Public Transportation Benefit Area.
A public transportation benefit area (PTBA) is a type of municipal corporation created to provide regional transportation service to all or a portion of a county or multiple counties. It is authorized to construct, own, and operate a regional transportation system within its jurisdictional boundaries in accordance with specified statutory requirements. The creation of a PTBA requires the convening of a public transportation improvement conference attended by an elected official from each city and county falling within the jurisdiction of the proposed PTBA.
Governance.
The governance of a PTBA is provided by a governing body consisting of not more than nine (or 15 if the PTBA is multicounty) elected officials from the governments of the cities and counties participating in the PTBA. A PTBA must also include in its governing body a nonvoting member recommended by the labor organization or organizations representing its employees, if the authority has employees represented by a labor union.
The requirements for the governing body of a PTBA are modified to allow for the appointment of two transit-using members to the governing body of PTBAs as voting members. One of the transit-using members must represent an organization that serves primarily transit-dependent individuals, if possible, and the other must primarily rely on public transportation. If no organizational representative available to serve resides within the PTBA's service area, a second member who is primarily reliant on public transportation must be appointed instead. Transit-using members must be provided comprehensive training regarding the Open Public Meetings Act and the Public Records Act, as soon as is reasonably practicable after the member's appointment.
The meetings of the governing body of a PTBA, that has transit-using members of the governing body, must occur at a time and place that is reasonably accessible by transit.
The ability to appoint transit-using members to the governing body of a PTBA does not apply to any PTBA where there are retained citizen positions on the governing body, which were in existence at the time the PTBA assumed public transportation functions previously provided under the Interlocal Cooperation Act.
The substitute bill requires that transit-using members must be provided comprehensive training regarding the Open Public Meetings Act and the Public Records Act, as soon as it is reasonably practicable after the member's appointment. The requirement that meetings of the governing body of a PTBA must occur at a time and place that is reasonably accessible by transit is limited to PTBAs with transit-using members of the governing body.
The ability to appoint transit-using members to the governing body of a PTBA does not apply to any PTBA where there are retained citizen positions on the governing body, which were in existence at the time the PTBA assumed public transportation functions previously provided under the Interlocal Cooperation Act.
(In support) The appointment of two additional transit-using members to a PTBA board is optional. This is not a criticism of current PTBA boards, but an opportunity to improve them.
Transit takes people many places and the people using transit should have a say in how it is run, since it can otherwise be difficult to run for office while dependent on transit.
There is a place and a purpose to having transit users on the board, since they understand the system and can thus help the functioning of the board. There are often people making decisions about transit who do not use it, and this bill will ensure that some of the board members do use transit.
Having transit users as a part of the board might boost its approval, and it will give citizens an opportunity to be heard.
The PTBA boards undertake a board review every four years. The elected members do not run for office to serve on transit boards, so this bill would allow for greater board diversity.
It is important to include all communities on transit boards, including the blind. This bill will add to the diversity of boards, rather than take away, and if it had occurred earlier, might have led to the earlier adoption of items like large print signs and the use of braille.
People who rely on transit are passionate about it and want to make the system better. You need to be able to drive to get elected, so transit expertise is often left out.
Too many transit staff drive to work. Even people who receive free passes do not always use them.
(Opposed) None.
(Other) Whatcom Transportation Authority seeks input from riders by hosting various types of meetings, releasing surveys, and receiving input at board meetings. It seeks out particular feedback from impacted communities.
Public comment at board meetings, Community Advisory Committees (CACs), and quarterly meetings all allow for input. A CAC might have 20 members, which allows for users with particular concerns to be heard.
Community Transit seeks input from the community for major decisions, and this input informs decisions.
Transit entities already have CACs to received feedback and advice. Transits are facing a tidal wave of change, with costs up and ridership down. Appointed boards have trouble with accountability, and this bill will not help.
(In support) Representative Joe Timmons, prime sponsor; Lindsey Schromen-Wawrin; Harry Kiick; Judy Jones; Kristina Sawyckyj; Kris Colcock; Kyle Parrish; Amin Hester; Anna Zivarts, Disability Rights Washington; Joe Kunzler; and Robert M. Wardell, Self Advocates in Leadership.