F-Line to Dudley
Senior Member
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2010
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Because the T charter would have to be completely amended for the fareless New World Order, as would lots of passed legislation have to be tweaked to substitute different revenue shares if they're explicit in reference to fare collection. Every member municipality is paying an assessment to the district and has a vested interest in the revenues formulation. Revamp by taking fares out and whether the town levies end up changing or not the resulting change is different enough that you've got to square the legalities with some major required votes.The system then won't even pay for its own R&D and development costs after the first year of operation. Plus, it saddles the T with an expensive system that it's saddled with maintaining for 20 years. We don't have 20 years to double T ridership if we want to meet the city's carbon goals.
Why not work on removing fare machines when we're already removing the fare machines?
It can be done if the state wants to get bold about a new kind of transpo funding scheme. They clearly don't want to anytime soon, but forever is a long time so you can never say never. But this will never be something they can feasibly enact by stopping on a dime. The solve for AFC 2.0 shitting the bed is never going to be to explode the very idea of fares instead and somehow substitute that onto AFC 2.0's implementation schedule. Too much legislation with too many fingers in the pot has to change first. Which means to have the juice for moving that much legislation this has to have been hotly debated for years prior.
Timetables don't come within 10 years of matching if you want to push that much legalese in time for an AFC 2.0 substitution. Hell, Wu only made news in the last 6 weeks with her fare-less proposal. I fully believe we'll be funding transit by a very different formula (whatever that may be) as we approach midcentury, but in no way is it going to come mirroring Procurement Dept. timetables.