I didn't make it, but supposedly there was a packed house for the fare proposal meeting tonight in Boston.
What's the use in having these meetings? They're gonna raise the fares anyway!! Supposedly, they are allowed to raise them every 2 years! Seems like it's every year to me!
A 6% increase over 3 years is just a basic inflation/cost of living increase. If anything they should just do it every year, but it costs more in signage and printing costs.
Yeah I saw some pictures it definitely was, wish people would turn out like this for other transit proposals... The unfortunate thing is they are all yelling at the wrong people, sure the FMCB has the final say over the fare increase but if you want change and want to get to the root cause of the issue then people should be contacting lawmakers in the state and their reps, the FMCB can really only work within their bounds to make the budget work within the restrictions they are given...
Yeah I saw some pictures it definitely was, wish people would turn out like this for other transit proposals... The unfortunate thing is they are all yelling at the wrong people, sure the FMCB has the final say over the fare increase but if you want change and want to get to the root cause of the issue then people should be contacting lawmakers in the state and their reps, the FMCB can really only work within their bounds to make the budget work within the restrictions they are given...
A 6% increase over 3 years is just a basic inflation/cost of living increase. If anything they should just do it every year, but it costs more in signage and printing costs.
Although I recognize that transit is often the only option for lower income people, the mbta is a transportation system and shouldn't have to subsidize poor people by lowering fares. We have social welfare systems and transportation subsidies that can go to individuals based on need and circumstances through those programs.
The central problem here is a fallacy that Michelle Wu and others are spreading that fare increases must be tied to improving service... why? The MBTA talks a big game about their "customers" as they should, but at the end of the day public transit is not a business, it's a social service. Your users aren't customers, they're partners, and we collectively fund transit in order to gain a collective benefit. [Note - transit CAN be a business in cases where you've contracted it out, as the T has to Keolis on Commuter Rail, but that doen't apply here].
This attitude of "why do you ask us to pay when you aren't giving us anything in return?" is silly. The MBTA is giving you transit. If the increasing cost of providing that transit requires that you contribute more, that's entirely appropriate.
FWIW, as Steve Poftak pointed out in the Globe the largest source of the MBTA's funding is a Statewide sales tax. I believe that fares are third, also behind Federal funding generated from the Federal gas tax. On the whole, MBTA riders are already receiving a spectacular subsidy from Massachusetts residents who either choose not to use it or who don't live in the service area. I think that's a good and necessary thing, but the whining from riders when they're asked to pay any share at all of the cost of their transportation is grating.
Making transit free for people who need it to be free is a great idea that's entirely in keeping with the concept of public transportation - being able to move freely should be a basic right that government supports. However, the share of people riding the T daily who need it to be free is not 100%, or even 50% (or probably even 30%). I have no sympathy for the person complaining about a $90 pass when they can and should pay $300.
I would completely agree with this, if we were also increasing the gas tax or other transportation related support taxes at a rate that also is equivalent to inflation. But we don't.
Transportation funding, as a general public service (all modes), is broken.
The central problem here is a fallacy that Michelle Wu and others are spreading that fare increases must be tied to improving service... why? The MBTA talks a big game about their "customers" as they should, but at the end of the day public transit is not a business, it's a social service. Your users aren't customers, they're partners, and we collectively fund transit in order to gain a collective benefit. [Note - transit CAN be a business in cases where you've contracted it out, as the T has to Keolis on Commuter Rail, but that doen't apply here].
This attitude of "why do you ask us to pay when you aren't giving us anything in return?" is silly. The MBTA is giving you transit. If the increasing cost of providing that transit requires that you contribute more, that's entirely appropriate.
FWIW, as Steve Poftak pointed out in the Globe the largest source of the MBTA's funding is a Statewide sales tax. I believe that fares are third, also behind Federal funding generated from the Federal gas tax. On the whole, MBTA riders are already receiving a spectacular subsidy from Massachusetts residents who either choose not to use it or who don't live in the service area. I think that's a good and necessary thing, but the whining from riders when they're asked to pay any share at all of the cost of their transportation is grating.
Making transit free for people who need it to be free is a great idea that's entirely in keeping with the concept of public transportation - being able to move freely should be a basic right that government supports. However, the share of people riding the T daily who need it to be free is not 100%, or even 50% (or probably even 30%). I have no sympathy for the person complaining about a $90 pass when they can and should pay $300.
Those ideas aren't tightly linked, though. Increase the MA gas tax if you need to pay for replacement/safer bridges and roadways. Increase the T fares if you need to pay for transit operations, which drivers pay for almost entirely out-of-pocket.
I agree that we should raise fees generally if we can program the money into needed projects and hire/train personnel and ensure local contractor capacity to deliver the projects successfully, but I don't think we need to raise fees on drivers every time we raise them on transit riders out of some 1st grade sense of fairness.
The gas tax isn't a punishment for driving, regardless of how much some people want it to be.
Those ideas aren't tightly linked, though. Increase the MA gas tax if you need to pay for replacement/safer bridges and roadways. Increase the T fares if you need to pay for transit operations, which drivers pay for almost entirely out-of-pocket.
I agree that we should raise fees generally if we can program the money into needed projects and hire/train personnel and ensure local contractor capacity to deliver the projects successfully, but I don't think we need to raise fees on drivers every time we raise them on transit riders out of some 1st grade sense of fairness.
The gas tax isn't a punishment for driving, regardless of how much some people want it to be.
But transportation funding, like transportation planning, needs to be wholistic, rather than balkanized. The fantasy that these different transportation modes are not intimately linked needs to end.
Fail to fund transit properly and dump the T riders with a driving option back on the roads and see what happens to traffic. Fail to fund bike infrastructure and force biker to drive and see what happens to traffic. Fail to properly tax ride sharing and see what happens to traffic. Fail to manage parking availability and see what happens to traffic. Comprehensive regional transportation (not just transit) policy and funding is needed or we face the mobility equivalent of a massive heart attack. (See Seaport as Exhibit A)
How much operating expense (salaries, equipment, sign printing, accounting) is cut by going to zero fare?
How much ridership is generated?
How many more trips per day can we make on the same equipment?
But transportation funding, like transportation planning, needs to be wholistic, rather than balkanized. The fantasy that these different transportation modes are not intimately linked needs to end.
Fail to fund transit properly and dump the T riders with a driving option back on the roads and see what happens to traffic. Fail to fund bike infrastructure and force biker to drive and see what happens to traffic. Fail to properly tax ride sharing and see what happens to traffic. Fail to manage parking availability and see what happens to traffic. Comprehensive regional transportation (not just transit) policy and funding is needed or we face the mobility equivalent of a massive heart attack. (See Seaport as Exhibit A)