Only One 1 Percent in US Live in Homes with Easy Access to Public Transit
The 30 U.S. Cities With the Best Public Transit

Money Talks News, by Marilyn Lewis
4/17/2017
http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/the-30-us-cities-with-the-best-public-transit/ss-BBzWgyc#image=1

Finding a home with easy access to public transit is a wonderful thing. In the United States, though, it’s rare. Less than 1 percent of homes for sale are located in what real estate company Redfin calls a “rider’s paradise.”

In addition to walkability, Redfin’s Walk Score website rates homes, cities and neighborhoods with Transit Scores that indicate the accessibility of public transit including buses, rail and light rail, subways and ferries.

Redfin was also interested in the way that public transport affects real estate values. So it also analyzed roughly a million real estate transactions in 14 U.S. cities that occurred between January 2014 and April 2016 and concluded that each additional point of a Transit Score increased the price of a home by an average of $2,040 or .6 percent.

Transit Score interprets the point assignments this way:

90-100: Rider’s Paradise. World-class public transportation78-89: Excellent Transit. Transit is convenient for most trips50-69: Good Transit: Many nearby public transportation options25-49: Some Transit: A few nearby public transportation options.0-24: Minimal Transit: It is possible to get on a bus.

Here’s the top 30 U.S. cities for public transit.

30. Dallas
Transit Score: 39.5
Population: 1,197,816
The LBJ Central Station (above) is a Dallas DART Light Rail Train System station. DART serves the city and 12 suburbs with public transit options including commuter rail, buses and light rail.

29. San Jose, California
Transit Score: 41
Population: 945,942
CalTrain, a commuter rail service, connects San Jose, California, with San Francisco and numerous smaller cities in between along the San Francisco Bay Peninsula.

28. Rochester, New York
Transit Score: 42.8
Population: 210,565

27. Cincinnati
Transit Score: 43.2
Population: 296,943
The Southbank Shuttle, managed by the Transit Authority of Northern Kentucky, ferries residents and visitors back and forth across the Ohio River between Cincinnati and Newport on the Levee, Kentucky.

26. Atlanta
Transit Score: 44.3
Population: 420,003
The Five Points Station (above) is the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority’s central hub.

25. St. Louis
Transit Score: 45.2
Population: 319,294
Since 1949, the adjacent states of Missouri and Illinois, on either side of the Mississippi River, have jointly provided public transportation in the St. Louis region with service reaching some 200 cities and towns. Here is a look at St. Louis from atop the city’s landmark Gateway Arch.

24. Santa Ana, California
Transit Score: 46
Population: 324,528

23. Denver
Transit Score: 46.9
Population: 600,158
Riders can go just about anywhere in Denver using a bus or rail, says Denver.org, a trade association that markets the city. Union Station (above) is a downtown light rail stop.

21. St. Paul, Minnesota
Transit Score: 47.4
Population: 285,068
St. Paul’s Metro transit carries people from one end of the city that abuts Minneapolis to the other.

20. Milwaukee
Transit Score: 49.1
Population: 594,833
Milwaukee’s far-northern winter skyline includes icy Lake Michigan.

19. Buffalo, New York
Transit Score: 50.4
Population: 261,310
A Buffalo Metro Rail train glides past the landmark 1899 Buffalo Savings Bank building.

18. Portland, Oregon
Transit Score: 50.8
Population: 583,776
Portland residents use a variety of transportation options, from the popular Max light rail to buses, commuter rail and streetcars like this one, near the city’s Burnside Bridge.

17. Los Angeles
Transit Score: 51.3
Population: 3,792,621
Los Angeles is known for its freeways, but the city’s subways, light-rail, buses and shuttles reach “nearly every corner of the Greater Los Angeles area,” says the Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board, which promotes Car Free L.A. a series of self-guided “car-free” vacation itineraries. Pictured above is the Chinatown light rail station.

16. Pittsburgh
Transit Score: 54.4
Population: 305,704
Pittsburgh’s historic Pennsylvania Station, finished in 1903, was the city’s railway hub for many years. It’s on the National Register of Historic Places, and today it is joined to a newer Amtrak station next door. A regional network of 10 transportation agencies links Pittsburgh and the 10-county Southwestern Pennsylvania region by train and bus.

