Verified source report
How a floating commute became the Bay Area’s unlikely transit success story
DJs, ball games, and lower fares have pushed SF Bay Ferry past pre-pandemic ridership — while BART and Muni have yet to fully rebound.
What happened
According to The San Francisco Standard’s source item, How a floating commute became the Bay Area’s unlikely transit success story, DJs, ball games, and lower fares have pushed SF Bay Ferry past pre-pandemic ridership — while BART and Muni have yet to fully rebound.
Context
The development sits in VINI’s Bay Area file for local readers tracking public services, civic decisions, transportation, housing, safety, and community life across the Bay Area. The original report is linked so readers can check the source account, follow later updates, and compare new coverage against the first published record. The source item is dated 2026-05-10T17:30:00+00:00.
What to watch
Open questions include whether primary sources issue follow-up statements, whether local or market impacts become clearer, and whether additional reporting changes the timeline or adds material context.
Source
Primary source: How a floating commute became the Bay Area’s unlikely transit success story via The San Francisco Standard. VINI cites and links the source; it does not reproduce the publisher’s full article text without rights clearance.
This source-cited VINI report links to the original publisher record. VINI does not republish third-party article bodies without rights clearance. 1 source listed.
Source links
- How a floating commute became the Bay Area’s unlikely transit success storyThe San Francisco Standard - 2026-05-10T17:30:00+00:00
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