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Drive a mile in MTA’s shoes

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Re “MTA is trying to shed some wait,” June 27

Before anyone issues a knee-jerk complaint about Metro buses being on time less than 70% of the time, ask yourself this:

* If you attempted to drive anywhere across L.A. and arrive within a predetermined five-minute window, could you do it better than 70% of the time? Not likely.

* How would my timeliness be if I had to stop my vehicle, rearrange a row of front seats, activate wheelchair lifts and anchors, and then repeat the process when each disabled rider gets off?

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If Metro is serious about being on time more, hiring 10 more supervisors at $90,000 a year each isn’t the answer. Requiring everyday Metro employees -- especially managers -- to ride their own system to and from work at least a couple of days every week might be, though. Only then would they realize how difficult it is to be on time.

D.J. Fone

El Cajon

I really don’t see how adding 10 more supervisors is going to speed up bus service. The buses are stuck in the same traffic as everyone else. Unless they invent a bus that can hover over traffic, or create more dedicated bus-only lanes, the answer to more reliable, on-time public transportation service is building more rail.

Jim Bean

Los Angeles

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