Nassau Inter-County Express

The Nassau Inter-County Express (NICE) is the local bus system serving Nassau County, New York. It also serves parts of western Suffolk County, New York as well as eastern portions of the New York City borough of Queens. It was formerly operated under the name of MTA Long Island Bus, the trading name of the Metropolitan Suburban Bus Authority, a division of MTA Regional Bus Operations. In 2011, the owner, Nassau County, decided to outsource the system to a private operator, the French multinational corporation, Veolia Transport (now Transdev), due to a funding dispute with the MTA.[2]

Nassau Inter-County Express
A Nassau Inter-County Express eastbound n20G bus at its first stop, Flushing–Main Street
ParentNassau County, New York (fleet ownership)
Commenced operation1973 (MSBA)
January 1, 2012 (NICE)
Ceased operationDecember 31, 2011 (MSBA)
Headquarters700 Commercial Avenue
Garden City, NY
LocaleNassau County, New York
Service areaMost of Nassau County (except for northern Town of Oyster Bay), parts of Queens and Suffolk County
Service typeLocal bus
Routes36 (plus two shuttle routes)
Hubs4 major bus hubs, 33 LIRR stations, and 5 New York City Subway stations
Fleet280 fixed-route, 122 Able Ride
Daily ridership84,969 (weekday 2017)[1]
Fuel typeCNG (fixed-route)
Diesel (Able-Ride)
OperatorTransdev
Websitenicebus.com

History

Private companies (pre-1973)

The MTA began operating Nassau County bus service in 1973 under the name Metropolitan Suburban Bus Authority, through the merging of 11 private operators (routes in italics have been discontinued):

  • Bee-Line, Inc. (N1, N4, N6, N2*, N3) and subsidiaries:
    • Rockville Centre Bus (N15, N16, N14, N17*)
    • Utility Lines (N19; extended to Patchogue along current S40 Suffolk Transit route)
    • Stage Coach Lines (N71, N73, N74, and earlier N70): Note: The N70 under Stage Coach was a loop route from Hempstead to Levittown, Bellmore, Wantagh, and back to Hempstead.
      • Mid-Island Transit (N78, N79, N80, N81): This operator was acquired by Stage Coach, which would be acquired by Bee-Line. Also operated by this operator was a route from today's Broadway Mall to Oyster Bay.
  • Schenck Transportation (N20, N21, N22, N23, N24, N25, N26, N27, N45, N51) and previously acquired:
    • Nassau Bus Line (N31, N32, N33)
    • Universal Auto Bus (N57 and N58)
  • Jerusalem Avenue Bus Line (N54, N55, N53)
  • Hempstead Bus Corporation (N35, N36, N37 [merged into N35], N40, N41, N47, N48, N49)
  • Roosevelt Bus Line (N62)
  • Branch Bus Corporation (N69; transferred to Long Beach in 1984)
  • Hendrickson Bus Corporation (N67, discontinued January 1975)

(*) denotes original bus routes that are now community shuttle routes

MTA Long Island Bus

Former Long Island Bus logo used under MTA ownership from 1998 to 2011.

In the 1980s, the N28, N46, N50 (all discontinued) and N70 (as an N72 branch) were instituted as new routes, with the N20 extended to Hicksville. The 1990s saw the creation of a shuttle around Roosevelt Field (N93, now discontinued), two shuttles designed to take customers from train stations to work sites (the N94 and N95, both discontinued), and a service connecting Nassau County to JFK Airport (the N91, now discontinued), with the 2000s seeing a Merrick shuttle (now discontinued) and the N8 (now discontinued) and N43 routes being created.

In 2007, Long Island Bus averaged over 109,000 weekday riders, many of which include customers connecting to other MTA services in the region. By 2011, the MTA had averaged 101,981 weekday riders by the time of the agency's exit from operating the service.

