Bottom line
1. Which Council powers apply
| Tool | Application |
|---|---|
| Fare authority | Fix fares through the Charter’s Rate Commission process and authorize free/reduced categories or pilots. |
| Operating budget | Fund operators, service hours, maintenance, security, information, and revenue replacement. |
| Capital budget | Fund buses, charging/fueling, centers, shelters, accessibility, signal priority, and lanes. |
| Street ordinances | Create transit-priority lanes, curb/loading rules, and lawful enforcement. |
| Land use | Concentrate housing/services near frequent transit and improve pedestrian access. |
| Appointments/oversight | Participate in Rate Commission appointments, question DTS, require reports, and audit service. |
| HART appropriations | Review and approve authority line-item budgets and related bond actions. |
2. A credible Council action package
- Reliability contract. Public targets for on-time performance, missed trips, operator vacancies, maintenance pull-outs, crowding, and customer information.
- Fare-free pilot. Define population/routes/period and predefine ridership, speed, equity, revenue, and security metrics.
- Revenue replacement. Identify net fare revenue after collection costs and fund it without service cuts.
- Bus-priority package. Dedicated lanes where justified, queue jumps, signal priority, all-door boarding, stop review, and enforcement.
- Operator and maintenance plan. Recruit, retain, train, and schedule sufficient staff.
- Quarterly scorecard. Route-level results and corrective actions.
3. Legal and operational limits
- Rate process: the Rate Commission has a formal Charter role before Council fare action.
- Revenue: quantify gross fare revenue, collection cost, and net replacement.
- Operations: Council cannot set individual schedules or dispatch buses.
- Street tradeoffs: bus lanes affect parking, loading, traffic, and emergency access; use corridor evidence.
- Federal funds: procurement, asset management, civil rights, and grant conditions apply.
- Integration: bus and rail transfers should function as one network.
Do not overclaim: a councilmember cannot guarantee on-time performance by declaration. Promise funding, right-of-way, metrics, and accountability.
4. Recent Honolulu examples
Bill 54 (2025)
The Council used an ordinance to set a detailed fare schedule for TheBus and related services. It is the clearest recent example of direct fare power.
Rate Commission
The Charter instructs the commission to consider equity, accessibility, sustainability, and ridership, then gives the Council the power to fix fares.
FY2025 budgets
Council budget action demonstrates the separate funding power required to purchase service and capital improvements.
5. Debate practice
“The Council can make fares free, but free buses that do not arrive are not transit justice. I would pair a fare-free pilot with replacement revenue, operator and maintenance funding, and bus-priority corridors. The Council fixes fares, enacts budgets, and controls street law; DTS runs routes and schedules. I would publish route-level on-time performance, missed trips, and crowding every quarter.”
“My goal is a bus system people can trust without checking a bank balance. The Charter gives the Council real leverage: it fixes fares after the Rate Commission process, enacts operating and capital budgets, can legislate bus-priority use of streets, and can require performance reports. I would begin with a measurable fare-free pilot and identify net revenue replacement before passage. At the same time, I would fund operator retention and maintenance, build lanes, queue jumps and signal priority where data show the greatest delay, and require route-level reports. DTS will operate the service. The Council’s job is to provide money, legal priority, and accountability.”
6. Hard questions and disciplined answers
“How will you pay for free fares?”
Answer: “Calculate net revenue after collection costs and discounts, then identify a recurring replacement. I will not fund free fares by cutting service.”
“Would buses become less safe?”
Answer: “Safety depends on staffing, operations, outreach, and design—not simply a fare. Track incidents and fund response.”
“Can you promise my bus will be on time?”
Answer: “I can promise route-level targets, funding, and street priority. DTS is responsible for daily delivery.”
“Why buses when rail exists?”
Answer: “Riders need a network. Frequent buses feed rail and serve trips rail cannot.”
7. Facts and phrases to memorize
- Rate Commission recommends; Council fixes fares.
- Bill 54 is recent fare-setting precedent.
- Free fares need recurring net-revenue replacement.
- Reliability: service budget, workforce, maintenance, priority, metrics.
- Phrase: “Free buses that arrive.”
8. Sources
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