Harvard Transportation Services is working on a new initiative to install electronic screens at shuttle stops that would indicate arrival times, Harvard Transportation Services General Manager David E. Harris, Jr. said during a Shuttle Town Hall Monday night.
The town hall was co-sponsored by the Undergraduate Council, Office of Student Life, and Harvard Transportation Services to gauge student demand for expanded services.
The town hall included presentations by Harris, Interim Associate Dean for Student Life David R. Friedrich, and Managing Director of Transportation Services John Nolan.
During the discussion, many students expressed their frustration with the accuracy of the shuttle schedule.
Samuel M. Meyer ’13 said there was a discrepancy between the schedule posted on the Transportation Services website and the real-time results.
He said the 12:20 “phantom shuttle” at the Quad was an example of when a shuttle time was listed on the website but did not actually arrive.
“Why does the information posted on your website not reflect real [shuttle times]?” Meyer said. “Who in your office decided to do that?”
However, Harris said that shuttles ran on time at least 82 percent of the time for the Quad—Stadium shuttle and 92 percent of the time for the Quad Express shuttle.
Students at the Town Hall also requested that the weekend morning shuttle be reinstated and the Extended Overnight Shuttle run more frequently.
However, Nolan said that it is challenging for Transportation Services to balance both student feedback and the needs of both Quad and River House residents.
“Understanding what the gaps in service are and trying to quantify them is difficult,” Nolan said.
According to the UC Student Life Committee Chair Michael C. George ’14, the UC has worked this semester to petition the University for an increase in the shuttle services budget after significant cuts were made in 2010.
George, who is also a Crimson news editor, is also a candidate for UC presidency.
Earlier this year, Pforzheimer resident Danielle S. Suh ’15 circulated a petition to expand shuttle services. The petition garnered more than 1,000 signatures.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
CORRECTION: Nov. 26
An earlier version of this article misstated the class year of Samuel M. Meyer ’13.
Read more in News
Students Assist Red Cross EffortRecommended Articles
-
School Committee Elections NearOn Nov. 3, the citizens of Cambridge will go to the polls and elect six members to the new Cambridge ...
-
School Election Results AnnouncedA few minutes after midnight, the conversations of the 40 townspeople and 30 staff members in the Cambridge Senior Center ...
-
Nolan, McGovern for CambridgeWhen Cambridge voters go to the polls next Tuesday, I hope they mark their ballots for the two committee members who have the strongest records of bringing positive change to the city’s public schools.
-
Young Expands Initiative to All GradesCambridge Public Schools Superintendent Jeffrey M. Young announced last night that he will expand the Middle Grades Initiative—which originally sought to restructure the city’s K-8 system to include middle schools—to address all grades, a change resulting from concerns that the initiative was too narrow to comprehensively address the achievement gaps in Cambridge schools.
-
Cambridge Public Schools Rethink Math EducationThe Cambridge Public School Committee met with a group of mathematics experts last night for a roundtable discussion on the latest trends in teaching mathematics in public schools.
-
Nolan’s ‘Inception’ Is A Dream Worth Having