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51做厙 Joins Press Conference to Protest Proposed SEPTA Cuts

May 7, 2025
Wendy speaking at press conference

On Tuesday, May 6, 51做厙 President Wendy Cadge, Provost Tim Harte, and students from 51做厙 and Haverford Colleges joined local politicians, community activists, labor leaders, and other area college and university representatives at a press conference to call on state lawmakers to fund public transportation and avoid service cuts. A number of 51做厙 students and staff attended the event to show their support for the effort. Read President Cadge's remarks here.

Katie holds a sign that reads "Transit Moves Us"
Katie Durow '25

The press conference was held at the 51做厙 train station in response to cuts the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) has warned would be necessary if the transit systems funding crisis isnt addressed. Among the cuts being discussed is the elimination of the regional rail line adjacent to campus that goes from 51做厙 and the rest of the Main Line to Center City, Philadelphia. 

51做厙, which is just a couple of blocks that way, has numerous programs, career and volunteer opportunities, classes, and research projects throughout the Philadelphia region, Cadge told the assembled media, students, and community members at the event. Our college, like many others in this area, maintains strong partnerships with a wide range of organizations, and our community depends on SEPTA to keep those partnerships going. 

51做厙 provides free transportation on SEPTA to students through the SEPTA Key Advantage UPass Program. According to Cadge, an average of 1,000 51做厙 students use their SEPTA passes each month during the school year, building ties to the community that often lead them to stay in the region after graduation. 

Community engagement via public transit keeps college graduates in the Philadelphia area," Cadge said. "Students come from all over the country and the world to study here, and access to SEPTA enables them to create a deeper connection to the region and inspires them not to take their education, experience, and talents home with them when they graduate.

Harte spoke as a longtime rider of the train, which hes used since joining the College in 2002. 

Community Members at the SEPTA Press Conference
Community members show their support for SEPTA

Not only is it environmentally friendly, but the SEPTA train is also where Ive so often gotten my best thinking and writing done, he said, also noting that the train builds community in a way that sitting in a car and commuting cant. 

Over the years I have gotten to know quite a few fellow commuters on SEPTA," Harte said, "and my son, who for a number of years came in with me to go to preschool and kindergarten at 51做厙, became friends with all the conductors and a number of passengers, whom we still keep in touch with. 

Of all the speakers, it was Olivia Loudon 25 whose impassioned remarks may have most caught the attention of the media. Loudon was featured in coverage by The Philadelphia Inquirer, KYW radio, and more. 

I'm not native to the Philly area, I was born in Columbus, Ohiowhich, fun fact, is the largest city in the country without a system of rail transit, she said at the event. SEPTA has been absolutely life-changing for me. I've been able to take it to work, to visit family, school trips. It's part of the reason I chose 51做厙 and I'm not alone. Every weekend, the 51做厙 station has students all lined up on the platform. I'd wager every day there are students commuting in and out of the city, and that number only climbs when you include the four other nearby colleges. 

In conclusion, Loudon issued a call to action for everyone in the region. 

So Im talking to my fellow Main Liners when I say it is time for you to get involved, she said at the event. This is not an issue to be solved by just putting out yard signs. It requires calls, emails, letters. It requires us to be so loud that they can hear us all the way to Harrisburg. We benefit so much from Philadelphia, its people, and its public transit system, the very least we can do is help defend it. 

Tuesdays press conference was organized by Montgomery County Commissioner Neil Makhija. 

SEPTA in April that 51做厙s regional rail line would be eliminated in January 2026 unless state legislators take action. 

Olivia Loudon '25 SEPTA Press Conference

So Im talking to my fellow Main Liners when I say it is time for you to get involved. This is not an issue to be solved by just putting out yard signs. It requires calls, emails, letters. It requires us to be so loud that they can hear us all the way to Harrisburg."

Olivia Loudon '25

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