http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-metra-considers-scaling-back-consultant-contract-defends-fare-hikes-20111003,0,3760985.story
Interesting that a very conservative GOP Senator (Kirk) thinks the fare increase (28%) may be excessive.
C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan
schlimm http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-metra-considers-scaling-back-consultant-contract-defends-fare-hikes-20111003,0,3760985.story Interesting that a very conservative GOP Senator (Kirk) thinks the fare increase (28%) may be excessive.
The only saving grace for METRA on this fare increase is that it will occur at the same time that the Illinois tollways are also taking a whopping increase in their tolls, so there shouldn't be much of a passenger loss. The tollway authority, needless to say, has followed the same pricing strategy as METRA - holding its tolls at the same level for many years and then taking a whopping increase. Their officials must have gone to the same business school as Metra's people.
For the benefit of all the fools who think that mass transit is some kind of socialist plot I suggest that they shut Metra down for 30 days and then ask the tax payers what it is worth to them to start it back up.
It would clearly demonstrate how much the community benefits by it's existence.
Dave
Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow
Part of the problem is that there are less and less people around who can remember when mass transit, from bus to commuter rail, was privately operated. Few are aware that mass transit became a government operation because the private sector could no longer make a profit on the operation.
CSSHEGEWISCH Part of the problem is that there are less and less people around who can remember when mass transit, from bus to commuter rail, was privately operated. Few are aware that mass transit became a government operation because the private sector could no longer make a profit on the operation.
CSSHEGWISCH: To expand many people forget that political pressures kept fares unreasonably low when they were privately owned. Remember Charlie on the MTA? That caused many private companys to go out of business. Then some of the mass transit operations were taken over by government and were subsidized by the government to keep low fares. Atlanta in 1971 (?) had the lowest fare in the country at that time of 15 cents.
Falcon:
Politicians make that mistake regularly. Government employees get small salary increases annually or every couple of years while political appointees and elected officials brag to voters about not increasing their own. Then every ten years or so they pass a huge increase for themselves and anger the very voters to whom they have been pandering.
Transit agencies do the same thing. Instead of raising fares 10 cents a year, they raise them a dollar every ten years. Which one is harder to sell to the commuters?
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