Good lord, we are so off-topic I don't even know, but whatever, I'll bite.
ElectricTraction wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 1:29 pm
lensovet wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 7:00 pmI would love to hear of a single POP system in the US that has a fare box recovery ratio above 30%.
POP is the standard across most of the US... except for the dinosaurs in the Northeast. Patrick O'Hara has written extensively about it in The LIRR Today.
The standard across the US was 5% of people commuting to work pre-pandemic (it's 3.5% today). The standard in the NYC metro today, without a full recovery, is 24%. But yeah, we're dinosaurs over here who have no idea how to get people using trains and paying for it.
The NYC metro's transit commuter transit ridership accounts for 46% of the country's entire transit riding population. So I don't know that we care much about what the "standard" across "most" of the US is. When you don't have any riders, you also don't care about whether you're collecting any revenue from them.
Metra collected $4.25 per passenger in 2023. LIRR alone collects double that (don't forget to add MNRR, NJT, and Amtrak to get an even better sense of scale). Not sure how Metra counts their riders if no one is checking tickets, but I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that LIRR doesn't feel like losing 290M to save 200M. Just a guess.
But the highlights are:
1. MTA could save $200M+ dollars per year on excessive conductors currently collecting tickets even after accounting for fare enforcement.
…and have people not bother buying tickets because they know they won't be checked. How much revenue is lost to offset that gain? We have a sense from the numbers I provided above. Plus how much money do you have to spend to now do fare enforcement?
2. MTA could further save an unknown amount of money due to tickets that aren't current collected, as POP requires a new ticket for each ride, you can't "save" uncollected tickets.
Hold up, #1 claimed that we have this excess of conductors that we could eliminate by going to POP. Now we're saying that apparently there's not enough of them that people are managing to save paper tickets to reuse them multiple times? Which is it?
Also, is anyone actually buying paper tickets in 2024?
3. If you set the fines for nonpayment high enough, say 10x the fare, then if you catch more than 10% of the fare evaders, you end up coming out ahead.
4. POP would allow for smaller crews, possibly even OPTO, allowing more service to be added more economically, creating more incremental ridership and thus revenue with little marginal cost.
Revenue from people who aren't paying anymore? Sure thing.
RandallW Brings up a great point about the absurdly stupid ticketing systems in many metro areas. The various fares in NYC are another issue that impedes ridership growth.
Randall brings up a great point for occasional riders and tourists. That's not where the majority of LIRR's revenue is coming from.
Paul Borokhov
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