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TCRP Web Doc 2 Evaluating Transit Operations for Individuals with Disabilities: Final Report (1997)
Transportation Research Board (TRB)

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CHAPTER V LOW-FLOOR BUSES INTRODUCTION AND MAJOR FINDINGS The experience of Ann Arbor, Michigan, Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, and Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia were studied to evaluate the operational experience of the transit authority, He Impact on riders with disabilities, ant! the impact on general public riders. A low-floor bus is one which has a floor between the front and rear doors sufficiency low enough to remove Me need for steps In Me vicinity of the cloors or in the aisle between Me cloors. A low-floor bus with a Chinch floor and a kneeling feature allows the step up from a sit nch curb to be reduced to four or five inches. ADA standarcis allow a ramp slope of I:6 for heights In this range, so a ramp for wheelchairs would neect to be only 24 to 30 Inches long. Buses currently being purchased typically have 48-~nch ramps. By comparison, a conventional North American transit bus has a floor 30 to 35 inches above the street, with three steps inside the door, the first of which is 14 or 15 Inches high. A kneeling feature reduces the height of Me first step by three to five inches. Access for wheelchair users and others who cannot climb steps is provided by means of a lift In the front or rear door. AD of the low-floor buses which were studied are 40-foot coaches manufactured by New Flyer Industries (mode! D40LF). They are typical of low-floor currently being purchased by Norm American public transit systems. The low-floor section extends only from the front door to the rear door, which is typically located just rear of the TCRP B-1A V-1 Draft Final Report

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Table V-~. Key Specifications for Low-Floor Buses New Flyer Mocte} D40LF Key Statistics Length Width Entrance height Kneeling height 40 feet 102 inches 14.4 inches 11.4 inches Seats 36 (max. without wheelchairs) Ramp length 44 inches Ramp width 30.5 inches Front door Muff 31 inches Nova Corporation Mode} [FS Key Statistics Length with Enhance height Kneeling height Seats 49 (max. without wheelchairs 40 feet 102 inches 14 inches 14 inches Front door wicket 43 inches Special Notice The Transportation Research Board, the National Research Council, the Transit Development Corporation, and the Federal Transit Administration (sponsor of the Transit Cooperative Research Program) do not endorse products or manufacturers. Trade or manufacturers' names appear herein solely because they are considered essential to the clarity and completeness of the project reporting. TCRP B-lA V-2 Draft Final Report

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center of Me bus. Rear of the rear door, Me aisle has a series of steps up to an elevated section over the engine and the rear axle. Full-s~ze "true low-floor" urban transit buses fin which the low floor extends Me entire length of the vehicle) are currently In use In Europe but are just recently being marketed by the Nova Bus Corporation in America. Key specifications of the New Flyer low-floor buses and the Nova Bus Corporation vehicle are provided In the following box. At all the case study sites, the buses have front-door ramps powered by a hydraulic drive located underneath the front door area. Normally, the ramp is operated by the driver using simple controls mounted on the dashboard. In the event the ramp does not operate normally, the driver can deploy the ramp manually. A leather strap is attached to the lip of the ramp which the driver can use to lift the ramp from its stowed position. Once the ramp is lifted to the vertical position, its fall to the deployed position is braked by resistance In the hydraulic mechanism. A similar procedure allows the ramp to be stowed manually. Wheelchair tie down locations are located near the front of the bus on both sides of the aisle. The first forward-fac~ng seats and the side-fac~ng seats In front of them fold up to create space for wheelchairs. The space immediately behind the driver on bow sides of Me aisle (between the driver and the first seats) is taken up by two wheel-housings. These wheel-hous~ngs look quite bulky, reaching almost as high as the seat backs, and extending almost five feet behind the front entryway. The bus width gives wheelchair users considerable room to maneuver. There Is 35.5 inches of clearance between Me wheel-hous~ngs, and a minimum of 38 inches clearance In turn past Me farebox. Me entryway is 31 inches wide. Aft of the rear door, there is a short step up to an elevated seating area. TCRP B-lA V-3 Draft Final Report

