S79 (New York City bus) explained

Box Width:300px
System:MTA Regional Bus Operations
Operator:New York City Transit Authority
Garage:Yukon Depot
Vehicle:Nova Bus LFS
Open:April 15, 1990 (S79)
September 2, 2012 (Select Bus Service)
Locale:Brooklyn and Staten Island, New York, U.S.
Communities:Bay Ridge, Fort Hamilton, Concord, Arrochar, Dongan Hills, Midland Beach, New Dorp, Oakwood, Bay Terrace, Great Kills, Eltingville, New Springville
Start:Bay Ridge - 4th Avenue & 86th Street
Via:Brooklyn: 92nd Street, 4th Avenue, 86th Street, Fort Hamilton Parkway
Staten Island: Narrows Road, Hylan Boulevard, Richmond Avenue
End:New Springville – Staten Island Mall
Length:14.8miles
Otherroutes:S59 Richmond Avenue Local/Hylan Boulevard South; S89 Richmond Avenue Limited
S78 Hylan Boulevard Local
Day:4:10 AM - 1 AM
Timetable Link:S79
Annualpatronage:2,476,147 (2023)[1]
Transfers:Yes
Map State:collapsed
Previous Line:S78
Next Line:S81

The S79 Select Bus Service constitutes a bus route in Staten Island and Brooklyn, New York, running primarily on Richmond Avenue, Hylan Boulevard, and Narrows Road in Staten Island, and 92nd Street, Fourth Avenue, 86th Street, and Fort Hamilton Parkway in Brooklyn. It is based at the Yukon Depot.

The S78 and S79 were originally one route, but were split in 1990. In 2012, the S79 was converted to Select Bus Service, the first and now-only route in Staten Island to do so. It is the busiest bus route in Staten Island, serving 2.4 million riders in 2023.

Route description and service

The S79 begins at Ring Road and Marsh Avenue, near Staten Island Mall, and uses Ring Road to access Platinum Avenue, and then Richmond Avenue, while buses heading to the mall uses Ring Road and Marsh Avenue to access the terminus. It then continues along Richmond Avenue until it turns to Hylan Boulevard. It then goes along the boulevard for most of the length until it turns to Steuben Street and then Narrows Road, and then goes on the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, and uses exit 17 to access 92nd Street, and turns right onto 4th Avenue from 92nd Street, and then continues until it ends at 86th Street, near the 86th Street station on the BMT Fourth Avenue Line, which is served by the . Buses heading to Staten Island use 86th Street and Fort Hamilton Parkway to access the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge.

This route uses rigid 40-foot Nova LFS diesel buses; it originally ran Orion VII NG Hybrid buses. The S79 is the only SBS line that does not utilize off-board fare collection, and so it prevents all-door boarding; when SBS was implemented in 2012, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) had determined that off-board fare collection was unnecessary since the route's boarding times were short enough.[2] Additionally, it was the only SBS line in the 5 boroughs that did not use 60-foot articulated buses before the B46 SBS was introduced as well as the only SBS line to not have blue destination signs until July 2017. Riders must pay the fare on board, as they do on local, limited-stop, and express buses.

Stops

Northbound is towards Brooklyn and southbound is towards Staten Island. The S79 SBS is 14.8miles long.

History

The S79 was originally the R103, which ran between St. George Ferry Terminal Ramp "E" and Tottenville. In 1975, it was renumbered the S103. In September 1980, every other S103 bus was rerouted along Richmond Avenue to terminate at the Staten Island Mall, providing service from Staten Island's South Shore. At the same time, every other S102 bus was rerouted to the Mall, providing North Shore service.[3] On January 4, 1987, as part of reductions in bus service on seven routes across the city, S103 service was decreased. While fewer short-run trips to Hylan Boulevard in Eltingville would operate, more frequent service would be operated on the branch to the Staten Island Mall.[4] [5] [6] On April 15, 1990, the S103 was split into two routes; the S78 assumed the Tottenville service, while the S79 assumed the Staten Island Mall service.[7]

On June 26, 1992,[8] the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) Board voted to approve a service change to reroute the northern terminal of the route from Saint George Ferry Terminal to 86th Street and Fourth Avenue in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn effective in September. The route would be revised to run via Steuben Street, Narrows Road North, and the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. Simultaneously, the B8 would be extended to 92nd Street to allow S79 riders to get to the Brooklyn Veterans Administration Hospital with a transfer. The proposed change was opposed by some store owners in Brooklyn and Brooklyn Borough President Howard Golden, who believed the route would lead Brooklyn shoppers to shop at the Staten Island Mall instead of at Bay Ridge stores.[9] The change took effect on September 13, 1992 as part of the New York City Transit Authority's Fare Deal improvements program.[10]