15. Oakland, California
Transit Score: 55.1
Population: 390,724
The San Francisco Bay Area’s rapid transit trains, known as the BART system, serve Oakland, the East Bay communities and San Francisco.

14. Honolulu
Transit Score: 55.6
Population: 337,256
TheBus carries residents and tourists around Honolulu and the rest of the island of Oahu

13. Seattle
Transit Score: 57
Population: 608,660
Buses and trams, and a monorail dating to the 1962 World Fair provide transport within the city. A new light rail system now connects travelers along a north-south axis, from one stop beyond Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEATAC) in the south, to the University of Washington, on the northern side of Seattle, and it continues to expand.

12. Minneapolis
Transit Score: 57.5
Population: 382,578
Minneapolis’ hybrid electric buses are part of a commitment to cut emissions from vehicles.

11. Baltimore
Transit Score: 57.8
Population: 620,961
Baltimore’s historic Penn Station is the hub for three services — Amtrack, MARC commuter trains and the Maryland Transit Administration’s light rail system.

10. Arlington, Virginia
Transit Score: 58
Population: 207,627
Despite the Washington, D.C., area’s famous gridlocked traffic, nearby Arlington is “a well-connected and transit-oriented county” where you can live “car-free” in many central neighborhoods, Redfin says.
It has a bike share program and enjoys access to the Washington, D. C.-region-wide Metro system of bus and rail as well as the local Arlington Transit, which uses natural gas buses to connect neighborhoods to Metrorail and operates cross-county routes.

9. Miami
Transit Score: 59.4
Population: 399,457
You can get around Miami using buses and rail, including this automated downtown train system.

8. Chicago
Transit Score: 64.7
Population: 2,695,598
Here, the Chicago Transit Authority’s famous Elevated Electric Train — or “The El” — crosses the Wells Street Bridge.

7. Newark, New Jersey
Transit Score: 64.9
Population: 277,140
NJ Transit light rail trolleys, including this one at Washington Park Station, are part of a complex system connecting Newark, surrounding New Jersey communities and New York City’s Penn Station.

6. Philadelphia
Transit Score: 66.8
Population: 1,526,006
Philadelphia’s public transit options include the popular Indego bike-sharing system.

5. Jersey City, New Jersey
Transit Score: 70
Population: 247,597
Jersey City, New Jersey’s second-largest city (after Newark), has excellent public transportation. What’s more, residents can do most of their errands by foot, making it extremely “walkable.”

4. Washington, D.C.
Transit Score: 70.6
Population: 601,723
Residents of Washington, D.C., and the surrounding suburbs use Metrorail and Metrobus to avoid the city’s legendary traffic gridlock. The Smithsonian Metro station is pictured above.

3. Boston
Transit Score: 74.4
Population: 617,594
One chapter in Boston’s long history of public transit is famously memorialized in a 1959 song, “MTA,” by The Kingston Trio (lyrics and song sample are here on Google Play) about a hapless subway passenger, Charlie, who for the lack of a nickel could not exit his train (then the Metro Transit Authority) and was condemned to “ride forever ‘neath the streets of Boston.”
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority operates the city’s trains, buses, trolleys and ferries.

2. San Francisco
Transit Score: 80.4
Population: 805,235
Cable cars are the least of San Francisco’s rich public transportation network. Besides Muni buses, trains, cable cars and streetcars that connect the city’s neighborhoods, the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) elevated and subway trains connect the city with Oakland and the East Bay, the CalTrain commuter rail line connects the city with the San Francisco Bay Peninsula cities to the south and ferries ply the waters between the city, Oakland and Sausalito. The Powell Street Muni station is shown above.

1. New York City
Transit Score: 84.1
Population: 8,175,133
In 2016, New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority opened the new 34 St-Hudson Yards Station, extending subway service for the first time in 26 years. New York is known for its public transportation, with bike share programs and many miles of bike lanes as well as buses, subway lines and the Long Island Rail Road. Since the city is so densely populated with block after block chock full of services, many New Yorkers can live their entire lives without owning a car.

Citizens Taking Action for public transit
Chicago, IL
www.CTAriders.org
8. Chicago
Transit Score: 64.7