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The following are key results from Me four case studies conducted for We low floor bus portion of the report . . . . . . Boarding and alighting times for non-disabled passengers are faster on low floor buses Man on conventional buses. The difference Is on the orcler of one second per passenger. Simulated boar&as and Lightings by wheelchair passengers in Champaign Urbana and at BC Trans* indicate that boarding is faster on low-floor buses than on conventional buses win lifts. The difference is one Me order of one minute. Alighting is also faster, wad a difference on the order of half a minute. Analysis of dwell times for wheelchair users at BC Transit suggests a boarding time advantage of only 17 seconds for low-floor buses in actual revenue service. However, this results depends on only five observed wheelchair boardings on low-floor buses. The dweD-dme analysis shows the average wheelchair boarding takes about two and a half minutes In revenue service. Analysis of dwell times at BC Transit shows that passengers wit h other mobility difficulties board a low-floor bus In Free to four seconds less time per passenger than they board a conventional bus. The observed differences in boarding and alighting time are undikely to result In measurable differences In operating speed. Repair frequency and maintenance cost are much lower for accessibility equipment on low-floor buses than on conventional buses. Annual maintenance costs per bus were $2,400 less In Champaign-Urbana and $300 less In Ann Arbor. TCRP B-lA Vat Draft Final Report

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. . . . . . Ramps on low-floor buses have much better ~n-service reliability than lifts on conventional buses. Incidents relating to difficult operation or failure of lifts are common. Ramp failure is rare, and difficulties can be easily overcome by manual operation. No evidence of increased passenger accident rates due to the low-floor design, including the step up in the back of the bus, were found. None of the case studies provided clear evidence of whether low-floor buses win increase ridership by passengers with disabilities or divert ridership from paratrans* service. Riciers with disabilities have varied opinions about the ease of use and safety of low-floor buses comparer} to conventional buses with lifts. Many riders, especially users of electric wheelchairs, find the low-floor buses easier to use. Other riders have difficulties stemming from steep ramp angles that can occur when buses must stop where there is no curb or when the kneeling feature cannot be deployed. Despite some difficulties with ramps, riders who use wheelchairs generally prefer low-floor buses because of the greater reliability of ramps compared to lifts. Many other riders with disabilities also prefer low-floor buses because of easier boarding and alighting and other features. The overall operating cost of low-floor buses appears to be similar to that of conventional buses, with Me exception of He cost of maintaining accessibility equipment. There appears to be no measurable difference In price between low-floor and conventional buses resulting solely from the low-floor design. TCRP B-lA V-5 Draft Final Report

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CASE STUDY SITES Information was obtained from case studies conducted for this research In Ann Arbor, Michigan and Champaign-Urbana, Illinois; from research by a team from the University of Michigan In Ann Arbors; and from a case study of accessible buses In Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia conducted by BC Transit for the Canadian Transport Development Centre (TDC).2 Except as otherwise cited, aU the data shown In this chapter come from these sources. Ann Arbor and Champaign-Urbana were selected as case study sites for this research because they have the most extensive record of low-~Door bus transit service In the United States. Both of them also have Jift equipped accessible buses for comparison purposes. Vancouver and Victoria, both operated by BC Transit, are among the few transit systems In Canada which offer wheelchair accessible fixed-route transit service. Vancouver uses lift buses for accessibility, while Victoria uses low-~Roor buses. (BC Transit, Vancouver, acquired 298 lift-equ~ppec! buses between 1990 and 1995. lYs most recent order was for 108 low-~door buses in 1996.) Summary data about the case study sues is provided In Table V-2. Attempts to compare low-floor buses with conventional buses depend on the particular equipment being used. As indicated before, all of the case study locations use similar low-floor equipment. However, as shown In Table V-3, there are notable differences in the conventional buses in use, the accessibility equipment on those buses, and policies regarding its use. For example, BC Transit's policy of requiring wheelchair users to board backwards significantly influenced passengers' perceptions. At MID iLevine, l.C. and Torng, G. Dwell Time Effects of the Low Floor Bus Design, paper presented at the 1994 Aru~ual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board. 2Geehan, T. (TransVision Consultants), An Evaluation of Accessible Transit Buses in Vancouver and Victoria, Final Report, Transport Development Center, Report No. TP 12709E, Montreal, June 1995. TCRP B-lA V-6 Draft Final Report

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Table V-2. Case Study Sites -- Key Statistics _ Ann-Arbor Champaign- BC Transit BC Transit Transportation Urbana Mass Vancouver Victoria Authority Transit District (AATA) (MTD) Service Area Population | 189,000 | L11,330 | 1.8 minion | 292,400 _ Total Bus Fleet 57 54b 699 buses 167 244 trolley buses Nwnber of Low-floor | lea | 15 | None | 21 Buses Date Low-Floor Buses | January 1993 | prig 1993 | n.a. | May 1992 Put in Service April 1993 Number of Lift Buses | 34 | 39 | 277 40' buses ~167 21 60' buses All fleet data pertain to die time of die case studies. Forty-foot buses only. AATA also operates eight low-floor Orion II buses in fixed-route service. bExcluding contracted campus service. TCRP B-lA V-7 Draft Final Report

