BART officials gave initial approval to an emergency "doomsday" plan that would significantly cut service, including ...
The BART Board of Directors approved Thursday a plan to close stations and make other service cuts if voters reject a sales ...
In the face of a financial deficit, the BART Board of Directors approved a backup budget plan Thursday that could cut up to ...
BART is delaying its plan to potentially close up to 15 stations — several of which could be in San Mateo County — if a ...
Leaders of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system voted to approve an alternative plan to cut service in an effort to save money ...
BART's Board of Directors approved a contingency plan that would slash service, close stations and raise fares if the transit agency fails to secure new funding.
BART's board approved a drastic measure that would begin a process of closing stations and gutting service if voters do not approve a sales tax increase on November's ballot.
What would happen if the BART didn't secure additional funding? The potential fix is closing up to 15 stations, reducing ...
In November, voters will decide whether to approve a sales tax increase that would provide more than $300 million in additional annual funding for BART. If that money is not approved, BART says it ...
The transit agency says it decided to focus its efforts on a different project while dealing with a deepening fiscal crisis.