Well, this is great! Finally, a chance to voice my bus problems to someone with the ability to do something!
OK, Here are the problems I've had recently:
1. May, 1999. I was using a
scooter rented from care medical due to back problems and medical problems with heat. I was secured in having gotten on at All Star Sports. As the bus took the turn from W. Buena Vista Drive onto World Drive, the centrifugal force (ask Tom Morrow about it!

Joke based on recent "Imagineer That" special on this topic) caused the scooter (and me) to almost topple over. Several riders pushed the other way helping prevent this,. I don't know if he was driving too fast or the scooter location was poorly designed, but it was SCARY!
2. May 1999. One night following Illuminations I went out to the bus for the bus back to All Star Sports. Now, the park has just closed following the show, so there are at least severla hundred or maybe 1000 people waiting to go back (1,760 rooms x 3 resorts = 5,280 rooms x avg. 2.5 people per room = about 13,000 people if full, figure 10% at Epcot that night). What shows up, one, count it O-N-E bus marked for Music, Movies and Sports. I asked when the next bus would be, was told "Sorry, don't know, probably 20 to 30 mins. We're really busy right now." Indeed it was 35 minutes. Waiting in the dark at a rapidly emptying bus station.
3. I think Disney would be better off having more logical route systems. Some of them just make no sense. Like using Downtown Disney as the main "transfer point" once the parks have closed. Its name notwithstanding, it is NOT centrally located, but is on the far northeastern corner of Disney property. I think it would be much more efficient, if there is to be a transportation hub, to use the TTC. That is, after all, why it was built == to be a hub. so let it be one. From there, there is monorail to EPCOT and the monorail resorts, monorail & boat to Magic Kingdom. Also, if you look at a map of WDW, it's about the same distance by bus from all other major resort areas (e.g., Downtown Disney, Animal Kingdom & MGM Studios). It simply makes no sense to tell someone trying to go from, say, the Contemporary to All Star Resorts, ride this bus 10 miles east, and then another one 10 miles west -- why not have one going due southfrom TTC.
4. On the positive side, I must say some of the bus drivers are wonderful. I'll never forget one night going from Downtown Disney to All Stars, the driver announced that we were on the "Twilight Zone Bus of Terror," sang the Twilight Zone music and flicked the interior lights off and on rapidly. It was a hoot. I think more of that should be encouraged, as it makes it much more pleasant.
5. How about more benches in the bus waiting areas -- and benches in those places that don't have them yet? There are currently way too few.
6. Better signs are needed everywhere as to where to et busses. I can't tell you how many times I've gotten literally lost at EPCOT and MK trying to find the right bus stop.
Those are the tops on my list of concerns. I honestly think, as a long-term strategy, it would be smart for Disney to think about light rail. It's relatively inexpensive to build (comparatively) and can be built pretty quickly, requiring not so much infrastructure. (See how quickly it was built in Baltimore or St. Louis.) A route could be constructed connecting TTC, MGM, Epcot, Downtown Disney, and Animal Kingdom. (Start at Animal Kingdom, run northeast to TTC, then southeast to MGM, then east to Epcot and Downtown Disney.) Then people wanting to go toher places would connect to buses from those points.
This would have two benefits: one, it would make the whole system much simpler conceptually. Two, buses woudl then be freed up to serve teh "feeder routes" to these stations.
Example: Everyone at All Stars, Animal Kingdom Lodge, or Coronado Springs would take a bus to the Animal Kingdom station, where they would board light rail. If going to MK or Epcot, get off at TTC & switch to monorail.
Everyone at the Epcot resorts would go to the Epcot light rail station.
Everyone at the monorail resorts could take the monorail to the light rail.
You would then only need buses to connect locations to the nearest light rail station. People could then take light rail and/or monorail to their destination.
As I said, the elimination of long-haul bus routes (e.g., All Stars to Downtown Disney would free up those buses and their drivers to run shorter feeder routes like, From Animal Kingdom to Animal Kingdom Lodge, Coronado Springs, and then the All Star resorts. This trip would take a total of 30 minutes round trip, the same time it takes to go to Downtown Disney one way.
I think this would be a much more efficient system. (I have a bit of experience in this regard, having worked summers in high school for a town's transportation department, helping design school bus routes for the coming year based on student locations.) I also think it would be much more environmentally friendly (light rail running on electricity rather than diesel-burning buses), something Disney likes to be.
I hope you find my comments helpful.
Regards,
Joe Hurley