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Sunday, May 27, 2018

Google bus protests - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org

The Google bus protests were a series of community-based activism held by residents of the San Francisco Bay Area beginning in late 2013, when the use of shuttle buses employed by Google and other local area tech companies became widely publicized. The term "Google bus" is pars pro toto, in that many other tech companies such as Apple, Facebook, Yahoo and Genentech also pay for shuttle services operated by private transportation companies. The core issues surrounding the use of buses were that only employees of tech companies were allowed to use them, and for a substantial amount of time the buses used city infrastructure without compensating the city for their use. According to Berkeley professor Abigail De Kosnik, the resulting protests can be viewed as "synecdoches for the anger that many San Francisco residents feel towards technological privilege and its facilitation of a widening of a class divide in the city", and that the Google bus protests were "attempts to disrupt the smoothness of technological privilege's spread."

The main strategy used during the protests was to briefly detain buses while engaged at their stops loading passengers. Afterwards, messages by the protesting groups were disseminated through media, communicating the protesting groups actions to larger audiences in the Bay Area, California and the nation. The buses free usage of city infrastructure aired on a national stage, eventually leading to enactment of the Commuter Shuttle Program. This subjected the shuttle services to regulatory processes and collected monies from them, imparting legitimacy upon their use.


Video Google bus protests



Background

The buses are used to ferry only tech company employees from their homes in San Francisco and Oakland to corporate campuses in Silicon Valley, about 40 miles south. The individuals involved in these protests viewed the buses as symbols of gentrification and displacement in a city where rapid growth in the tech sector has led to increasing rent and housing prices.

In reaction to the protests, the City of San Francisco began provisional regulation of the shuttle services in August 2014, with some of the shuttle stops being closed or reassigned to other locations within the city. A permanent solution, known as the Commuter Shuttle Program, took effect on 1 February 2016. Owing to these new regulations, by May 2017 the protests had largely abated.

Transportation needs

Growth in the technology sector of Silicon Valley at the beginning of the 21st century encouraged an influx of tech workers to the area. From the viewpoint of spatial justice, it was this growth which brought increased demands upon the public transportation networks servicing the greater Bay Area. These inadequate links between San Francisco and Silicon Valley workplaces became a leading factor in Silicon Valley employers' 2008 implementation of Google buses as viable alternatives for transportation. As a net gain, busing ensured employees had a convenient way to commute to work while allowing for tech workers to live outside of Silicon Valley. According to a 2012 report by the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA), there were approximately 6,500 tech commuters who used shuttle buses to take them from their respective homes to work locations outside the city.

Gentrification

Concomitant to this were the effects that the growing presence of technology companies in the surrounding metropolitan area were having upon the city itself, namely gentrification. The usage of exclusive busing services, along with the suburban locations of tech companies, served to isolate tech workers from other San Francisco residents in a manner similar to gated communities. Observations of the Google buses include:

The buses roll up to San Francisco's bus stops in the morning and evening, but they are unmarked, or nearly so, and not for the public. Most of them are gleaming white, with dark-tinted windows, like limousines, and some days I think of them as the spaceships on which our alien overlords have landed to rule over us. Sometimes the Google Bus just seems like one face of Janus-headed capitalism, in that they contain the people too valuable even to use public transport or drive themselves.

Dueling transportation systems

Concerns soon arose over implementation of the busing, most notably the shuttles' usage of public bus stops. The process of having two different transportation systems each attempting to use the same designated areas at each stop in an uncoordinated fashion brought about unnecessary traffic congestion, usage for which the City of San Francisco was not compensated. An internal city report stated:

Prior to August 2014, San Francisco did not regulate or collect fees from commuter shuttles. Shuttles operated throughout the City on both large arterial and small non-arterial streets. Shuttles loaded and unloaded passengers in a variety of places whether it was legal or not, including white loading zones, red Muni zones, and other vacant curb spaces. When curb space was unavailable, shuttles often would load or unload passengers in the travel lane. The lack of rules for where and when loading and unloading were permitted resulted in confusion for shuttle operators and neighbors, inconsistent enforcement, and real and perceived conflicts with other transportation modes.

With rents rising over gentrification and evictions in area housing occurring with growing frequency by late 2013, the fact that private bus services were operating without paying fees to the city government only served to increase the likelihood of direct action being taken by residents.


Maps Google bus protests


Protests

Direct action

The protests started on 9 December 2013, when activists from a group called Heart of the City blocked and entered a double-decker bus used by Google at 24th Street and Valencia in San Francisco's Mission District. This sparked other groups across the bay in Oakland and out of state in Seattle to protest private tech commuter buses in their areas. In the majority of incidents, protesters merely blocked the buses from leaving their stops. At a protest organized by Eviction Free San Francisco on 20 December 2013, a group of individuals blocked a bus while an organizer using a loudspeaker from the back of a truck drew attention to the blockade, which lasted 30 minutes. On 1 April 2014, April Fools' Day, protesters wearing blue, yellow and red costumes blocked a Google bus at 24th and Valencia, preventing it from departing. An organizer named "Judith Hart" -- claiming to be the president of Google's new Gmuni division -- began answering questions on a loudspeaker from the gathering crowd of onlookers while distributing Gmuni passes, which she claimed allowed the public to ride the Google buses for free. After several people from the crowd were denied boarding, the organizer acknowledged to arriving police that the bus driver "may not have received notice of the program" and the bus was ultimately allowed to depart.

