2018
DOI: 10.1177/0361198118777605
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The Effect of Demographic Changes on Transit Ridership Trends

Abstract: Since 2013, there has been a noted overall decline in U.S. transit ridership despite continued growth in population. Transit ridership declines are not a new phenomenon, however. Since 1980, ridership has peaked and decreased seven different times. In the same time period, transit ridership per capita has decreased by nearly 15%. While economic considerations, fuel price, and changing modal choices are among the factors being evaluated in attempts to explain this decline, several unexplored causes share a stro… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…More notable in hindsight, Diab et al find that each additional percent of residents working from home correlated with a 0.127% decline in ridership within a given service area. Demographic changes within cities may have also played a role, as boomers retired (Driscoll et al, 2018), and as many urban neighborhoods became wealthier, whiter, and home to more vehicle owners (Berrebi & Watkins, 2020).…”
Section: Public Transitmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More notable in hindsight, Diab et al find that each additional percent of residents working from home correlated with a 0.127% decline in ridership within a given service area. Demographic changes within cities may have also played a role, as boomers retired (Driscoll et al, 2018), and as many urban neighborhoods became wealthier, whiter, and home to more vehicle owners (Berrebi & Watkins, 2020).…”
Section: Public Transitmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A body of research has quantified the impact of socio-demographic change on ridership change over time at the agency or regional level. Driscoll et al (2018) estimate the effects of population aging on ridership. Assuming that travel demand and mode share by age bracket have remained constant since 1980, they estimate that 3% of the 20% bus ridership decline could be due to aging population.…”
Section: Urban Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Solving metro network expansion is nontrivial due to two primary challenges. Firstly, consideration must be given to intricate features, including transportation flow matrices between regions and the relationship with existing metro lines [3]. Secondly, the selection of regions for metro network expansion poses an NP-hard problem characterized by an enormous solution space comprising all candidate regions, which makes it impossible to conduct an exhaustive search [12].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%