN Plaza Station. Other productions in 2024 included Dominique Morisseau’s “Pipeline,” about the complexities and nuances of Black parenting in the inner-city, and Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew.” The former was performed at Taube Wilsey Atrium Theater (an 11-minute walk from Civic Center/UN Plaza Station) and the latter at the Marines’ Memorial Theatre (a six-minute walk from Powell Street Station).
A promotional photo for “Cinderella” from 2022, starring Funmi "Lola" Awopetu in the title role.
In 2015, Sherri met Jill Buschini, who manages BARTable Co-Marketing Partnerships (learn more about these partnerships here). Sherri wanted to build the reputation of African-American Shakespeare Company and realized “we could do that through BART.” She signed a co-marketing agreement with BART so the two organizations could promote each other with no exchange of money.
"From the moment we met, we just clicked!” said Buschini. “Over the past 9+ years, Sherri and I have cultivated a co-marketing partnership that has allowed both of our organizations to reach new audiences and achieve greater marketing impact together. I've watched her organization grow and thrive, just as she’s seen BARTable expand—even through a pandemic! I think I can speak for both of us when I say we've both enjoyed the journey, and I feel honored to know her and work alongside her. I look forward to our continued partnership and collaboration to get more people on BART to experience her amazing productions!"
As part of the partnership, you’ll see the BARTable logo on many African-American Shakespeare Company materials, including their website and performance programs. In exchange, BART posts banners and digital advertisements around the system promoting the company’s performances. BARTable also runs an annual sweepstakes for “dinner and a show” at the African-American Shakespeare Company through its Contests and Deals program. Sherri considers BART “one of our best and most critical partners.”
“Small organizations like ours can’t afford to pay much into marketing,” Sherri said. She prefers those dollars go to people and program expenses. “BART helps us get the word out and make connections.” Besides, "You can go to dinner, a show, a bar, stay up late, then take the train home.”
Sherri Young featured in a BART advertisement.
The relationship goes deeper than marketing. For Sherri, it’s all about connection.
“BART has physical extensions to communities, but we’re giving BART access to our community as well,” she said. BART and arts organizations like the African-American Shakespeare Company enrich and uplift one another. One gives people a place to go, the other gets people there. If patrons can’t find a way to the theater, the show won’t go on.
Because of that natural synergy, Sherri said "BART is going to be a lifelong partner of the company. We’re helping each other grow and succeed.”
The African-American Shakespeare Company was born more than thirty years ago as a one-time showcase in a small black box 50-seat theater with friends and scrounged costumes. It has since grown into a company of ten full-time employees that work with 11 teaching artists, and up to 80 actors, designers, and technicians every year.
In those thirty years, BART’s grown too. In 1994, BART had just 34 stations. Today, it has 50.
To borrow Sherri’s phrasing: “We’re growing! We’ve grown! We’re doing all the things! And we’re all in this together.”
About BART Connects
The BART Connects storytelling series was launched in 2023 to showcase the real people who ride and rely on BART and illustrate the manifold ways the system affects their lives. The subjects of BART Connects will be featured in videos as well as a forthcoming marketing campaign that is slated to run across the Bay Area. Find all the stories at bart.gov/bartconnects.
The series grew out of BART's Role in the Region Study, which demonstrates BART’s importance to the Bay Area’s mobility, cultural diversity, environmental and economic sustainability. We conducted a call for stories to hear from our riders and understand what BART means to them. More than 300 riders responded, and a selection of respondents were interviewed for the BART Connects series.
East Contra Costa BART Extension Implementation
The eBART Project is under construction, having entered the implementation phase in cooperation with the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC), Contra Costa Transportation Authority (CCTA), and Caltrans. The three partners, together with BART, are coordinating on design, construction and funding. The
Take BART to Sunday Streets in the Mission June 7
The next in the series of car-free "Sunday Streets" events in San Francisco will highlight the Mission District -- and BART makes it easy to get there. For the June 7 event, the public can participate in a wide variety of free, car-free activities. The central gathering point is Garfield Square Park, at 26th
Charter bus items will be in BART's Lost and Found
BART's lost and found office regularly helps riders reconnect with items they have inadvertently left behind on trains, from sweaters to sunglasses. Now, they're also helping out with items left behind on the special charter buses that BART provided to carry riders during the strike last week when trains were
Nov. 20: Join BART for a community meeting on BART’s sustainability progress and share your feedback
On Wednesday, Nov. 20, 5pm to 6:30pm, BART’s Sustainability Department invites the public to join a virtual community meeting for updates on BART’s sustainability progress and to share their thoughts and priorities moving forward.