Privatization and NICE

In 2010, the future of MTA Long Island Bus became uncertain, as the MTA threatened drastic cuts due to Nassau County's disproportionately small contributions to the operation. For the past decade, the MTA has provided a unique subsidy (of $24 million in 2011 and over $140 million since 2000) to the Nassau County bus system that the other New York City suburban county bus systems have not received.[3] The county's contribution was $9.1 million per year out of a total budget of $133.1 million, and the MTA desired that this contribution increase to $26 million.[3] Critics have noted that Westchester County subsidized its similarly-sized Bee-Line Bus System service by $33 million/year, and that Suffolk subsidizes its substantially smaller Suffolk County Transit system by $24 million/year.[3] The county hoped to reduce its contribution from $9.1 million to $4.1 million by using a private contractor;[4] the planned county contribution was later decreased to $2.5 million/year.[5]

By March 2011, the MTA—citing Nassau's refusal to pay its contracted amount—proposed a set of major service reductions which would have eliminated over half of the routes, with the greatest impact on southeastern Nassau County, eliminating all routes operating south of Hempstead Turnpike and east of the Meadowbrook State Parkway (except for the N71).[6] After reviewing the service cut plans, County Executive Ed Mangano considered severing ties with the MTA and privatizing the Long Island Bus system.[7] A temporary reprieve, via additional state funding, would have sustained service through the end of 2011.[8] However, on April 27, 2011, the MTA voted to cease all bus service in Nassau County after the end of 2011. Mangano then announced that he had retained Veolia Transport to operate the system beginning in 2012 through a public-private partnership pending legislative approval.[9][10] On November 10, 2011, Veolia and Mangano announced that the service was going to be renamed Nassau Inter-County Express (or NICE), upon Veolia's takeover of the system. All buses, including Able-Ride vehicles, would be painted into a new paint scheme to reflect the change.[2] On December 12, 2011, the legislature unanimously approved the Veolia contract, which was subsequently approved by the state-controlled Nassau County Interim Finance Authority (NIFA) on December 22, 2011. Veolia began operations January 1, 2012. This Veolia plan was the subject of heated county public hearings in which Long Island Bus riders and employees criticized the plan.[11][12]

In February 2012, Veolia announced service cuts and adjustments to take effect in April 2012. While there were no route cancellations planned, just over $7 million in cuts to existing routes were planned, with service reductions and route concentrations planned for routes primarily serving northern and eastern Nassau County, beginning in spring 2012, with resources redirected towards busier routes.[5] These cuts ultimately included decreased service on 30 routes, including elimination of weekend service and decreased midday service on seven routes.[13] These cuts were criticized as occurring too soon, only six weeks after starting service.[14] The Long Island Bus Rider's Union, a transit advocacy group, sharply criticized the cuts, claiming that "the announcements of service adjustments on the [NICE bus] website were very unclear", that service to many health care and social service centers was cut, and that "many of the NICE bus service cuts appear to be in low income communities where more people rely on buses to get to work and to access the few available health care centers that serve their needs."[15]

In 2013, the NICE bus system obtained a "windfall" from increased New York State (but not Nassau County) aid of $5 million and $3 million from a fare increase for MetroCard bus riders.[16]

In March 2014, the NICE bus system faced another $3.3 million budget deficit.[16] At that time, the bus system expected "an increase of state aid — its largest revenue stream — of $1.2 million."[16]

On October 31, 2014, the Nassau County legislature adopted a 2015 budget that will increase Nassau County's contribution to NICE bus from $2.6 million to $4.6 million in 2015 and promised not to raise fares outside of MetroCard fare increases (MetroCard is controlled by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority).[17] This new $4.6 million contribution was hailed as a victory for Nassau County bus riders, although it will still leave NICE bus with a $6 million operating deficit.[17][18] However, on December 11, 2014, Nassau County executive Ed Mangano proposed cutting $4 million from Nassau County's NICE bus contribution (in addition to cuts to numerous other Nassau County services) to replace the $30 million that will be lost after the shutdown of Nassau County's controversial school speed zone cameras.[19]

On January 17, 2016, NICE eliminated fifteen routes due to a budget deficit and low ridership and restructured three other routes.[20]

On June 27, 2016, NICE restored service on two routes (n80/81) and restored two others (n14, n17) as shuttles.[21]

On September 6, 2016, NICE restored service on one route (n51) and restored three others (original n2, n62, n73) as shuttles.