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Table V-3. Conventional Bus Equipment at Case Study Sites BC Transit-Vancouver MC! Classic and New Flyer with front-door Lift-U lifts. Passengers using wheelchairs or scooter are requested to board the lifts backwards. Champaign-Urbana MID FIxible, 35-foot, 96-inch wide with front-door Lift-U lifts. Grumman F[xible, 35-foot and 40-foot, 96-~nch wide with front-cloor EEC lifts. Passengers are encouraged to board the EEC lifts backwards. Ann-Arbor Transit Authority RT~06, 35-foot, 96-~nch wicle with rear-door GMC lifts. TCRP B-lA V-S D rapt Final Report

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Pl~e V-[ -or Bus Operand by the In Labor Transpod~lon body f ! I "I 1 1 1 -j ~79 D~ BUZZ Reporf

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Pl~e V-~ Lo~-Iloor Bus Operated by the Champal~~rb~a Mass lit Dlshld ~ Ace. ; ~ ;.. ..... IMP B-j ~V-10 D~ BUZZ Report

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Figure V-3. Interior of Ann Arbor low-Floor Bus Looking Forward TCRP B-IA V-1 Draft Final Report

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Your feeling of safetr on the lift/ramp The ease of moving down the bus aisle The ease of orienting the chair/scooter to move into position The ease of maneuvering into the securement position The time it takes to get out of the bus Your feeling of safety on Me lift/ramp during exiting Ratings were more favorable for low-floor buses for Amount oftzmefor ramp/lift to descend, The ease of turning around when you boar~forward, and for most procedures related to the securement process. However, the securement mechanism is not part of the low-floor design. Even though participants' ratings were higher for the lift-buses than the low-floor buses on most items, their ratings on Overall satisfaction with the design of [he vehicle were higher for low-floor buses than lift-buses. This result could reflect participants' perceptions of the likely reliability of the ramps, an issue that was not nclucled on the surveys and therefore was not actuaBy tested. Differences in aisle clearances that affect maneuvering were described In Me section on boarding anc! alighting lime, which found no significant difference maneuvering tone between low-floor and conventional buses. The focus group participants at MID agreed that maneuvering to and from the tie down area is easier on MTD's low-floor buses. It is easier partly because Me low-floor buses are 102 inches wide, while MTD's lift buses are 96 inches wicle. However, it is also the case that, because of Me large wheel-weD covers In the front of Me low-floor buses, there are no passenger seats between the front door and the tie down area. By comparison, in a TCRP B-IA V-34 Draft Final Report

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conventional bus, it is easy for a passenger boarding In a wheelchair to rod over or run into the feet of passengers seated In the side-fac~ng seats mounted over the wheel weds. Four manual wheelchair users who responded to Me MID clisabled rider survey found no difference In ease of getting from the door area to the seat or tie-down area, while three users of electric wheeTchans or scooters found the low-floor buses easier. Presumably the wider aisles on the low-floor buses make a greater difference for the electric wheelchair and scooter users. MID drivers generally confirmed the observations of the focus group participants. Boarding can be delayed because other passengers, especially children, won't get out of the way. There are fewer passengers in the way on the low-floor buses. The wider aisles on these buses also help. One aspect of boarding that requires a little extra effort and tune by the striver on a low floor bus Is that three seats must be lifted instead of one as on the conventional buses. Most of the MTD riders with disabilities who participated in Me boarding simulations or responded to a survey found ramps safer than life;. Reasons given included Dislike of lifts, including a fear of heights, mistrust of mechanical devices, and a prior accident on a lift. ~ the case of manual wheelchair users' Me advantages of ramps appear to be tempered by concerns related to negotiating an inclined ramp, with possibilities of tipping backward, losing traction, losing control on the way down, or even roping off the side of Me ramp. Other Riders with Disabilities Evidence on the -preferences of riders win disabilities, other than wheelchair users, comes from surveys of BC Transit paratransit users, a survey of low-floor bus TCRP B-lA V-35 Draft Final Report

