ScoreCard Jun 2014 [May 14 Data] Ridership

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+ ScoreCard Jun 214 [May 14 Data] Ridership Average Weekday Ridership May 14: 1.36M Up 2.% from May 213 Year-to-Year Change: May 13 to Present -.6% -1.% -2.3% -1.7%.4% 4.9% -.2% -.3% -3.8%.8%.7% 3.1% 2.% 6.9 System Maintenance A key measure of system maintenance is the travel time impact of slowdowns caused by track condition. Impact is measured as minutes of speed restrictions. 8.4 8. 8. 6.6 6.2 3.7 5.7 12.4 9.9 1.4 1.6 11.4 On-Time Performance Vehicle Maintenance The MBTA measures in mean-miles between failures, the average distance a vehicle travels between breakdowns. Goal Red 47, 15,16 Orange 37, 39,571 Blue 35, 28,73 Green 5, 5,238 Commuter Rail 1,2 9,85 Bus 6, 12,943 M J J A S O N D J F M A M Elevator Uptime 99.6% Accessibility Escalator Uptime 98.7% Schedule Performance The MBTA measures reliability as the percentage of scheduled service operated. This measure captures our ability to maintain the system well and operate reliably. Red 1% Orange 1% Blue 99% Green 97% Bus 97% On-Time performance is a key measure of Commuter Rail performance. A train is considered on time if it arrives less than five minutes after the scheduled time. For Subway, On-Time Performance compares the scheduled frequency of service to the actual frequency. An on-time train must leave the first station within 1.5x of the scheduled interval between it and the previous train.

Red Line Vehicle Availability 175 174 173 172 171 17 169 168 167 166 165 Required: 168 174 12, 1, 8, 6, 4, 2, Goal: 47, 15,16 8. 7. 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. 1.. Speed Restrictions Travel Time in Minutes 6.7 1.% 99.% 95.% 94.% Percentage of Scheduled Service Operated 1.% On-Time Performance 95.% 94.% 93.% 92.% 91.% 9.% 89.% Goal: 95%

Orange Line Vehicle Availability 96.5 96 95.5 95 94.5 94 93.5 93 92.5 92 91.5 Required: 96 96 5, 45, 4, 35, 3, 25, 2, 15, 1, 5, Goal: 37, 39,571 2.3 2.3 2.2 2.2 2.1 2.1 2. 2. 1.9 1.9 Speed Restrictions Travel Time in Minutes 2.17 15.% 1.% 95.% 9.% 85.% 8.% Percentage of Scheduled Service Operated 1.% On-Time Performance 94.% 92.% 9.% 88.% 86.% 84.% Goal: 95% 91.%

Blue Line Vehicle Availability 9 85 8 75 7 65 Required: 72 81 1, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, Goal: 35, 28,73 3. 2.5 2. 1.5 1..5. Speed Restrictions Travel Time in Minutes 1.5 1.% 94.% 92.% 9.% 88.% Percentage of Scheduled Service Operated 99.2% On-Time Performance 99.% 95.% 94.% 93.% 92.% 91.% Goal: 95%

Green Line Vehicle Availability 165 16 155 15 145 14 135 Required: 15 144 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, Goal: 5, 5,238 3. 2.5 2. 1.5 1..5. Speed Restrictions Travel Time in Minutes 1. 12.% 11.% 1.% 99.% 95.% 94.% 93.% 92.% Percentage of Scheduled Service Operated 96.5%

Bus Vehicle Availability 85 84 83 82 81 8 79 78 77 76 75 Required: 791 794 2, 18, 16, 14, 12, 1, 8, 6, 4, 2, Goal 6, 12943 99.% 98.5% 97.5% 96.5% 95.5% 95.% Percentage of Scheduled Service Operated 97%

Commuter Rail 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Locomotive Availability Required: 6 16 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 Goal: 1,2 9,85 1% 95% 9% 85% 8% 75% 7% 65% 6% 55% 5% Goal: 95% On-Time Performance (All Lines) 4% 6% 9% On time 5-9 mins late 1+ mins late Goal: 95% On-Time Performance by Line 1% 95% 9% 85% 8% 4% 1% 1% 7% 9% 11% 4% 3% % 1% 2% 5% 4% 6% 9% 6% 5% 8% 1% 2% 1% 1% 13% % 7% 8% 8% 75% 7% 65% 6% 88% 98% 8% 92% 91% 95% 97% 85% 87% 97% 99% 77% 93% 84% 55% 5%

Stations Elevator Performance Escalator Performance 1.% 99.5% 99.% 98.5% 97.5% 99.6% 99.5% 99.% 98.5% 97.5% 96.5% 98.7%

