Reduced Cost Versus Transit Services
- Share via
* Re “Backers of New Transit Zone Are Skeptical,” Sept. 8.
People who advocate running a reduced-cost transit system in the San Fernando Valley overlook the fact that such a cost-saving continues the Valley’s perceived image as [having] second-class service.
If the Valley ever becomes an independent city, it will become the sixth-largest in the country, with a growing commercial and industrial base. Such a city should not seek to slash transit costs.
If a bus driver currently makes $50,000 a year, he earns every penny of it. Long hours, split shifts, gargantuan vehicles with limited visibility and overly crowded; demanding passengers; and poor braking systems are the lot of the bus driver. This is a tough and demanding job.
To reduce salaries by half says the Valley does not deserve good service or competent drivers. The Valley is just a bedroom suburb with second-class facilities.
Why should I care? For 20 years I taught a half-time load at one-fifth salary in the night division of the L.A. College District. My final (1989) salary of $8,100 a year for two classes and 100 students a semester compared poorly with $45,000 for my full-time colleagues. I had no health benefits and was never sent to the in-service workshops my colleagues went to, so as the needs of our students changed over time, full-timers kept up but part-timers didn’t. So night-school students got a second-class education.
Let’s not let MTA follow suit.
RICK ROFMAN
Van Nuys
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.