San Francisco Chronicle

Cupertino hires private firm to create public transit system.

- By Carolyn Said

Cupertino, the hometown of Apple, is taking an initial step toward having its own public transit system by contractin­g with private operator Via to run ondemand sixpasseng­er vans within the 11squaremi­le city and to the nearby Sunnyvale Caltrain station.

Passengers can summon the black Mercedes Metris vans via a smartphone app or by phone; they’ll be directed to walk to a nearby location to meet their ride. Typical wait times in other cities where Via operates are six to 10 minutes, the company said. The goal is to get multiple people to share rides, taking some cars off the streets to reduce congestion.

“This community shuttle is our first foray into providing our own transit” for residents and commuters, said Chris Corrao, senior travel and transporta­tion planner for Cupertino. Currently the city is served by buses from the Santa Clara Valley Transporta­tion Authority, “which very few people use, to be honest,” he said. “They are slow. Taking the bus to San Jose (10 miles

away) can take well over an hour.”

Housing and public transit top the list of concerns of many Bay Area employers. Tech companies run private shuttle buses for employees, but they are often stuck in traffic. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said last week that the company is eyeing expansion outside the region because of those infrastruc­ture issues. Apple is also looking outside the Bay Area for a new campus.

Cupertino, with a population of some 60,000, balloons to about 150,000 people weekdays thanks to a huge influx of commuters, most of them headed to the city’s largest employer, Apple.

While Apple maintains a network of private buses around the Bay Area and local shuttles that crisscross Cupertino, Corrao expects that some Apple workers will take advantage of Via. Its new Apple Park campus has more than 11,000 parking spaces; parking occupies more square feet than the spaceshipl­ike building.

Seniors, high school students and students at De Anza College are likely to be heavy users of the new system, Corrao said. Some of the vans will be wheelchair accessible.

The Via service will start Oct. 29 and will offer $1 rides for the first three weeks. After that, rides will be $5, with passes available for $17 a week and $60 a month. Service will run weekdays from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The program will start with six vans and expand to 10 as demand increases.

Cupertino is picking up the $1.75 million cost of the 18month pilot, offset by fares. It is applying for grants as well.

Corrao hopes neighborin­g towns such as Sunnyvale would like to partner on expanded Via service.

“This is a really good model for the South Bay because it’s really suburban here,” he said. “A lot of the areas are not higher density, so a system like Via’s can be a shortterm solution while we wait for fixedroute transit, which is expensive and takes a long time.”

New York’s Via operates in about 80 cities in 20 countries, including Pacifica, northern San Rafael, and West Sacramento. It also provides some service in Los Angeles and Orange County. Its largest deployment is 150 vehicles in Berlin.

Via’s California bus drivers are independen­t contractor­s. Under AB5, the recently passed gig work bill, they likely would need to be reclassifi­ed as employees since they do work central to the company’s business.

“We are aware of AB5 and will definitely make sure we are compliant with it by the time it takes effect on Jan. 1,” said Dillon Twombly, Via’s chief revenue officer.

Via partners with cities to provide a dynamic counterpoi­nt to their “rigid” routes, it says.

“As transit agencies struggle with declining ridership, this provides a new option for them to fill needs like first mile/ last mile (connection­s to transit) and in transit deserts,” Twombly said. “We operate in parts of cities where it’s not efficient to run a fixedroute bus.”

“This good model is a really for the South Bay because it’s really suburban here. A lot of the areas are not higher density.”

Chris Corrao, Cupertino transporta­tion planner

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 ?? Via ?? The pilot program, funded by the suburban, lowdensity city of Cupertino, will start with six vans operated by Via and summoned by smartphone.
Via The pilot program, funded by the suburban, lowdensity city of Cupertino, will start with six vans operated by Via and summoned by smartphone.
 ?? LiPo Ching / Special to The Chronicle ?? Apple Park looks like a spaceship — one that’s landed in a transit desert. Train and lightrail stations are miles away from the Apple headquarte­rs.
LiPo Ching / Special to The Chronicle Apple Park looks like a spaceship — one that’s landed in a transit desert. Train and lightrail stations are miles away from the Apple headquarte­rs.

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