"Data-Meister" Celebrates 20 Years of Counting Riders
Data Specialist Bill Kalinowski was honored at yesterday’s Community Transit Board of Directors meeting for 20 years of service, half of the agency’s existence. During that time, his job of tracking bus ridership, “dwell” times and on-time performance has evolved.
Today, he sits at a high-powered computer reviewing and analyzing data that comes from a suite of on-board transit technologies, like automatic passenger counters, ORCA fare terminals and GPS. During his first 16 years at Community Transit, he was in the field every day riding buses or standing at bus stops to manually gathering that same data.
“I used to ride about 500 bus trips a year,” Kalinowski recalled. ”Today, I track more than 455,000 weekday bus trips, plus those on the weekends. All from my desk.” The data he gathers, and the reports he produces, are used by planners and transportation managers at Community Transit, and outside agencies like Sound Transit, the Washington State Department of Transportation and the Federal Transit Administration.
As one of four Community Transit service quality monitors in “the old days,” Kalinowski used to ride buses to count how many people boarded and got off the bus at each stop. He also spent time standing at bus stops with a watch to track how long a bus stayed at that stop (dwell time), and compare actual bus arrival times to posted schedule times. While all that data can now be gathered electronically, there are some experiences the computer screen doesn’t share.
“I was riding the bus one time and overheard a conversation by a guy who, obviously, just got out of jail,” Kalinowski remembered. “He was telling someone about a motorcycle he left in Gold Bar whose gas tank was full of money. I think he was on his way to find it.”
While he doesn’t know if that man found his fortune, or whether there was any truth to that tale, it was just one of many fond memories Kalinowski has of his bus adventures.
So, does he miss it? “Only on nice days.”
Photo, top: Bill on the bus in the beginning of his Community Transit career. Photo, bottom: CEO Emmett Heath congratulates Bill for 20 years of service.
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