To receive the meeting Zoom link, register by clicking here or scanning the QR code on the flyer below.
The meeting will gather perspectives and ideas from the community as BART moves forward in updating its 2017 Sustainability Action Plan for 2025. BART’s Sustainability Department will provide background on its sustainability vision and program; an overview of current efforts to update the action plan for 2025; and presentations on key topics (each followed by interactive polling), including energy/GHG emissions, water, waste, resilience and adaptation, transportation and land use planning, materials and construction practices, and rider and employee experience.
This will be followed by a Q&A and a discussion of next steps.
More on BART’s Sustainability Action Plan: The action plan identifies, evaluates, and prioritizes the most important actions BART can take to advance sustainability through Calendar Year 2035. The plan summarizes much of the existing sustainability work BART is doing and finds the best points to leverage sustainability in the future planning, design, construction, operations and ongoing maintenance of the system.
We hope to see you there!
To read more about BART’s Sustainability Program, visit bart.gov/sustainability. To read the 2017 Action Plan, click here.
BART awarded $25 million state grant for project to transform the North Berkeley BART Station
On Thursday, October 24, 2024, California Secretary of Transportation Toks Omishakin announced at the North Berkeley BART Station that BART has been awarded $25 million from the Cycle 7 Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program (TIRCP) for the North Berkeley Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) Mobility Enhancements Project.
“This funding makes possible two plazas plus bike and pedestrian improvements, which will help transform the North Berkeley BART station area into a mixed-use, sustainable community,” says BART Board Director Rebecca Saltzman, who represents the station. “By enhancing access to public transit and improving bike and pedestrian infrastructure, projects like this will reduce dependency on personal vehicles.”
Key project components include BART rider parking within a TOD garage, publicly accessible open spaces including an intermodal transit plaza, and walking and biking enhancements around the station. The TOD will transform the main North Berkeley Station parking lot into housing and open space. The TIRCP funds are critical to supporting investments that enhance access to BART for current and future BART riders.
TIRCP funds will be used to enhance walking and biking infrastructure and augment multimodal connections. These enhancements are expected to boost ridership by facilitating safe pedestrian and bike access and promoting non-automotive transportation. The estimated total cost for the Mobility Enhancements Project is $37 million. Remaining funding sources are from local and state contributions.
The overall North Berkeley Station TOD project prioritizes affordable housing, aligns with BART’s TOD Policy goals and meets the strategic objectives of the TIRCP program. The project will consist of five residential buildings that will be built in phases.
BART estimates that the 739 new homes in the TOD, with approximately half affordable for households at or below 80% of Area Median Income, would generate roughly 750 new trips per day by 2031.
BART’s Brightening Crew: Blasting Away the Grime
You may have seen them before in downtown Oakland or San Francisco, covered head-to-toe in protective gear and wielding a heated high-pressure washer wand. They’re BART’s brightening crew, and they’re on a deep cleaning mission to blast away the dirt (and blood, and vomit, and human waste) mucking up our
BART participates in emergency drill at Antioch Station
On Monday, February 25, 2019 at 10 am the BART Police Department along with the Berkeley and Walnut Creek Police Departments will participate in an emergency preparedness drill at the Antioch BART Station. The exercise will take place for approximately three hours. The east end of the Antioch Station platform
Cracked rail repaired, BART service restored
BART has restored service along lines affected this morning by a cracked rail north of Lake Merritt Station, although there were residual delays as the system recovered from the disruption. The incident began around 9:15 a.m. today and service was restored at 11:07 a.m. Special shuttle trains were put in