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Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority




  Logo Filename SEPTApng
  Logo Size 81px
  marks SPAX
  "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/New_Castle_County,_Delaware" class="copylinks">New&nbspCastle&nbspCounty
  Start Year 1965
  End Year present


The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority ('''SEPTA''') is a regional Quasi-public State Agency that serves 3.8 million people in five counties in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania region. SEPTA follows a multi-modal approach to Public Transport ation, operating Bus , Subway and Elevated rail, Regional Rail , Light Rail , and Electric Trolley Bus ,and manages construction projects that repair, replace, and expand the existing infrastructure and rolling stock.

SEPTA serves the combined city and county of Philadelphia , Delaware County , Montgomery County , Bucks County , and Chester County . SEPTA also serves New Castle County in Delaware , and Mercer County in New Jersey .

SEPTA has the fifth largest transit system in the United States, with 280 active stations, over 450 miles of track, 2,295 revenue vehicles, 196 routes, and about 306.9 million annual unlinked trips. Average weekday ridership across the system is about 1,000,000 passengers. SEPTA also manages Shared-Ride services in Philadelphia and ADA services across the region. These services are operated by third-party contractors.

SEPTA has a workforce of over 9,000. The company's headquarters is located at 1234 Market Street in Center City Philadelphia.


ROUTES AND RIDERSHIP


Rapid transit


The busiest rapid transit stops are Olney Transportation Center , Frankford Transportation Center , 15th Street / City Hall , and 69th Street Terminal .


Trolley and light rail



Bus

SEPTA lists 121 bus routes, not including over 50 school trips, with most routes in the City of Philadelphia proper. Currently, SEPTA generally employs lettered, one and two-digit route numbering for its City Division routes, 90-series and 100-series numbers routes for its Victory ("Red Arrow") Division (Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery Counties) and its Frontier Division (Montgomery and Bucks Counties), 200-series routes for its Regional Rail connector routes (Routes 201, 204, 205 and 206 in Montgomery & Chester Counties), 300-series routes for other specialized and/or third-party contract routes, and 400-series routes for limited service buses to schools within the city of Philadelphia.


Commuter rail

SEPTA's commuter rail service is run by the SEPTA Regional Rail division. This division operates 13 lines serving more than 150 stations covering most of the five county southeastern Pennsylvania region. It also runs trains to Newark, Delaware , Trenton, New Jersey , and West Trenton, New Jersey . Daily ridership averaged over 100,000 in 2006SEPTA 2007 Annual Service Plan, pg. 82, http://www.septa.org/inside/reports/ASP2007.pdf, retrieved May 7, 2007, with 1/3 of ridership on the R5 route between Thorndale, Paoli, Lansdale, and Doylestown.


SEPTA DIVISIONS

SEPTA has three major operating divisions: City Transit, Suburban, and Regional Rail. These divisions reflect the different transit and railroad operations that SEPTA has assumed.


City Transit Division

The City Transit Division operates routes mostly within the City of Philadelphia, including buses, subway-surface trolleys, the Market-Frankford Line , and the Broad Street Line . Some of its routes extend into Delaware, Montgomery, and Bucks counties. This division is the descendant of the Philadelphia Transportation Company (PTC). There are seven depots in this division - 5 of these depots only operate buses, 1 is a mixed bus/streetcar depot, 1 is a streetcar-only facility.


Garages



Routes


=Bus and trackless trolley

See Also: SEPTA City Transit Division bus routes




=Light rail routes

See Also: SEPTA Subway-Surface Trolley Lines


See Also: SEPTA Route 15




Suburban Division


Victory Division


The Victory Division operates suburban bus and trolley (or light rail) routes that are based at , also known as the Red Arrow Lines. Most residents of the Victory Division operating area still refers this division as the "Red Arrow Division."