In December 2016 NICE announced a $12 million budget shortfall for FY2017 and warned of additional service cuts. These cuts were proposed to the Transit Advisory Committee, but failed to pass. A more severe sets of cuts was passed in February, eliminating ten routes and reducing four more.[22] Many of these routes were the ones restored in 2016. Additional last minute state funding allowed service on three routes to be saved.[23]

In July 2018, a multi-year plan to restructure and improve service on the system was released for public comment. Improvements include a more developed frequency network, restoration of former services, and express buses to Manhattan.[24]

Fare

The current fare is $2.75 ($1.35 for seniors and disabled customers) with a MetroCard (including unlimited cards) or coins. Students with ID receive a discount of $0.25 from the base fare. Dollar bills are not accepted on any NICE fixed-route buses. Transfers are available upon request with coins, and are included automatically with MetroCard. The transfers are valid for two hours and can be used on two connecting NICE bus routes; no round-trips nor stopovers. They are also valid on Suffolk County Transit, Long Beach Bus, Huntington Area Rapid Transit (HART) or MTA New York City Transit, with the following restrictions:

  • Transfers to non-MetroCard buses are with coins only.
  • Transfers to the New York City Subway, or New York City Bus or MTA Bus express service, are available with MetroCard only (express buses require additional fare).
  • Transfers from Suffolk Transit, Huntington Area Rapid Transit (HART) or Long Beach Bus require payment of a $0.25 fare.[25]

The Able-Ride paratransit fare is $3.75, payable in Able-Ride tickets or exact fare.

Bus depots

The Rockville Centre Bus Depot in September 2012. Note the MTA logo is painted over.

Nassau Inter-County Express has two operating depots, one each for its fixed route and paratransit operations, as well as an additional depot that was closed in 2017.

Mitchel Field Depot (CNG)

The Mitchel Field Depot (marked Senator Norman J. Levy Transit Facility on older buses and on the building itself) is located at 700 Commercial Avenue in Uniondale, and is the headquarters and central garage for Nassau Inter-County Express fixed route service. The garage is named after the Mitchel Air Force Base that operated there from 1918 until 1961. All routes at this garage are dispatched from this garage. It handles both 40ft and 60ft articulated buses. [26]

Stewart Avenue Depot (Able-Ride)

The Stewart Avenue Depot is located at 947 Stewart Avenue in East Garden City. All Able-Ride Nassau County shared-ride ADA paratransit service is dispatched from this garage.

Rockville Centre Depot (CNG)

The Rockville Centre Bus Depot was located at 50 Banks Avenue in Rockville Centre.[26] This garage was originally the home of Bee Line, Inc, and was closed in 2017 as part of a cost-cutting move. It is now used as a storage garage for older NICE buses. [22]

Fleet

All fixed-route NICE buses are ADA compliant, 8.5 ft (2.6 m) wide, CNG-fueled, and semi low-floor. All buses are also equipped with "smart bus" technology from Woodbury-based Clever Devices Ltd., which includes automated onboard route and stop announcements. However, Nassau Inter-County Express has recently hired Clever Devices again to replace its original "smart bus" system in most of the fleet with new on-board units and software that use GPS data to calculate the next stop announcements instead of odometer-based data with the older system. The new system will also provide maintenance with vehicle diagnostics data and provide customers and dispatchers alike with real-time bus location data accessible online (akin to MTA Bus Time).

Bus fleet

Photo Builder and
model name
Model year Length Numbers
(Total)
Amount in service
Orion Bus Industries
Orion VII
Next Generation
[27]
2008-2011 40 ft (12 m) 1700-1839
(140 buses)
139
Orion Bus Industries
Orion VII
EPA10
[28]
2012-2013 1840-1884
(45 buses)
45
New Flyer
XN40 Xcelsior
2015-2016 1885-1964
(80 buses)
80
New Flyer
XN60 Xcelsior
articulated
2016 60 ft (18 m) 1965-1969
(5 buses)
5
New Flyer
Xcelsior XN40
2019 40 ft (12 m) 1970-1979
(10 buses)
10
New Flyer
Xcelsior XN40
2021 1980
(1 bus)
1

Paratransit fleet

All NICE Paratransit buses use diesel fuel.

Photo Builder and
model name
Model year Length Numbers
(Total)
Amount in service
ARBOC Specialty Vehicles
Spirit of Mobility
cutaway van
2015-2016 26 ft (7.9 m) 2290-2297
(8 buses)
8

Routes

The Hempstead Transit Center sees service from 21 different routes.

NICE runs fixed-route service on 35 routes, plus two shuttles, servicing the towns of Hempstead, North Hempstead, and the southern part of Oyster Bay, along with parts of the cities of Long Beach and Glen Cove. Non-shuttle routes are designated "n" for Nassau County, with service provided daily (although not all routes operate 7 days a week), and 24-hour service provided on the n4 Merrick Road and n6 Hempstead Turnpike routes.

