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Home » BART Needed Nearly $300M In Relief Funding To Balance 2021-2022 Budget

BART Needed Nearly $300M In Relief Funding To Balance 2021-2022 Budget

by CLAYCORD.com
7 comments

BART finished the 2021-2022 fiscal year with a balanced budget due in large part to federal relief funding and more sales tax revenue than expected, budget officials with the transit agency said Thursday.

While daily fare revenue across the system remained low, generating $30.6 million less than the transit agency had expected in the final budget it adopted in June 2021, BART received $49 million more than expected in sales tax revenue.

That increase was driven partially by inflation, according to BART budget officials. Meanwhile, total passenger trips fell roughly 20 percent short of the totals expected in the adopted budget.

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The transit agency also spent $61 million less than expected, with roughly two-thirds of that total due to unfilled labor positions.

Even with the increased revenue and savings, though, BART still faced a $286.7 million deficit before federal relief funding was applied to close the gap.

BART received $57.5 million more than expected in federal relief, with $275.9 million coming from the federal American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 and $167.3 million in one-time relief from the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2021.

Budget officials had originally planned to need $385.7 million in relief funding, according to Katherine Alagar, BART’s manager of operating budgets.

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“The saving will be applied to costs in future years, thus extending the district’s fiscal runway,” Alagar told the transit agency’s Board of Directors on Thursday.

Earlier this year, BART officials projected the agency’s fiscal cliff to come some time in mid-2025 considering current ridership trends and the amount of federal relief funding to which the agency still has access.

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Does that mean they won’t raise ridership fare? Ha, ha, ha.

Just my opinion but Katherine Alagar and most of the rest of the people running BART need to be replaced with someone with just a little common sense. The monetary costs and overrun amounts are way past ridiculous.
GEEZUS!

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If the bart board can’t balance a budget they should all be fired

If a public transportation agency can’t break even it needs to curtail service or just close up.

Closing Bart isn’t an option.

Finding skilled management to keep the system solvent is what’s needed.

This being CA, that’ll never happen.

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Can you say “BAILOUT”?
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And how exactly are BART officials preparing for the “agency’s fiscal cliff to come some time in mid-2025”? Don’t tell me – they are working on yet another proposition to raise taxes. Or bridge tolls. Or both. Did I guess it right?

In the Sunday paper was a long article about how ALL the various transit agencies might consider cutting service to reduce costs. Rather drastic ones. Part of it was no BART service on weekends. Not a great idea for getting cars off the roads.

Let ‘em sink…

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