La Crosse Municipal Transit Utility

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The La Crosse Municipal Transit Utility or MTU is the primary provider of mass transportation in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Using 21 buses, eleven regular routes are provided from Monday through Friday. On Saturdays, the MTU runs six routes, and five routes on Sundays.[2]

La Crosse Municipal Transit Utility
Bus #1202 in 2020
ParentCity of La Crosse
FoundedJanuary 2, 1975
Headquarters2000 Marco Dr.
LocaleLa Crosse, Wisconsin
Service areaLa Crosse County, Wisconsin
Service typeBus service, Paratransit
Routes11
HubsClinton & Caledonia Transfer Point
StationsGrand River Station
Fleet21
Annual ridership685,372 (2023)[1]
WebsiteLa Crosse MTU

History

Public transit in La Crosse began with the opening of a horse-drawn streetcar line in 1879. Over time, more streetcar lines were added and in 1893, all streetcars had been electrified. Beginning in the early 20th century however, increasing car ownership led to a decline of the privately run streetcar system. As a result, buses began to replace streetcars throughout the city and by November 1945, the last streetcar line closed. The City of La Crosse took over operations of the buses in 1975 from the Mississippi Valley Public Service Company, as the buses could no longer be operated profitably.[3]

In 1945, in the first timetable after streetcar service had ended, there were four bus routes. The earliest bus left at 5:40am and the last bus returned at 1:00am. Buses ran at a 10 to 15 minute headway throughout the day. In total, the buses provided 1519.95 hours of service per week. In 2022, the MTU provides only 1141.6 hours of service per week, a decline of 24.89%.

In 2019, a real time bus tracking mobile app was launched.[4] The first two electric buses were introduced to the system on June 13, 2022, which was followed in October with the launch of a mobile app for fare payment.[5][6][7]

Routes

Services Mon-Fri (5:12am–10:40pm) Sat (7:42am–7:40pm) Sun (7:42am–6:40pm):

  • Route 1: South Avenue
  • Route 2: Green Bay
  • Route 4: Losey Boulevard
  • Route 5: Valley View Mall
  • Route 6: Northside

Services Mon-Fri only

  • Route 7: French Island
  • Route 8: Crossing Meadows
  • Route 9: Onalaska
  • Ciculator Route 1
  • Circulator Route 2

Services Mon-Sat only:

  • Route 10: La Crescent Apple Express

Grand River Station

Grand River Station panorama
Grand River Station can be seen on the right of this aerial in downtown La Crosse

Grand River Station is the downtown transfer point for the majority of MTU routes and provides an MTU ticket counter along with retail and housing. The center opened on August 25, 2010, allowing transfers between MTU buses, intercity buses and commuter buses.[8] Prior to the construction of Grand River Station, transfers between buses occurred by the Post Office at the intersection of 5th Avenue and State Street.

Ridership and service

Total RidershipChangeTotal Revenue HoursChangeTotal Revenue MilesChangeFixed Route RidershipChangeFixed Route Revenue HoursChangeFixed Route Revenue MilesChange
2007[9]1,043,403n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
2008[10]1,202,018 015.2%n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
2009[11]1,189,841 01.01%n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
2010[12]1,230,030 03.38%n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
2011[13]1,255,407 02.06%n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
2012[14]1,152,781 08.17%n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a
2013[15]1,229,410 06.65%89,707n/a1,171,787n/a1,175,528n/a54,206n/a763,957n/a
2014[16]1,223,182 00.51%81,247 09.43%1,113,534 04.97%1,192,752 01.47%54,215 00.0%766,569 00.34%
2015[17]1,128,992 07.7%80,624 00.77%1,136,698 02.08%1,102,173 07.59%56,160 03.59%794,864 03.69%
2016[18]1,059,472 06.16%81,240 00.76%1,112,519 02.13%1,032,964 06.28%58,547 04.25%830,979 04.54%
2017[19]1,025,797 03.18%70,506 013.21%1,043,529 06.2%999,955 03.2%58,801 00.43%844,107 01.58%
2018[20]980,865 04.38%67,404 04.4%1,002,603 03.92%959,453 04.05%58,459 00.58%845,271 00.14%
2019[21]923,030 05.9%67,734 00.49%988,717 01.38%905,412 05.63%60,626 03.71%866,971 02.57%
2020[22]562,145 039.1%62,788 07.3%887,922 010.19%552,719 038.95%59,275 02.23%826,151 04.71%
2021[23]524,717 06.66%67,767 07.93%983,201 010.73%510,235 07.69%62,356 05.20%884,284 07.04%
2022[24]606,371 015.56%--1,012,367 02.97%587,835 015.21%--887,773 00.39%
2023[25]685,372 013.03%--1,016,566 00.41%667,034 013.47%--896,617 01.0%

Financial Information

Operating ExpensesFare RevenueFarebox Recovery RatioOperating Expense per Vehicle Revenue MileOperating Expense per Vehicle Revenue HourOperating Expense per Passenger MileOperating Expense per Unlinked Passenger Trip
2013[26]$4,426,715$646,95523%$5.79$81.66$1.18$3.77
2014[27]$4,661,352$633,58219%$6.08$85.98$1.30$3.91
2015[28]$4,993,931$632,43817.3%$6.28$88.92$1.46$4.53
2016[29]$5,123,647$645,20417%$6.17$87.51$1.60$4.96
2017[30]$5,153,871$610,97315.7%$6.11$87.65$1.72$5.15
2018[31]$5,150,579$612,67018%$6.09$88.11$1.79$5.37
2019[32]$5,317,615$537,19414.9%$6.13$87.71$1.96$5.87
2020[33]$5,301,401$170,1868.2%$6.42$89.44$3.20$9.59
2021[34]$5,408,836$251,8329.4%$6.12$86.74$3.54$10.60

Although the MTU does not recover all of its operating expenses through fares, neither does the local motor vehicle infrastructure recover any of its expenses through user fees. In fact, not one cent of local road costs are paid for by the user, not to mention the abundant subsidized parking in the city.

Bus fleet

Fleet sizeAverage fleet age
2013[35]218.5
2014[36]189.5
2015[37]219.6
2016[38]2110.6
2017[39]2111.6
2018[40]2112.6
2019[41]2311.4
2020[42]2111.7
2021[43]227.7

See also

References

External links