Word: transition
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Meanwhile the transit labor situation gets worse weekly. Never overpaid, trolley conductors and bus drivers are scampering off to war jobs in droves. In Washington a bus driver was in such a hurry to quit that he jerked to a stop at a traffic light, left a load of puzzled passengers stranded at the curb (TIME, Sept...
Such was the gist of a three-day powwow held last week by the 61-year-old American Transit Association. In Chicago's famed Palmer House, some 800 transit men heard enough criticism, ominous prediction and plain bad news to make most of them sorry they ever made the trip...
...Transit men have partly solved their problem by reconditioning old trolley cars, jamming more passengers into every car and bus. They have other schemes too. In Kansas City, a staggered work-hour scheme is calculated to give the Kansas City Public Service Co. the equivalent of 42 new busses; Indianapolis Railways (controlling all local transportation) has slashed the number of stops 40% to 2,700, dropped or shortened seven feeder lines to boot. The Cleveland Transit System recently hitched 31-passenger trailers to regular busses. In Washington, transit bigwigs tested a new device: the "standsit" seat. Spaced...
...this is not enough. At last week's A.T.A. conclave ODT official Guy A. Richardson (once Chicago transit boss) flatly accused transit men of "business as usual," too much "conversation" and not enough action. He warned that before the war is over you "will be glad to get any sort of vehicle that will roll on wheels...
...equipment sent overseas has sometimes been damaged in transit due to faulty packing, lost through inefficient storage, or has sat useless for lack of simple parts like spark plugs or coils. Where parts have been ordered they have often served no good end: there is no sense ordering as many spare truck cabs as spare fan belts-one seldom requires replacement, the other frequently does...