Metro-North is telling part-time commuters to go back to work. Their incentive? Elimination of the 20 trip discount tickets introduced in 2022.
After the pandemic when daily
commuters were reverting to two or three days a week in the office, the old
monthly pass didn’t make economic sense.
So MTA introduced
a 20 trip ticket (good for 60 days) offering a 20% discount over daily
fares. It proved very popular.
Investment manager John Sini from Darien says
he loved the idea. “I currently commute
3 – 4 times a week (to GCT) and a 20 trip ticket would last me 2-3 weeks.”
Here's a chart showing the ticketing options for a Darien
commuter on Metro-North:
TICKET TYPE |
COST |
DISCOUNT |
One Way – Peak |
$ 15.25 |
None |
One Way – Off Peak |
$ 11.50 |
25% |
10 Trip – Peak |
$ 152.50 |
None |
10 Trip – Off Peak |
$ 97.75 |
15% |
20 Trip – Peak |
$ 244.00 |
20% |
Weekly |
$ 107.25 |
30% |
Monthly |
$ 301.50 |
50% |
The unlimited monthly ticket only makes sense if you take at least 27 trips a month. For many in the work-from-home crowd this isn’t their new reality.
If all of this is confusing,
MTA does have a cool online fare calculator
(https://fares.mta.info/) showing your
lowest price option based on your travel patterns. Plug in your stations, number of trips each month,
peak and off-peak, and it recommends the “best” kind of ticket to buy.
Why is MTA killing the 20-trip
ticket? They say it’s because “post-COVID travel
patterns continue to return to normal.”
But that’s obviously not what’s happening.
Ridership on Metro-North has flatlined at 70% of pre-COVID
numbers for over a year now. Efforts by
employers to force their workers back into the office are still not working. People prefer to not commute if they can.
The MTA’s claim of “a return
to normal” also runs counter to what the CDOT is about to do in reducing
service on the least-traveled days, Mondays and Fridays. That decision is already baked into the new state
budget but details are pending.
When I asked CDOT to comment
on this apparent contradiction I never got a reply. Even though CDOT sets fares in Connecticut, they’re
clearly not in synch with Metro-North.
So think of this new move by Metro-North (effective Sunday August 20th
along with fare hikes on the subways and buses in NYC) as a not-so hidden fare
increase.
When the 20 trip tickets were introduced in 2022 they were a “carrot”. Now Metro-North is going with a “stick”.
Higher fares won’t incentivize
the work-from-home crowd back to the train. They may actually do the opposite. As commuter Sini says, “I think the MTA’s decision (to eliminate the
20 trip ticket) is a short sighted fare
policy mistake that will drive some commuters that have in-office flexibility
to commute less frequently.”
Workers now have a stronger
argument with their bosses that they’ll be more productive (as well as saving
time, stress and money) by not commuting.
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