Who’s not upset about higher gas prices? Proponents of mass transit.
Transit advocates might be
accused of a little schadenfreude,
taking satisfaction in drivers’ pain at the pump. Or maybe they’re renewing their long term dream:
Maybe this will finally push people out of their cars and onto the
train and bus!
Maybe not.
In 2008, when gasoline spiked,
ridership on Metro-North surged. Connecticut
commuters did the math and decided the train beat sitting on I-95 burning $4
gas.
But these days gasoline is not the main cost of driving.
Sure, the price of gas is just
the most visible expense … the one glowing at you on every street corner. But for most drivers, that’s only a fraction
of what they’re already paying. The real costs are “sunk”: car payments,
insurance, maintenance, depreciation. Whether
gas is $3 or $5, you’re still writing those checks every month.
Your car doesn’t get cheaper
just because you leave it in the driveway. It just sits there like a very expensive lawn
ornament, depreciating.
So when gas rises by a dollar
a gallon (as it has in a month), the typical commuter might spend an extra $30
or $40 a month. Painful, yes. But not exactly life-changing when you’re
already paying hundreds monthly for the car itself.
Gas prices are the classic
example of an inelastic market. Prices
go up… and people grumble, but they keep driving, in many Connecticut locales
because it’s the only option.
Of course, the transportation
equation depends on what alternatives to driving you might have. Is there a bus? When’s the train? How frequent and reliable is the service? And what’s the fare?
Assuming there are mass
transit alternatives to the daily drive, some commuters may become part-time
transit riders. They’ll drive some days, take the train others, especially when
traffic or the weather are brutal. Or maybe
when gas spikes even higher. Or when
parking in Stamford or New Haven feel like highway robbery.
Early signs are already there.
Commuter ridership on Metro-North
Railroad was ticking
up even before the Iran war. That may continue.
Ironically, the railroad is now
running a social media campaign encouraging riders to avoid standing in the
aisles and vestibules on crowded trains, instead sitting in that dreaded
middle seat on the three-seat side.
They say this will “avoid crowding”. That’s putting the mass back into mass
transit.
So the real “trigger price”
for behavior change in commuting isn’t just a number on the gas pump. It’s a combination of factors: sustained high
prices, lousy traffic, expensive parking, and most of all, whether you actually
need to make the trip at all.
Work from home seems a lot
more attractive these days, something we didn’t have as an option in previous
oil “shocks”. Thank you COVID, the
ultimate commute-killer.
Let’s be honest: you can’t
argue with the convenience of driving. But to save money, people will adjust: combine
trips, carpool, skip errands, shop online. Or even rethink that low-mileage SUV.
PS: Just as gas prices rise,
there’s another 5% fare increase coming this summer for commuter rail in
Connecticut … and a potential 30%
cut in Bridgeport bus service. Timing is everything.









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