A New Flyer XN40 operating on route n4.

NICE routes operating to Jamaica and Flushing, Queens operate closed-door service in Queens (that is, local service is not provided solely for travel within Queens; appropriate MTA bus services must be used instead). There are two exceptions to this: the n24, where one side of Jericho Turnpike/Jamaica Avenue is in New York City, but the other side of the street is in the Town of Hempstead (eastbound drop-off begins at 225th Street, where state maintenance of Jamaica Avenue begins, and westbound pickups occur as far west as 239th Street); and the n31/n32 and n33, which operate open-door in a portion of Far Rockaway where no other bus service is available. In addition, the n33 operates closed-door within the City of Long Beach, where local service is provided by Long Beach Bus.

See also

References

  1. Castillo, Alfonso (November 9, 2011). "LI Bus gets new name, look, operator says". Newsday. Retrieved November 10, 2011.(subscription required)
  2. Applebome, Peter (March 27, 2011). "Riders to Lose Buses as Nassau and M.T.A. Battle". The New York Times. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  3. "Nassau Bus Riders May Get Reprieve on Service Cuts". The New York Times. April 2, 2011. pp. A17. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  4. "Bus Riders' Advocates Oppose Planned Cuts". longislandpress.com. Archived from the original on March 1, 2012. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  5. Castillo, Alfonso (March 2, 2011). "MTA Long Island bus faces deepest cuts". Newsday. Retrieved April 20, 2011.(subscription required)
  6. Castillo, Alfonso (March 16, 2011). "Nassau: Private company to run LI Bus". Newsday. Retrieved March 20, 2011.(subscription required)
  7. Maloney, Jennifer (April 1, 2011). "LI Bus saved for 2011 by $8.6M from state". Newsday. Retrieved April 20, 2011.(subscription required)
  8. Castillo, Alfonso (April 27, 2011). "MTA vote ends contract to run LI Bus". Newsday. Retrieved April 27, 2011.(subscription required)
  9. Castillo, Alfonso (June 10, 2011). "Pick to run LI Bus has D'Amato tie". Newsday. Retrieved June 10, 2011.(subscription required)
  10. ALFONSO A. CASTILLO. "Crowd at hearing pans Nassau's LI Bus plan". Newsday. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  11. "County hearing gets heated over L.I. Bus - LIHerald.com - Nassau County's source for local news, breaking news, sports, entertainment & shopping". liherald.com. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  12. Service cuts coming to NICE buses with low ridership. http://7online.com/archive/8553313/
  13. JOYE BROWN. "Too soon for cuts to new Nassau bus system". Newsday. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  14. "Long Island Bus Riders' Union". longislandbusridersunion.org. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  15. ALFONSO A. CASTILLO. "NICE: $3.3M budget gap could spur service cuts". Newsday. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  16. ALFONSO A. CASTILLO. "NICE bus gets $2M bump in 2015 Nassau budget". Newsday. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  17. "Long Island Bus Riders' Union". longislandbusridersunion.org. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  18. "Nassau Executive Mangano weighs options to replace speed camera revenue". News 12 Long Island. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  19. Castillo, Alfonso (January 17, 2016). "NICE cuts 11 bus routes despite rescue bid by Nassau lawmaker". Newsday. Retrieved April 8, 2017.
  20. Murphy, William (June 24, 2016). "NICE restores four of 11 bus routes it had eliminated". Newsday. Retrieved April 8, 2017.
  21. Castillo, Alfonso (February 16, 2017). "Vote passes to eliminate 10 NICE Bus routes, cut service on 4 others". Newsday. Retrieved April 8, 2017.
  22. Castillo, Alfonso (March 30, 2017). "Only 3 of 10 NICE bus routes facing cuts may be saved, CEO says". Newsday. Retrieved April 8, 2017.
  23. "Let's Go! A Multi-Year Transit Vision for Nassau County" (PDF). NICE Bus.
  24. http://nicebus.com/Passenger-Information/Fares-Passes.aspx NICE fare policy
  25. Long Island Bus garages - EPA.gov
  26. "MTA Long Island Bus orders Orion VII NG (CNG) buses". Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  27. Castillo, Alfonso (July 25, 2012). "Nassau buys 45 new buses for NICE fleet". Newsday. Retrieved July 28, 2012. (subscription required)
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