Ridership 1.5 1.4 1.3 13 1.2 1.1 1.9.8.7.6 1.31 1.3 212 213 Average Weekday Ridership in millions 1.38 1.39 1.33 1.3 1.31 1.3 1.26 124 1.24 122 1.18 1.22 1.37 1.33 1.36 FY to date Percentage Change Compared to Previous FY 1.14% 14% 6% 4% 2% % 2% 4% Jun un 13: 1.% Percentage Change Compared to Same Month of Previous Year Jul 1 13: 2.3% Aug g 13: 1.7% Sep 13: +.4% Oct 13: +4.9% Nov 13:.2% Dec 13:.3% Jan 14 4: 3.8% Feb 14: +.8% Mar 14: +.7% Apr 14: +3.1% May 14: +2.1% 6% Commuter Rail 9.6% Ridership Breakdown by Service Type Light Rail 16.4% The Ride Boat.5%.5% Heavy Rail 42.9% Bus 29.9% Private Carrier.2% Ridership is the measure of how many trips customers take on the MBTA. Specifically it counts "unlinked trips." (A customer who transferred from a bus to the subway would count as two unlinked trips, one on bus and one on subway.) Increasing ridership is always a goal at the MBTA. Bus and subway counts are from the fare collection equipment and are adjusted to account for those who ride without interacting with it (such as young children.) Commuter rail and boat counts are collected by the conductor or captain. Currently a month's ridership data is not immediately available by the end of that month, although making the data available immediately is a goal for the future.

About The Measures Vehicle availability (Subway, Bus, Commuter Rail) Vehicle availability measures whether there are enough vehicles available to run all the service that is scheduled each day. A vehicle might not be available if it has a mechanical problem or if it is undergoing routine maintenance. Vehicle maintenance works to have enough buses and trains available each day. The number of vehicles required for service varies seasonally and over time as schedules change. (Subway, Bus, Commuter Rail) (MMBF) measures vehicle reliability. It is the average number of miles a vehicle travels between breakdowns. If one vehicle travels 5, miles in a month, and breaks down twice during that time, that vehicle has an MMBF of 2,5. Values can fluctuate greatly from month to month if the total number of failures is already small. High MMBF is achieved through ongoing vehicle maintenance, which includes everything from oil changes to major midlife overhauls, and by periodically buying new vehicles to replace old ones as they reach the end of their useful life. Speed Restrictions (Subway) Speed restrictions measure the amount of slowdown caused by track conditions. If a section of track falls below standards in some way, such as if the rail is worn down, a speed restriction is put in place to ensure safe operation. Trains operate at a reduced speed when traveling that section of track until the issue is addressed. If the impact on the Orange Line for a month is three minutes, that means that speed restrictions add three minutes to the fastest possible round trip. Trains don t actually operate at the maximum speed allowed by track conditions at all times (they slow down to a stop to pick up passengers, for instance) so the actual impact on travel time may be less than the theoretical impact that s shown. Percent of Scheduled Service Operated (Subway, Bus) Percent of Scheduled Service Operated shows the percentage of scheduled trips that the MBTA operated. The MBTA strives to come as close as possible to operating every scheduled trip on every day. That requires having enough operators, well-maintained vehicles and track, and good schedules; and also keeping a certain number of extra operators and vehicles on standby to fill in if there s a problem. If a trip is nonetheless dropped on a frequent bus route or a subway line the MBTA will spread out other trips on the route to try to fill the gap as much as possible. If there s no way to avoid missing a trip on an infrequent bus route the MBTA will notify as many customers as it can via T-Alerts, mbta.com, and the customer support hotline. On the subway system the trains on standby are sometimes used to run extra trips, so more trips may be operated than scheduled. On-Time Performance (Subway, Commuter Rail) On-time performance (OTP) shows how well our service follows our schedules. For each type of service we measure on-time performance differently to reflect the way the customer experiences it. Subway customers walk to the subway platform at any time and wait for the next train, expecting the trains to run frequently. So the subway OTP standard compares the scheduled frequency of service to the actual frequency. Trains must leave the first station within 15% of the scheduled interval between them. If a Blue Line train is scheduled to leave Wonderland four minutes after the previous

train was scheduled to leave, and it leaves more than six minutes after the previous train left, then the train is late. Commuter Rail customers use a published schedule of trip times. A Commuter Rail train is considered on time if it arrives four minutes or less after the scheduled time. The MBTA also tracks how many trips are less than 1 minutes late, which includes trips that are not on time but are still relatively close to schedule.