Routes


=Light rail routes

See Also: SEPTA Route 100


See Also: SEPTA Suburban Trolley Lines




=Bus routes

See Also: SEPTA Suburban Division bus routes




Frontier Division

The Frontier Division operates suburban bus routes that are based at the Norristown Transportation Center in Montgomery County and bus lines that serve eastern Bucks County. This division is the descendant of the Schuylkill Valley Lines in the Norristown area, with the routes in Bucks County initiated by SEPTA in the 1980s.


Frontier Division routes

See Also: SEPTA Suburban Division bus routes




Suburban contract operations

See Also: SEPTA Suburban Division bus routes




Regional Rail division

See Also: SEPTA Regional Rail



The Regional Rail Division (RRD) operates 13 commuter railroad routes that begin in Central Philadelphia and radiate outwards, terminating in intra-city, suburban, and out of state locations.

This division is the descendant of the 6 electrified commuter lines of the between 1974 and 1984.

With the construction and opening of the Center City Commuter Connection Tunnel in 1984, lines were paired such that a former Pensylvania Railroad line was coupled with a former Reading line. Seven such pairings were created and given route designations numbered R1 through R8 (with R4 not used). As a result, most trains proceed from one outlying terminal to Center City, stopping at 30th Street Station , Suburban Station , and Market East Station , then proceed out to the other outlying terminal assigned to the route. Exceptions exist, e.g. R6 Cynwyd Line trains from Cynwyd terminate at Suburban station and do not proceed to Norristown .

The out-of-state terminals offer connections (and potential connections) with other transit agencies. For example, the R7 Trenton line offers connections in Trenton, New Jersey to NJ Transit (NJT) or Amtrak for travel to New York City . Plans exist to restore NJT service to West Trenton, New Jersey , thus offering a future alternate to New York via the R3 West Trenton line and NJT. Another plan offers a connection for travel to Baltimore and Washington DC via MARC , involving extensions of the SEPTA R2 from Newark, Delaware , an extension of MARC's Penn service from Perryville MD , or both.

SEPTA's railroad Reporting Mark SPAX can be see on non-revenue work equipment including boxcars, diesel locomotives, and other rolling stock.


HISTORY

Pennsylvania state charter created SEPTA on August 17 , 1963 . On November 1 , 1965 , SEPTA absorbed two predecessor agencies. The first predecessor agency, the Passenger Service Improvement Corporation (PSIC), had been created on January 20 , 1960 to work with the Reading Company and Pennsylvania Railroad to improve commuter rail service and help the railroads maintain otherwise unprofitable passenger rail service. The city of Philadelphia and Montgomery, Bucks, and Chester counties created the other predecessor agency, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Compact (SEPACT), on September 8 , 1961 to coordinate regional transport issues. SEPACT itself had succeeded the Philadelphia Transportation Company.

SEPTA was chartered with the purpose of coordinating government subsidies to various transit and railroad companies in southeastern Pennsylvania. This included the Reading Company and Pennsylvania Railroad commuter railroad lines, and by 1966, all of these commuter railroad lines were operated under contract to SEPTA. On February 1 , 1968 , the Pennsylvania Railroad merged with the New York Central railroad to become Penn Central , only to file for bankruptcy on June 21 , 1970 . Penn Central continued to operate in bankruptcy until 1976 when Conrail took over its assets along with several other bankrupt railroads, including the Reading Company. Conrail continued to operate commuter services under contract to SEPTA until January 1 , 1983 , when SEPTA officially took over operations and acquired track, rolling stock, and other assets to form the Railroad Division .

SEPTA acquired the Philadelphia Transportation Company (PTC) on September 30 , 1968 , which included bus, trolley, and trackless trolley routes, and the Market-Frankford Line and the Broad Street Line in the City of Philadelphia. This became the City Transit Division. (Established as the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company in 1907 by the merger of a group of then independent transit companies operating within the city and its environs, the system became the PTC in 1940 .)

