Sustainable Communities Strategies Implementation Alternatives for Meeting Transit Needs in the Rural San Joaquin Valley

Shared-use mobility services largely serve major metropolitan areas. However, increasingly officials, who represent rural communities, want to know whether these types of services may be able to provide more cost-effective access to rural residents than is currently possible by fixed-route and dial-a-ride transit services. Many of these officials must contend with low farebox recovery rates that threaten transit funding and subsequent cutbacks in transit services that are often strongly opposed by constituents. In this study, the cost-effectiveness of existing inter-city transit service in rural disadvantaged communities in the San Joaquin Valley (California) is compared to hypothetical ridesharing and carsharing services. The results show significant potential to reduce transit costs and reinvest those cost saving to expand shared mobility services.

The cost-effectiveness analysis is supplemented with reviews of existing shared-use mobility pilots and consultations with experts in shared mobility and local transportation planning. The result is two shared-use mobility pilot concepts in seven communities in four counties in the San Joaquin Valley region:

  1. Carsharing and ridesourcing in affordable housing complexes in the Dinuba, Cutler, and Orosi community of Tulare County and the Lamont-Arvin and Wasco communities of Kern County.
  2. A technology platform that enables improved efficiency for multiple independently operated demand responsive transportation services in jurisdictions in northeast Stanislaus and southeast San Joaquin counties.

Implementation of Research Outputs

The researchers’ analysis of existing conditions and development of concept programs laid the groundwork for the creation of three rural transportation pilot programs: Míocar, an electric carsharing program with vehicle hubs at affordable housing complexes in Tulare and Kern counties; VOGO, a volunteer ridesharing service; and Vamos, a Mobility-as-a-Service app that facilitates trip planning and ticket purchasing across the valley’s many transit services.

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