Waukesha Metro will receive a no-cost study from SUREPAX to evaluate whether the transit system's private-contractor management model remains the most effective and fiscally responsible structure. Commissioners discussed the study during an announcement item and asked staff clarifying questions; no formal vote was required on the study itself.
Transit staff said Waukesha Metro has operated under a private-management contract for 44 years and that the commission had never conducted a formal study comparing management models. SUREPAX agreed to perform the review at no charge, requiring only staff time. Staff framed the study as due diligence driven by fiscal pressures identified in the city's financial management plan.
Staff noted that market consolidation has reduced the number of potential private operators: Transdev purchased First Transit, leaving fewer viable vendors for operations contracts. Staff said that, nationally and in Wisconsin, fewer systems use the Waukesha model and that other jurisdictions have considered bringing operations in-house or using other structures. Commissioners asked whether an in-house option would mean adding public employees to the city's payroll or creating a separate utility; staff said both are potential options alongside a continued private contract or a turnkey private arrangement, each with trade-offs in cost and control.
Commissioners did not take a formal vote to change structure; the item was presented as an exploratory study that could either validate the current model or recommend alternatives. Staff said the study will help the commission evaluate options as future contract renewals approach.