On January 30 , 1970 , SEPTA acquired the Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Company, also known as the Red Arrow Lines, which included the Philadelphia And Western Railroad (P&W) route now called the Norristown High Speed Line (Route 100), the Media And Sharon Hill Lines (Routes 101 and 102), and several suburban bus routes in Delaware County. Today, this is the Victory Division, though it is sometimes referred to as the Red Arrow Division.

In 1976, SEPTA acquired the Schuylkill Valley Lines, which is today the Frontier Division.

The present General Manager is Faye L. M. Moore, who had served as the authority's Chief Financial Officer/Treasurer prior to her appointment in 2002. Past General Managers include Joseph T. Mack, John "Jack" Leary, Lou Gambaccini, and David L. Gunn . Past Acting General Managers include James Kilcur and Bill Stead.


2005 STRIKE


SEPTA's contracts with its transit operators expired in April and May, 2005. In October 2005, the Transport Workers Union Local 234 and the United Transportation Union Local 1594 set a strike deadline effective Halloween morning, October 31 , 2005 at 12:01 am. The reason the strike occurred was due to disagreement between SEPTA management and union leadership regarding employees' contributions to healthcare. Before the strike, SEPTA tried to negotiate with the union, offering them a new deal whereby SEPTA union employees would pay 5% of their salary towards healthcare costs. The SEPTA union refused the offer, arguing that when cost of living increases and inflation are factored in, its members would actually make less money than before. Negotiators walked out of contract negotiations minutes before that deadline when they failed to come to a conclusion. SEPTA management was not reqired to pay any of their own healthcare costs. It is also noted that because of overhead, SEPTA has as many middle management jobs as it has union jobs. This could be a result of nepotism and patronage. All employees in the City, Victory, and Frontier Divisions walked off the job, resulting in a complete suspension of service on all bus, trolley, and subway lines. Service on the regional rail division continued according to contingency plans, with service added to certain stations to help transport displaced city and suburban division passengers. This work stoppage stranded approximately 400,000 riders daily, impacting around 1,000,000 rides daily, forcing commuters to car-pool, walk, or arrange other alternative methods of transportation. In addition, over 27,000 public school students who receive free or subsidized transit tokens were forced to miss school completely or have their days cut short due to transportation issues. In 2007, SEPTA proposed eliminating bus transfers which would result in an 80% fare increase for many riders. Because SEPTA has been unable to provide a statistical need for the elimination, they have been forced to hold off.

In the early morning of November 7 , 2005 , a preliminary agreement had been reached between SEPTA management and union leadership. Service on all affected transit lines was fully restored by the late afternoon. This agreement was due in large part to the intervention by former Philadelphia mayor, and current Pennsylvania governor, Ed Rendell .


ACTIVE REVENUE FLEET


Bus



Subway



Light Rail



Regional Rail


, in 1993.]]
station in May 2006.]]


Maintenance of way vehicles



MAINTENANCE FACILITIES



GOVERNANCE

SEPTA is governed by a fifteen member Board of Directors.





The day-to-day operations of SEPTA is handled by the General Manager, who is appointed and hired by the Board of Directors. The General Manager is assisted by 9 department heads, with the title of "Assistant General Manager". The Assistant General Managers report directly to the General Manager on behalf of their respective departments.


CONNECTING TRANSIT AGENCIES IN THE PHILADELPHIA REGION


=Local services



=Regional services



=Interregional/National services



TRIVIA

The Philadelphia-based synth-pop musician Atom And His Package wrote a song entitled "Head of Septa, Nose of Me" about his belief that SEPTA was not responsive to him after he sustained an injury to his nose inside a SEPTA station, it appears on the album Making Love

Philadelphia-based band The Hooters sang that ''You can't get to Heaven on the Frankford El, 'cause the Frankford El goes straight to Frankford,'' in their 1989 song "Beat Up Guitar," which contains several references to Philadelphia.


FOOTNOTES



SEE ALSO



EXTERNAL LINKS




http://www.freewebs.com/bustitution Septa bus and rail pictures