New Orleans Regional Transit Authority

New Orleans Regional Transit Authority
New Orleans Regional Transit Authority
logo
image
RTA building on Canal Street
Founded 1983
Headquarters New Orleans, Louisiana
Service area Orleans Parish, Louisiana
Service type Public Transit
Light rail
Fuel type Diesel
Operator Veolia Transportation
Web site New Orleans Regional Transit Authority
Streetcar network
Streetcar on Canal Street, April 2007

The New Orleans Regional Transit Authority (RTA or NORTA as it is called by some residents) is a body established by the Louisiana State Legislature in 1979; since 1983 it has controlled bus and streetcar service in the City of New Orleans.

Previously, public mass transit, electric, and natural gas were all controlled by a private utility company, New Orleans Public Service Incorporated (NOPSI), now known as Entergy New Orleans. The switch to a public operation was motivated by lack of profitability and the desire to be eligible for federal funding.

NORTA has one of the largest fleets of buses in the nation and it also has the reputation for being one of the cleanest and safest systems.

Contents

Hurricane Katrina

City buses were used before Hurricane Katrina hit to transport people to a refuge of last resort, the Louisiana Superdome. Much of the city flooded due to the storm. The NORTA Administration building on Plaza Drive appears to have been in ten feet of water. Almost eighty-five percent of the fleet was rendered useless and inoperative; 146 city buses were visible outdoors in the flood at the 2817 Canal St. facility, while only 22 were at 3900 Desire Pky. The 8201 Willow St. facility was one block within the flood but was built above street level. The buses at the flooded facilities were mostly written off.

Post-disaster recovery

As of 2007, service was restored to certain areas as they become habitable again. However, there is no 24-hour service on any bus or streetcar line. Streetcars have returned to the full length of Canal St. and the Riverfront, initially using the historic St. Charles Line streetcars, which were not damaged, as the red Canal cars were. In 2008, the St. Charles streetcar resumed running the entire length of its route. By early 2009, the red Canal streetcars were repaired and had taken over service on the Canal and Riverfront Lines. The buses that have been restored to operation have returned to several major thoroughfares, including Elysian Fields Avenue, Esplanade Avenue, Claiborne Avenue, St. Claude Avenue, Judge Perez Drive, General Meyer Avenue, Lapalco Boulevard, Robert E. Lee Boulevard, and the Chef Menteur Highway. And just two express routes, Lake Forest Express and Morrison Express, both serving Eastern New Orleans, have been reinstated so far.

A year before Katrina, in addition to local and express bus service, NORTA brought Bus Rapid Transit to the city. The first BRT line opened up on Broad Street, with two more lines opening up months later running along Tulane Avenue and Saint Claude Avenue.

Bus & Streetcar Route List

  • 2 Riverfront Streetcar
  • 5 Marigny-Bywater
  • 10 Tchoupitoulas
  • 11 Magazine
  • 12 St. Charles Streetcar
  • 15 Freret
  • 16 Claiborne
  • 24 Napoleon
  • 27 Louisiana
  • 28 M.L. King
  • 32 Leonidas
  • 39 Tulane
  • 45 Lakeview
  • 47 Canal Streetcar to Cemeteries
  • 48 Canal Streetcar to City Park/Museum
  • 51 St. Bernard - Paris Ave.
  • 52 St. Bernard - Senate - St. Anthony
  • 55 Elysian Fields
  • 57 Franklin
  • 60 Hayne
  • 62 Morrison Express
  • 63 New Orleans East Owl
  • 64 Lake Forest Express
  • 80 Louisa
  • 84 Galvez
  • 88 St. Claude/Jackson Barracks
  • 91 Jackson-Esplanade
  • 94 Broad
  • 100 Algiers Loop Owl
  • 101 Algiers Loop
  • 102 General Meyer
  • 108 Algiers Local
  • 114 General DeGaulle - Sullen
  • 115 General DeGaulle - Tullis
  • 201 Kenner Loop
  • 408 Algiers Local-Landry High School

New Orleans Streetcar Expansion

Two new streetcar projects are currently underway with one already under construction. The New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal (UPT)/Loyola Avenue corridor streetcar line started construction in August 2011 and is planned to begin revenue service starting in June 2012. The line will be less than a mile long, and will connect the Canal Streetcar Line through the Central Business District to the UPT Amtrak Station and Greyhound Depot.[1][2]

The French Quarter Rail Expansion is scheduled to begin construction in Spring 2012 with revenue service planned for Fall 2013. The French Quarter Route will be 2.48 miles long and have 13 stops. It will extend from a loop via North Rampart, Canal, and Basin Streets, down N. Rampart and St. Claude Avenue to Press Street. A branch is to extend from St. Claude via Elysian Fields Avenue to connect with the Riverfront line at the foot of Elysian Fields and Esplanade Avenues. A future extension is projected down St. Claude Avenue past Press Street to Poland Avenue, next to the Industrial Canal. This would require crossing the Norfolk Southern Railroad at Press Street, which the railroad opposes on safety grounds.[3][4]

See also

References

  1. ^ NORTA System Improvements, norta.com, retrieved Aug 6, 2011
  2. ^ Loyola Avenue streetcar line construction ramps up, New Orleans Times-Picayune, nola.com, Aug. 16, 2011
  3. ^ Mayor Landrieu and Regional Transit Authority Announce French Quarter Streetcar Expansion, norta.com, posted January 25, 2011, retrieved Aug 6, 2011
  4. ^ Streetcar service along Rampart, St. Claude is getting a green light, New Orleans Times-Picayune, nola.com, Jan. 25, 2011

External links


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