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passengers in Ann Arbor, and focus groups and individual rider interviews In an four cities. Non-wheelcha~r users who were interviewed included, In Ann Arbor, a blind woman who had also broken her ankle and a person with arthritis who walks with a cane, and In Champaign-Urbana, two blink! riders and one rider with vertigo. Me Ann Arbor riders found the low-floor buses easier to get on and off. They cited factors such as the lack of steps, wider doors, and the ability to take a shopping cart on the bus. One woman stated that the low-floor buses are easier to kneel, a feature she always requests. The blind woman wad a broken ankle noted that she can lose her balance on the steps of a conventional bus, a problem which does not exist on low-floor buses. She also observed that her guide dog is able to lie under the first seat on the low-floor buses because there is no wheel weD under the seat. She felt that it is a little easier to get to a seat on a low-floor bus, even though the distance to the first seat is longer than on a conventional bus. According to a blind rider in Champaign-Urbana, boarding with a guide dog is easier on a low-floor bus. In particular, if there are several people boarding at once, so that boarding passengers have to wait In line as fares are paid, dogs find it hard to pause on We steps of a conventional bus. Over non-wheelcha~r users In Champaign- Urbana had no strong preference for either type of bus. The on-board survey In Ann Arbor included responses from 56 riders who reported some difficulty going up and down steps. As reported In He section on perceptions of general public riders, they generally preferred low-floor buses by a slightly wider margin Pan other riders. TCRP B-lA V-36 Draft Final Report

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The surveys of BC Transit paratransit users Included results from 35 lift-bus riders In Vancouver ant! 42 low-floor bus riders in Victoria. These samples included both wheelchair users and non-wheelchair users. The low-floor bus riders gave higher satisfaction ratings than the lift-bus riders on 20 out of 21 features, typically by a spread of about half a point on a five-point scale. Some of the features rated do not appear to have any connection to the bus design, including Ease of access to the bus stop, Suitability of the bus stop, Operator's willingness and athhude, and Ability to find i?lformahon. Since Victoria riders also rated these features better than Vancouver riders, it is possible that the differences stem from the composition of the samples, or a different overall approach to accessible bus service in We two cities. Driver Perceptions Information about drivers' perceptions is available from a group interview of four drivers on MTD's safety and tra~rung committee. In addition to items already noted, the drivers made the following observations: . . . The drivers were of the belief that no wheelchair riders prefer the lift buses over me low-floor buses. It is the drivers' impression that the reliability of the ramps compensates for Me ramp angle for the passengers. In cold weather, Me bottom of Me ramp can pick up snow and ice which the driver has to scrape off. The drivers suggested a heating element for melting ice on the ramp. When Me ramp is wet, its longitudinal ribs can cause sliding. The drivers prefer the low-floor buses in general. They have better seats, a better ride, a more adjustable steering wheel, and are faster than MTD's older buses. Passenger boarding goes faster, and the driver has better visibility TCRP B-lA V-37 Draft Final Report

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around the passengers. The only negative from He drivers' perspective is that there is no place for Hem to stow their gear. · The drivers hear no complaints about Here being fewer seats on the low-floor buses. However, passengers win longer legs do complain about lack of knee room. Preferences of Non-Disabled Riders An on-boarc3 survey In Ann Arbor founct that most riders, including riders who have some difficulty going up and down steps, find low-floor buses easier to use. As shown in Table V-10, 89% of riders with difficulty going up and down steps and 82% of other riders, stated that low-floor buses are easier to board than conventional buses with steps. Seventy-five percent of riders with difficulty going up and clown steps and 72% of other riders fire! low-floor buses better with respect to ease of leaving the bus. Smaller majorities found low-floor buses better with respect to the feeling of roominess and the ability to see out. For the other issues, less than half of riders had a preference for low-floor buses. However, in no case did more Han 15% of riders actually prefer conventional buses with steps; He balance stated Hey had no preference. Economic Evaluation The relative cost of providing accessible bus service win lift buses or low-floor buses will depend on He following factors: Purchase cost. Number of buses required for service to provide desired capacity and headways. Maintenance cost. . TCRP B-lA V-38 Draft Final Report

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. Purchase Cost Cost of complementary paratransit service for riders with disabilities who cannot use accessible fixed route buses. Prices for 40-foot conventional and low-floor buses appear to be comparable. AATA paid $19S,000 per bus for the ten low-floor buses delivered in January 1993, compared to $185,000 per bus for an order of conventional buses purchased four years earlier. A second order by AATA for delivery of 15 low-floor buses in the spring of 1995 cost $225,000 per 40-foot bus. Bid prices were obtained from four other systems in the United States which purchased low-floor buses during 1994. For these four systems, plus AATA, the average bid price for a 40-foot, diesel powered, low-floor bus was $227,000. The total spread of bid prices was only from $220,000 to $234,000. There was no clear relationship to order size which ranged from 15 to 150. AD of the buses were manufactured by New Flyer. By comparison, staff of Santa Clara County Transit surveyed 11 transit systems In the United States which had made recent purchases of conventional buses, and found an average bid price of $236,000. By subtracting out costs for extras, including natural gas propulsion or extended warranties, a "base price" for a standard 40-foot coach was calculated, which averaged $228,000 for the 11 orders. Based on tenders received by BC Transit In May 1995, the capital cost for bow a lift-equipped bus and a low-floor bus was $324,500 Canadian ($243,000 U.S.). These results appear to confirm that there is no measurable difference In price resulting solely from the low-floor design. TCRP B-lA V-39 Draft Final Report