Across the bay in Oakland, protesters were more pointed in their blockade, with one protester breaking the window of a bus while an unrelated second protester slashed the tire of another bus. Other protesters detaining a bus in Oakland unfurled a banner containing expletives. In one incident on 2 April 2014, a protester climbed to the roof of a Yahoo bus close by Bay Area Rapid Transit's MacArthur station in Oakland, and proceeded to vomit on the windshield. According to an organizer from San Francisco, the protests in Oakland were not affiliated with the San Francisco groups, with "the only real connection is that most of our communities are being heavily displaced and people are very angry."

Police response

In almost all incidents protesters obstructing buses eventually moved, either of their own accord or at police direction. Very few incidents of arrests were made during the protests, due largely to so-called Graham factors, whereby use of the police power to arrest is considered inexpedient in cases where people are viewed as peacefully protesting. In these cases, San Francisco Police Department officers are trained to de-escalate the situation by using other, non-confrontational means, such as communicating with non-compliant subjects.


The Google Dog Bus and the Costs on San Francisco | Occupy.com
src: www.occupy.com


Resolution

SF Board of Supervisors

With the accumulation of media and public interest that the protests garnered, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors held their first three-hour meeting on the protests at City Hall on 7 January 2014. Tech shuttles had been offered a solution whereby they would be charged $1 per stop per day, regardless of how many workers got on or off. Angry residents, citing the $2 fee San Franciscans had to pay to board city buses, demanded that the private bus services pay more for their share. In the meantime, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency was asked by the Board of Supervisors to commission a panel to begin gathering information on a long-term solution. Six months later, in July 2014, SFMTA began implementing its first preliminary fee of $1.00 for each public stop used by the buses, which was expected to raise $1.5 million during the 18 months that it was to be in effect.

Tech companies' response

In February 2014, Google donated $6.8 million to SFMTA to provide free public transit for low-income children in San Francisco. On 31 March 2014, tech-advocacy group sf.citi--led by Ron Conway, angel investor in Google and other tech companies--released a statement of support for SFMTA's pilot program.

Commuter shuttle program

In 2015 SFMTA released the results of its fact-finding pilot program, which found that about 47% of workers in tech areas would commute to and from work using their own vehicles if they did not have shuttles available to them, increasing the amount of privately owned vehicles on area roadways. This led SFMTA's board of directors to approve a broader solution, thereafter known as the Commuter Shuttle Program. The program allowed the city to regulate the buses by delineating where they could travel to, their size, and how much each bus was to pay the city as compensation for their usage of city bus stops. Sporadic protesting continued until February 2016, when SFMTA approved an extension to the program, allowing it to continue beyond its initial end date of 31 March 2017. This extension carried tighter regulations of the shuttles, including limits to larger buses, final approval on all main roads to be used, and city provided safety training for the drivers. Stricter coordination would also be made through continuous GPS tracking of the shuttles. Finally, the extension made permanent the city's ability to collect their per-stop fee, which as of February 2018 stood at $7.31 per stop.


PHOTOS: Activists Attach 'Die Techie Scum' Sign To Google Bus ...
src: static-ssl.businessinsider.com


Notes


Protesters Block Google Bus at 24th and Valencia | Uptown Almanac
src: uptownalmanac.com


References


Gentrification Blowback | Uptown Almanac
src: uptownalmanac.com


Further reading

  • "Income Inequality In The San Francisco Bay Area". National Public Radio. Special Series of Reports from All Things Considered on NPR. 
  • Dreyer, Leslie (8 May 2014). "Google Bus Blockades for a Right to the City". 
  • Lee, Wendy (21 September 2015). "Tech bus drivers forced to live in cars to make ends meet". San Francisco Chronicle. Hearst Newspapers. 
  • Swan, Rachel (February 19, 2014). "The Evolution of Protest: The Bay Area Has Been Shaped by Dissent, But No One Can Stand in the Way of What's Coming". SF Weekly. Archived from the original on March 13, 2014. Retrieved March 16, 2014. 
  • Tracy, James (2014). Dispatches Against Displacement: Field Notes from San Francisco's Housing Wars. Edinburgh, UK: Ak Press. ISBN 9781849352055. 
  • Wong, Julia Carrie (January 23, 2014). "When companies break the law and people pay: The scary lesson of the Google Bus". Salon. Archived from the original on January 24, 2014. Retrieved January 23, 2014. 

SF's Tech Bus Problem Isn't About Buses. It's About Housing | WIRED
src: media.wired.com


External links

  • San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency Commuter Shuttle Program
  • Map of Google bus stops in San Francisco (2018) SFMTA
  • April Fools Day 2014 Google bus protest: "Gmuni Program" Video footage of direct-action protest by Heart of the City

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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