The
geniuses who run this backwater burgh we call Pensacola, Florida, in
a misguided effort to decrease the ridiculous vehicular traffic on
the beach every weekend, will be instituting a ferry service between
downtown and Pensacola Beach. Small ferries, you ask? Oh nooooo! Big
ferries. But not car ferries...people ferries...150 passenger ferries.
A
round-trip ticket is supposedly going to be $20. We'll see.
Two
big boats have been purchased with a $5.2 million grant from BP Oil as a result of their Deepwater Horizon disaster back in 2010. An operator has been found that is
experienced in such things. In the newspaper, they say they will
hire between 30 and 40 people. Service is scheduled to begin
(fingers crossed!) June 15th. No ticket
kiosks or infrastructure of any kind is in place right now. Personally, I think the start-date is kind of optimistic. We'll see.
The ferry operator hopes to attract 900 people per day. And by that we can assume that they mean "Saturday and Sunday." Because nobody is going to take the ferry during the week, period. Weekly ridership will probably not even cover the expenses of running the two boats on those days.
The ferry operator hopes to attract 900 people per day. And by that we can assume that they mean "Saturday and Sunday." Because nobody is going to take the ferry during the week, period. Weekly ridership will probably not even cover the expenses of running the two boats on those days.
Hmm,
let's think about this. 900 people per day? They're dreaming. We're
talking LSD-induced fantasyland here. But let's humor them! Let's
figure 900 people times $20 equals $18,000 per day - less if we
deduct the discounts for groups, military, children and senior
citizens they're talking about. Still, setting those aside for the
moment, that's potentially $36,000 for the weekend...and...ohhhh,
let's be optimistic...maybe another 500 people during the week, or an
additional $10,000 revenue, giving gross sales of $46,000 for the
week. Roughly $180,000 for the month.
“Great!”
you say. ”That's a lot of money!”
But
hold on a minute. That's not year-round revenue. The ferries
may be able to generate that kind of revenue on
nice weekends during May, June, July and August. Maybe. But there's
no way...no way! they can sustain that kind of
traffic year 'round. I don't even know if they intend to run the
ferries all year long, but the revenue has to be spread over twelve
months because the costs of the boats and the infrastructure (piers,
etc) don't go away. I'm not sure what the ferry service's annual
operating costs are, but I'll bet that they're considerable! And
I'll bet that the service will only run six months out of the year.
And
let's not forget that even in the summer, not every weekend is
suitable for the beach. We do get storms! Hurricane Season runs
from the beginning of June through November. So there's always
that possibility. But in addition, the ferry
probably won't run if the water is particularly rough. So a storm
out in the Gulf of Mexico that doesn't affect our local weather might
render the boats unusable.
But
again, let's be generous...let's assume they can do $750,000 in
revenue for the year.
Now,
I'll be the first to admit that I don't know much about operating
boats. However I do know a lot about operating airplanes and
helicopters. And I'm sure that boats can be just as expensive to
maintain, even when you're not using them. And while I have no idea
what their actual operating costs are going to be, I suspect
that the service will operate at a loss. While the purchase of the ferries may have been subsidized, the operating costs are not. It cannot run at a loss.
As
I said and believe, the passenger ferry service is misguided. But
the government has to do something. The weekend
traffic out on the beach has gotten unbearable. It often takes an
hour or more to get out to the beach at midday
on a weekend.
The
beach is a victim of its own success. It's beautiful! We've got
that famous sugar-white sand. We've got some really good hotels,
restaurants and clubs. As we used to say in the groovy 1960's, the
beach is happening, man! Our Chamber of
Commerce markets it heavily. We are known as “The Redneck Riviera”
due to all of the visitors we get from Alabama, Mississippi and
Louisiana. It's not flattering but it's true.
Another part of this is due to our idiotic local residents. We've got about 300,000 people in the surrounding Pensacola area. And on the warm, sunny weekends they all want to go to the beach. These morons can't seem to get up before eleven a.m. They get on the road around noon, all heading for the beach. Anyone who's lived here through one summer knows that the beach gets FULL every Saturday and Sunday without fail. By one p.m. there is literally no place left to park. Traffic through the city of Gulf Breeze is choked to a standstill. The Three-Mile Bridge that goes across Pensacola Bay to Gulf Breeze gets backed-up all the way to Pensacola. But the faithful are undeterred. By God, they're going to the beach!
Our
stupid Santa Rosa Island Authority (the agency that runs the beach)
will not detour or shut down the traffic entering the beach; they
just let people come and come and fight it out for the parking spots.
And those people do come, mostly in cars and big pickup trucks
carrying only one or two people. Car-pooling? Not in Pensacola,
thank you! As a taxi driver I see this first-hand. As I'm stuck in
crawling, bumper-to-bumper traffic, my passengers stare gloomily at
the meter, which never stops clicking ever upward. You might say
that I'm part of the problem, but I go out there and do not stay; I
just drop my people off and leave.
There
was talk once about building a multi-story parking garage on the
beach. The plans came to naught. Turns out it couldn't be built
between the end of one season and the beginning of the next. So that
idea was dropped. Recently, someone actually suggested the
installation of traffic circles/roundabouts as a way of smoothing the
flow of traffic. Traffic circles! The idiots around here can barely
navigate a conventional intersection much less one where the rights
of way are not clear. Then there are the pedestrians – so many
pedestrians!...yet the county will not build crossover bridges to get
the people off the roads.
Local
governments are horrible at actually solving problems. They'd rather
just “kick the can down the road.” Which is what they've done
here. The summer traffic problems on Pensacola Beach will not get
better on their own. A passenger ferry service will do precious
little to help alleviate the overcrowding.
But
they can dream!
You can read the story in our local newspaper HERE
https://www.pnj.com/story/news/local/pensacola/beaches/2018/05/09/pensacola-bay-ferry-service-track-start-june-15-says-operator/592403002/
2 comments:
"It cannot run at a loss."
In my experience, anything built and run by a government, be it national or local can run at a loss for huge periods of time, even forever, under the guise of it is a public necessity. I have lived in two different towns now that have built large public civic centers and in one town a water park all saying they would bring much needed revenue to the area. In all three cases, none of them have turned a profit in the last 25 years and yet they are still here. That happens because governments have unlimited wealth, i.e. taxpayer pockets.
Yes Ed, we have such a civic center here in Pensacola, too. But with the ferry service, although the boats were purchased with BP money, they are supposedly a private operation. I'm not exactly sure who owns the boats, but I suspect that it *is* the City of Pensacola and that the service *will* receive government subsidies as it runs at a loss.
It will be interesting to see the ridership levels, if they're even published (which I doubt). I'm sure the first week will see high numbers as the curious come out to experience the new service. But both of the terminals at the beach are a long walk from the actual beach itself. Therefore, anyone carrying a cooler and all the accouterments one normally brings to the beach will have a hard time getting to their place on the sand. We shall see how it all works out.
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