If
a mugger came up to you on the street and said “I’m going to poke your eyes
out!”, but then he only kicked you in the groin, would you think better of him?
That’s
what Metro-North commuters are asking themselves now that CDOT has decided on 15.25% fare hike
spread over the next three years instead of the 16.4% hike first proposed.
To
their credit, CDOT held eight public hearings around the state to gauge
commuter response to their plan.
Hundreds turned out, 99% of them saying there was no justification for a
fare increase in light of worsening service.
But the CDOT should have been careful what they asked for. They heard the public, then chose to ignore
them.
Mind
you, this fare hike is not really coming from the CDOT. It’s actually a creation of Governor Malloy
and his budget team.
At
every monthly meeting over the past two years the CT Rail Commuter Council
asked CDOT if there were plans for a fare increase. Each month they said “no”, until this spring.
When
the Governor’s concessions package was initially rejected by state employees,
Malloy came out with “Plan
B”, a painful collection of service cuts and fee increases (including a
fare hike) that hit everyone in the state.
That got the state workers to reconsider and eventually they agreed to
concessions and avoided layoffs. But
when the unions said yes, “Plan B” didn’t go away, especially the Metro-North
fare hike.
So
these fare increases are really nothing more than a tax on commuters, a very
convenient “captive audience” with few alternatives. These fare hikes are not to cover the cost of
running the railroad but to balance the state budget.
Our
fares are already the highest of any commuter railroad in the US. Now they’ll be even higher. Even the railroad’s own computer models
suggest these higher fares will reduce ridership.
There
are plenty of ways for Metro-North to save money without a fare hike, like collecting
all the tickets on the trains. For
years the CT Rail Commuter Council has been asking the railroad to get
conductors to do their job. By their own
estimates, the railroad acknowledges millions of dollars in lost revenue from
uncollected fares.
Instead
of collecting all the tickets, the railroad adopted new rules which make
tickets expire sooner, leaving many riders with tickets that are now worthless. Buy a ten-trip ticket and it’s worth zero in six months
if you haven’t used it. Meanwhile,
passengers board trains at Stamford every day and get a free ride to Bridgeport
because conductors aren’t doing their job. Their free ride is paid for by those
with tickets.
Remember: Metro-North works for the CDOT. Why the state chooses to look the other way
while the railroad abuses passengers in this way is a question best answered by
Governor Malloy.
At
a time when the state should be doing all it can to create and keep jobs in the
state… and keep taxpayers from moving to NY or NJ… it’s astounding that Governor
Malloy chooses instead to make the cost of commuting more expensive, not less.
This
fare hike is just another nail in the coffin of Connecticut’s economic growth.
2 comments:
MNRR Fare hike = unequal taxation. The governor is chicken to address the real tax loophole, the one which permits a commuter in a car to follow exactly the same commute as a commuter on the train for a cost which is subsidized by those on the train. It is time for highway tolls and or a more aggressive gasoline tax.
and where are the new trains ? other than those what 2 or 3.
CDOT/MTA are pathetic
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