TEXT B Public transit. In North
America, public transportation has been the major casualty of the commitment to
the automobile. Ridership on public transportation declined in the United States
from 23 billion per year in the late 1940s to 7 billion in the early 1990s. At
the end of World War I, U.S. cities had 50,000 kilometers of street railways and
trolleys that carried 14 billion passengers a year, but only a few hundred
kilometers of track remain. The number of U. S. and Canadian cities with trolley
service declined from about fifty in 1950 to eight in the 1960s: Boston,
Cleveland, New York, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, and
Toronto. Buses offered a more flexible service than trolleys,
because they were not restricted to operating only on fixed tracks.
General Motors acquired many of the privately owned streetcar companies
and replaced the trolleys with buses that the company made. But bus ridership
has declined from a peak of 11 billion riders per year in the late 1940s to 5
million in the 1990s. Commuter railroad service, like trolleys and buses, has
also been drastically reduced in most U.S. cities. The one
exception to the downward trend in public transportation in the United States is
the subway, now known to transportation planners as fixed heavy rail. Cities
such as Boston and Chicago have attracted new passengers through construction of
new lines and modernization of existing service. Chicago has been a pioneer in
the construction of heavy rail rapid transit lines in the median strip of
expressways. Entirely new subway systems have been built in recent years in a
number of U.S. cities, including Atlanta, Baltimore, Miami, San Francisco, and
Washington, D.C. Public transportation is particularly suited to
bringing a large number of people into a small area in a short period of time.
Consequently, its use is increasingly confined in the United States to rush-hour
commuting by workers in the central business district. A bus can accommodate
thirty people in the amount of space occupied by one automobile, while a
double-track rapid transit line can transport the same number of people as
sixteen lanes of urban freeway. Despite modest recent successes,
most public transportation systems are caught in a vicious circle, because
fares do not cover operating costs. As patronage declines and expenses
rise, the fares are increased, which drives away passengers and leads to service
reductions and still higher fares. Public expenditures to subsidize construction
and operating costs have increased, but public officials in the United States do
not consider that public transportation is a vital utility deserving subsidy to
the degree long assumed by European governments. In contrast,
even in the relatively developed Western European countries and Japan, where
automobile ownership rates are high, extensive networks of bus, tram, and subway
lines have been maintained, and funds for new construction have been provided in
recent years. Since the late 1960s, London has opened 27 kilometers of subways,
including two new lines, plus 18 kilometers in light rail transit lines to serve
the docklands area. During the same period, Paris has built 65 kilometers of new
subway lines, including a new system, known as the Reseau Express Regional (R.
E. R.) to serve outer suburbs. Smaller cities have shared the
construction boom. In France alone, new subway lines have been built since the
1970s in Lille, Lyon, and Marseille, and hundreds of kilometers of entirely new
tracks have been laid between the country’s major cities to operate a high-speed
train known as the TGV. Which of the following is NOT true of the public transportation systems in the developed countries
A.Commuter railroad service, trolleys and buses have been reduced in the U. S. B.Subways have largely been maintained. C.Fares usually can not cover operating costs. D.U.S. officials think it worthwhile to subsidize public transportation.