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Table V-IO. Percent of Riders Preferring Low-Floor Buses No Difficult with Some Difficultly with Steps (n=256) Steps (n=56) ~_ _ _ | Ease of getting on the bus 82% 89% | Ease of getting to a seat 41% 48% | Ease of leaving the bus 72% 75% | Availabilitr of seats 34% 44% . Seated comfort 39% 38% 1 | Feeling ofroonuness 63% 59% | Smoothness of the ride 47% 46% | Feeling of personal security 25% 29% Ability to see out l 60% | 63' Source: Survey of riders on-board low-floor buses, July 1994. TCRP B-1A VITO Draft Final Report

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Number of Buses Requiredfor Service There could be a difference in the number of buses required for service if bus operating speeds were significantly different or if passenger-carry~ng capacity were significantly different. The analysis indicates that operating speeds are not significantly different at the patronage levels typical of most North American transit systems. Low- floor buses do have less seating capacity than conventional buses, but they have somewhat more standing room. None of the case study operators has actually added buses to make up for lost seating capacity. For purposes of this analysis it is assumed that the number of buses required for service win not change as a result of using low- floor buses. Maintenance Cost The analysis shows a clear savings In maintenance cost resulting from the lower cost of maintaining ramps instead of lifts: $300 per bus per year In Ann Arbor and $2,400 per bus per year In Champaign-Urbana, with no measurable difference in other maintenance costs. Most of the difference between the two systems stems from differences In the cost of maintaining different lift designs rather than differences in the cost of maintaining ramps. Cost of Complementary Paratransit Low-floor buses will permit some individuals to use fixed-route transit service who would be prevented from using it with conventional buses. Under a system of ADA eligibility certification, it is possible Mat the number of people eligible for complementary paratrans~t could be reduced. It is also possible, Even a program of travel training and publicity, Mat people who can use fixed-route buses some of the TCRP B-lA V~1 Draft Final Report

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time would choose to rely on paratransit for fewer trips if the fixed-route service used low-floor buses. It was not possible to quantify these effects In the case studies. In ah likelihood, a significant Impact win only occur when a transit system has a fleet which is preclominantly low-floor buses, and the system makes a concerted effort to encourage a shift In ridership. Summary of Economic Evaluation On the basis of the available evidence, low-floor buses win result in no change In capital costs, and a reduction of $300 to $2,400 per bus per year In operating cost as a result of reduced maintenance costs compared to conventional buses with lifts. IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES--LESSONS LEARNED The case studies provide very limited information about implementation issues. Both AATA and MTD used a demonstration bus provicled by New Flyer ~clushies to test whether clearances would be problem on any routes (they were not), ant] to gain acceptance from the disabled community and operations staff. Both systems placed the low-floor buses on more heavily-used routes, a decision which appears to have been popular with disabled riders and the general public. AATA used the buses on all routes at first to let people in all parts of the service area see them before placing them predominantly on specific routes. Neither system guarantees low-floor bus service on particular routes or runs. Neither system promoted low-floor buses to riders with disabilities, or made special efforts to encourage paratransit riders to shift hips. APPLICABILITY AND TRANSFERABILITY The lessons learned in Ann Arbor and Champaign-Urbana should apply well to other small to medium-s~zed transit systems. Both systems provided a test of operation TCRP B-1A V-42 Draft Final Report

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in hot and cold weather and in snowy conditions. Champaign-Urbana is flat, but Ann Arbor includes some hilly terrain. However, the case studies do not provide any evidence about operations in a large-city environment with heavy passenger loadings. Both of Me case study systems, as wed as BC Transit In Victoria, use low-floor buses with front-door ramps. The results of the case studies would not necessarily apply to low-floor buses who rear-door ramps. TCRP B-lA V-43 Draft Final Report

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Representative terms from entire chapter:

conventional buses