In April 2001, the MTA announced it would increase the span of S79 service on Sundays from 8:38 p.m. to 11 p.m. from Bay Ridge, and from 7:23 p.m. to 9:50 p.m. from Staten Island Mall due to demand for increased service. The additional service was expected to cost $40,000 a year, and would take effect in July 2001.[11] In July 2001, it was announced that the span of morning service would be extended by two hours on weekends, to take effect in September 2001. The change was expected to cost $50,000 a year. S79 eastbound service previously began at 6:45 a.m. on Saturdays and 7:20 a.m. on Sundays, while westbound service began at 7:50 a.m. on Saturdays and at 8:30 a.m. on Sundays. With the change, eastbound service would begin at 4:45 a.m. on Saturdays and 5:20 a.m. on Sundays, and westbound service would begin at 6:00 a.m. on Saturdays and 6:30 a.m. on Sundays. The change would be made since ridership on the first trips of the day indicated demand for earlier service.[12] The span of Sunday service was extended again on September 7, 2003, with the last trip from Staten Island leaving at 10:10 p.m. instead of 9:45 p.m., and the last trip from Brooklyn leaving at 11:30 p.m. instead of 11 p.m..[13]

The MTA announced in June 2012 that the S79 would be converted to a Select Bus Service route, as the S79 was Staten Island's busiest bus route. On September 2, 2012, the S79 was converted to an SBS route, and three-quarter of the stops were eliminated. It was the first bus route in Staten Island to do so. While the routing was left mostly intact, the S79 had all local service eliminated and replaced by local service on the S59 route along Richmond Avenue and the S78 route along Hylan Boulevard. The route was also straightened through New Springville to bypass the Yukon Bus Depot, which was expected to save four minutes.[14] By 2017, the route was so crowded that numerous local elected officials were advocating for the MTA to increase the frequency of S79 bus service.[15]

Traffic cameras were mounted onto S79 buses in late 2022 as part of a pilot program to ticket drivers who were using bus lanes illegally.[16] [17] In January 2023, the MTA announced that bike racks would be installed on the front of S79 buses.[18] [19]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Subway and bus ridership for 2023 . mta.info . April 29, 2024. May 2, 2024.
  2. Web site: Sedon . Michael . June 4, 2012 . MTA: Staten Island's busiest bus route to become a timesaver . June 21, 2023 . silive.
  3. News: Engels . Mary . August 10, 1980 . Bus riders will get relief, but at local pace . New York Daily News . May 28, 2023.
  4. News: January 7, 1987 . Molinari: Tell me your bus woes . New York Daily News . May 28, 2023.
  5. News: January 4, 1987 . 7 Bus Routes Cut Back . Newsday . May 28, 2023.
  6. News: December 30, 1986 . 7 Bus Routes to Cut Service . New York Daily News . May 28, 2023.
  7. Web site: 1990 . Staten Island Bus Service: A Guide to Route Renumbering Effective: April 15, 1990 . May 28, 2023 . Flickr . New York City Transit Authority.
  8. Book: June 1992 Transit Authority Committee Agenda. June 19, 1992. New York City Transit Authority. E.1, E.2-E.3, E.4-E.5, E.6-E.7.
  9. News: Hoey . Sharon . June 27, 1992 . New Bus Route to Brooklyn Approved by Transit Board MTA Also Oks Ban on Cigarette Advertising on Buses, Trains . A10 . Staten Island Advance.
  10. News: Spend your money in Brooklyn and Staten Island, not getting there.. September 18, 1992. New York Daily News. February 3, 2019. 533. February 4, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190204122324/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/27994693/spend_your_money_in_brooklyn_and_staten/. live.
  11. Book: April 2001 NYC Transit Committee Agenda. July 19, 2001. New York City Transit Authority. 119, 120, 121-122.
  12. Book: July 2001 NYC Transit Committee Agenda. July 19, 2001. New York City Transit Authority. 109, 110, 111-112.
  13. Web site: 2003 . Staten Island Bus Service Notice . https://web.archive.org/web/20031213152224/http://www.mta.info:80/nyct/service/bus/bussrvnosi.htm . December 13, 2003 . September 14, 2023 . mta.info . Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
  14. News: MTA putting the speedball on Staten Island's S79 bus. https://web.archive.org/web/20180526174029/http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/07/mta_putting_the_speedball_on_s.html. May 26, 2018. July 25, 2012. Staten Island Advance. Michael. Sedon.
  15. Web site: Bascome . Erik . December 2, 2017 . Local officials urge MTA to add rush-hour buses to S79 route . June 21, 2023 . silive.
  16. Web site: Hoogensen . Finn . October 3, 2022 . Hundreds more MTA buses to be equipped with cameras to catch lane violators . June 21, 2023 . PIX11.
  17. Web site: Bascome . Erik . December 1, 2022 . Attention Staten Island drivers: MTA S79 bus-mounted cameras to begin issuing tickets this month . June 21, 2023 . silive.
  18. Web site: Rahmanan . Anna . January 17, 2023 . The MTA is installing a bunch of bike racks all across the city . June 21, 2023 . Time Out New York.
  19. Web site: Bascome . Erik . January 11, 2023 . S79 MTA buses to get mounted bike racks to enhance cycling access over Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge . June 21, 2023 . silive.