I'm having trouble finding the original publication but NBC Boston has the breakdown.
I'm having trouble finding the original publication but NBC Boston has the breakdown.
Alright, thanks. The congestion revenue estimate is noted on page 15 and on the table on page 17.
To a bus stop or most of the surface Green Line branches, it is pretty obviously impossible?Is it really that expensive to just add fare gates?
It makes sense to do fare enforcement on bus and surface Green Line; but they're starting enforcement on the GLX, which probably *could* (should) have faregates installed.To a bus stop or most of the surface Green Line branches, it is pretty obviously impossible?
I think the T has stated that due to the amount of disruption this past year, decreased service and shutdowns, they did not feel it was fair to raise fares on the riders for a worse experience. We will see the plan for this year's diversions, which are supposed to be much less disruptive to the typical commuter, and see if they start discussing fare increases. The T is relatively cheap compared to other US public transit, so it's probably in the discussions.Also, I mean fares should probably increase, right? There's been inflation.
Yes. That is pretty obvious.To a bus stop or most of the surface Green Line branches, it is pretty obviously impossible?
Massachusetts Wins More Than $102 Million for Transportation Infrastructure Projects | News | MBTA
Official website of the MBTA -- schedules, maps, and fare information for Greater Boston's public transportation system, including subway, commuter rail, bus routes, and boat lines.www.mbta.com
I really hope the JFK/UMass redesign and rebuild includes an additional track and platform for the Commuter Rail. It would be a mistake to rebuild the station without the additional track.
- More than $4 million for the MBTA’s High-Risk Grade Crossing Elimination Master Plan initiative, which will have the MBTA evaluate 52 high-risk, high-priority pedestrian and roadway grade crossings throughout the greater Boston regional rail network.
- Approximately $2 million to the MBTA for the JFK/UMass Station Redesign & Replacement Project, which will bring the station into a state of good repair, increase accessibility, enhance environmental resiliency, and improve connectivity to Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood.
At EVERY chance they get, the MBTA should be looking at double-tracking the Old Colony main line since it now has Fall River, New Bedford, Kingston, Greenbush, Cape Flyer, and someday maybe Plymouth spur, all feeding into ONE track! I'm looking at you Quincy Center!I really hope the JFK/UMass redesign and rebuild includes an additional track and platform for the Commuter Rail. It would be a mistake to rebuild the station without the additional track.
It looks like the MPO is using “congestion pricing” to mean “variable tolling on highways” like they do on interstates in Virginia and Texas , rather than a “charge to enter the central business district” like in London or Stockholm. Their map only included interstates and certain state highways, and notable excludes Storrow and Memorial Drives, so most trips from inner ring suburbs like Belmont and Watertown and Newton to Downtown or Kendall Square would not be affected by their version of congestion pricing. The central business district charge would probably yield more revenue that just the highways, but probably not to the level of NYCAlright, thanks. The congestion revenue estimate is noted on page 15 and on the table on page 17.
Similar to what London is doing now with the expanded ULEZ cordon that encompasses much more of the city, eventually for Metro Boston (strong emphasis on eventually - acknowledging this would likely happen in phases if at all), I think the best thing would be to have a multi-tiered cordon - like a baseline charge for entering within the boundary outlined by 128 and then a CBD cordon that had a higher charge and encompassed the high demand, relatively transit-rich districts like Downtown, Back Bay, LMA, Airport, Kendall, etc.It looks like the MPO is using “congestion pricing” to mean “variable tolling on highways” like they do on interstates in Virginia and Texas , rather than a “charge to enter the central business district” like in London or Stockholm. Their map only included interstates and certain state highways, and notable excludes Storrow and Memorial Drives, so most trips from inner ring suburbs like Belmont and Watertown and Newton to Downtown or Kendall Square would not be affected by their version of congestion pricing. The central business district charge would probably yield more revenue that just the highways, but probably not to the level of NYC