Sunday, March 24, 2019

Why Osceola residents need to vote "for" SunRail

If you’re an Osceola County resident who rides SunRail, please read this article.

Osceola County is holding a special election on May 21st to ask residents to support a referendum that can help pay for and improve public transportation – SunRail and Lynx.


Please vote “for” this referendum that will increase the county sales tax by one penny.

If approved, this tax would raise $67 million per year.

This money will go for transportation – including SunRail and Lynx service in Osceola County. 

In case you didn’t know it, the Florida Department of Transportation is subsidizing SunRail until 2021, when it will be the responsibility of Osceola and the other SunRail partners – Orlando, Orange, Seminole, and Volusia counties – to pick up the tab.

No public transit system in the world can pay for operations solely from the fare box. Typically, a transit system can pay about 30 percent of the costs from fares. Beyond that, they need government support.

Without a dedicated funding source, SunRail would have to go from county to county every year begging commissioners for enough money to keep running. That’s what Lynx has been doing for years, which is why our public bus system is barely scraping by.

Remember, public transit is a service. The police and fire are also very expensive services paid for by the government. Unlike police and fire, transit raises some of the money needed to pay for its operating costs. Keep in mind that all transportation – from the street outside your house to the airlines – receive government subsidies.

No doubt you can see every day how many Osceola residents ride SunRail.

The SunRail train has been a huge hit since last summer when it started serving stations at Tupperware, Kissimmee, and Poinciana. Folks boarding at those stations and Meadow Woods in Orange County have nearly doubled SunRail’s daily ridership.

Granted adding a penny to the sales tax will put a squeeze on some residents. But the sacrifice is worth it because communities with a strong transportation system – both roads and public transit – are attractive to investors and that means more employers; more and better employment opportunities, and a better standard of living for everyone.

We strongly encourage Osceola riders you and your neighbors to vote “for” this referendum on May 21st.

Hopefully, Orlando, Orange, Seminole and Volusia counties will soon follow Osceola’s leadership to create dedicated funding sources for public transportation.


Saturday, March 23, 2019

Weekend SunRail requires fixing the devil in the details

Riders and would-be riders ask us why SunRail doesn’t run on Saturdays and Sundays.

Typically, we respond that SunRail doesn’t have money in its budget for weekend operations.

There is another reason that’s a little more complicated.

The devil is in the details of the joint-operating agreement signed by the state and Central Florida’s local governments – known as the local funding partners (Orlando, Orange, Seminole, Volusia, and Osceola counties).

You can read that agreement by clicking here.

On page 20, under Base Service Standards, subsection B., it reads: “The Commuter Rail System will not provide any train service between midnight and 5 a.m., legal holidays, and Saturdays and Sundays.”

This clause helps to explain why there is no money to help pay for weekend or late-night service.

The SunRail Commission – the local elected officials who represent the funding partners – is expected to update the operating agreement this year.

Hopefully, they will remember to update this clause to create an opportunity for weekend service.

See you on The Rail Monday to Friday.




Saturday, March 9, 2019

Saddle up on SunRail for a "daycation" cattle drive

Mark Monday, March 18th in your datebook.

Get the day off from work, play hooky from school, and take SunRail to a “daycation” in Kissimmee to enjoy a rare event – a real deal cattle drive. (Cue “Rawhide”)

Our friends at Florida Daycations and Events have packaged an experience for visitors that will immerse them in the frontier spirit and culture that created Kissimmee. To sign up, click here.

We’re excited because until now, the Kissimmee cattle drive has been mainly a local event for Osceola residents.

Thanks to SunRail -- which started running into Osceola County last summer -- it’s easy for people throughout Central Florida to ride down to Kissimmee and saddle up. (Well maybe not saddle up, but you know what we mean.)

Many people may not realize that Florida is one of the biggest cattle states in the country, and Kissimmee is the heart of Florida cattle country.

Cowboys still live in Osceola County. Usually, you need to drive down to southern Osceola near Kenansville to see working cowboys. But on March 18th there will be real cowboys and cowgirls and cattle lumbering down Broadway in the heart of Historic Downtown Kissimmee.

The experience Florida Daycations and Events packaged involves much more than witnessing the cattle drive but also soaking up Kissimmee’s frontier spirit and history.

Florida Daycations and Events guests will get to eat like a cowboy; go to a cowboy hoedown street party. There is a herd of extras, including a VIP area for Florida Daycations and Events guests. Most of all, it’s going to be fun!

For more details, and to sign up, click here.

See you in Kissimmee on March 18.


Friday, March 8, 2019

SunRail ridership stats - WOW!

SunRail managers deserve to take a bow.

In a little more than a year, the SunRail daily ridership has nearly doubled.

We remember when not too long ago when daily ridership was limping along at 3,200.

But that was in the past. In a statement sent out Friday (3/8) afternoon, SunRail managers reported that during this January and February, daily ridership averaged 6,000.

They also pointed out that Friday ridership is averaging more than 6,300.

What happened?

The Southern Expansion – opening stations last summer in the south Orange County community of Meadow Woods and in Osceola County at Tupperware, downtown Kissimmee and Poinciana.

Sometimes trains headed northbound from those stations are so full there are few empty seats available by the time to train reaches the original 12 stations that opened 5 years ago when SunRail service launched.

“The ridership numbers are very exciting, and we are anticipating even higher numbers in March and April as these months are typically among the strongest for SunRail” said SunRail Chief Executive Officer Nicola Liquori. “The increases are trending system-wide as customers take advantage of the new schedule and the convenience of SunRail.”


It’s noteworthy that even though SunRail’s resources – money and equipment are limited – they have embarked on several initiatives to expand the service. They:
Tweaked the schedule to better accommodate the hours of the caregivers who work at Advent Health/Florida Hospital and ORMC. It still needs work, but we notice more caregivers boarding at those stations in the afternoons.
Launched a special late-night southbound train after Orlando Magic games.
Worked on partnerships to get people from the SunRail station in Sanford to historic downtown Sanford with a trolley service and worked with Lynx on a bus connection between the sand lake Road station and Orlando International Airport. Those efforts are bearing fruit. Many days the Sanford trolley is packed. We see more people with luggage boarding and getting off SunRail and Sand Lake Road.

We are also delighted to learn that SunRail is working closely with the University of Central Florida to find ways students at the new downtown campus can make use of SunRail. That downtown campus is due to open late this coming summer.

See you on The Rail.