You miss the point.
These rail systems in our biggest cities have already made their big dent (and only 11 cities have the very expensive subway systems).
Adding more rail has less and less impact.
The numbers speak for themselves, highly subsidized rail has a 100 times less passenger miles than private cars (and rail has about the same as Bus service).
Even massive investing in more very expensive light Rail is not going to make much of a dent in those numbers.
Worse, their passenger rates per mile are pathetic: Rail only averages 26 passengers per Train trip and Buses only average 10 passengers per Bus trip for the simple reason that they have only two heavily used periods per day and yet to be useful to commuters they have to run all day/night long. You can't just look at their peak periods and say, "gee, that's efficient", you have to look at their entire daily schedule, which when you add in the extra commute to/from your home and place you really want to go to, is not efficient at all.
These rail systems in our biggest cities have already made their big dent (and only 11 cities have the very expensive subway systems).
Adding more rail has less and less impact.
The numbers speak for themselves, highly subsidized rail has a 100 times less passenger miles than private cars (and rail has about the same as Bus service).
Even massive investing in more very expensive light Rail is not going to make much of a dent in those numbers.
Worse, their passenger rates per mile are pathetic: Rail only averages 26 passengers per Train trip and Buses only average 10 passengers per Bus trip for the simple reason that they have only two heavily used periods per day and yet to be useful to commuters they have to run all day/night long. You can't just look at their peak periods and say, "gee, that's efficient", you have to look at their entire daily schedule, which when you add in the extra commute to/from your home and place you really want to go to, is not efficient at all.
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