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#41
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#42
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In message , at 14:01:07 on
Fri, 4 Mar 2016, Paul Corfield remarked: There's a rural bus service where I live that the council is proposing to ask passengers-with-twirly-cards to pay the fare one day a week, in order to provide enough funding to keep it running at all. I believe that is illegal. It's been raised with the DfT before and they've said "no". Is illegal to ask for a voluntary contribution? All the old folks have to do is leave their twirly-card at home, and take a couple of quid onto the bus (it runs once an hour, afternoons only). -- Roland Perry |
#44
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On 2016-03-04 12:21:41 +0000, Paul Corfield said:
Oh come on. There is a cost to effectively reducing fares for people. There is - it is an increase for others so that people are effectively sharing the cost more reasonably rather than some being penalised twice. It's a not unduly complicated calculation, and should be possible to obtain from the Oyster data to establish what the new, slightly higher transfer fare should be. I suspect users would rather keep their services even if they had to pay a bit more to do so. Once again, I am not suggesting a cut to the income from the bus network. I am simply suggesting dividing it by the number of users making a point to point journey, rather than by the numbers making a single-bus journey. You could extrapolate to those using bus+Tube+bus or similar. It's just a case of - take the income TfL requires, divide it by the number of end to end journeys made, and that gives you your fare. You may want to scale it by zone, but that's not hard maths. Yes, some will whine, but *overall it will be fairer*. It will open up opportunities across the network for people who can all of a sudden afford to use it as what it is - a network. And you will be able to save a load of money and make the network easier to use overall by removing pointless duplication. You'll even make everything operationally easier in the event of disruption - no faffing about with transfer tickets, no making sure everyone gets the right onward bus - if a bus terminates short, it's simply a connection, and it costs nowt. If you have to transfer from Tube to bus, because the Tube is not running, touch in on the bus - free, it's a connection. Easy. What's not to like, apart from a stubborn UK-centric view that if the concept isn't invented here, it's wrong? The old objection used to be revenue protection, but add Oyster/contactless and that goes away completely. Let's say we didn't have the Travelcard. Would you be one of those arguing against what was and is an excellent concept, used worldwide, and just needs expanding a bit into single fares? Go and tell the Chancellor that please because he clearly doesn't understand it. He does not believe that users should receive any form of fares or service support. They should pay the economic cost of the service or else they lose the service. You can determine the economic cost of any public transport service in any one of a number of ways. It can be by the whole network divided by the number of journeys. It can be by route. It could even be by individual journey. It's just a pricing model. All I suggest is the abandonment of an archaic, unfair model into one that befits a 21st century integrated transport system. Subsidy has nothing to do with it; subsidy would be added, if available, just to bring the fares down. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#45
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On 2016-03-04 12:32:30 +0000, Roland Perry said:
There's a rural bus service where I live that the council is proposing to ask passengers-with-twirly-cards to pay the fare one day a week, in order to provide enough funding to keep it running at all. This is the problem with the free travel concept - it was unfunded from day one. It has directly caused many of the cuts. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#46
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On 2016-03-04 14:01:07 +0000, Paul Corfield said:
Well people might learn that stuff doesn't come for free. Someone pays. If you want good public services then pay your taxes and pressure the government to make sure companies pay their proper share. And yes I know that's all a bit simplistic but no one can be shocked that a so called austerity programme of spending cuts means things stop being done. The problem being who makes those decisions. There is a *lot* of waste going on in the public sector, but it isn't that that gets cut. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#47
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#49
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#50
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Neil Williams wrote:
On 2016-03-04 12:21:41 +0000, Paul Corfield said: Oh come on. There is a cost to effectively reducing fares for people. There is - it is an increase for others so that people are effectively sharing the cost more reasonably rather than some being penalised twice. It's a not unduly complicated calculation, and should be possible to obtain from the Oyster data to establish what the new, slightly higher transfer fare should be. I suspect users would rather keep their services even if they had to pay a bit more to do so. Once again, I am not suggesting a cut to the income from the bus network. I am simply suggesting dividing it by the number of users making a point to point journey, rather than by the numbers making a single-bus journey. You could extrapolate to those using bus+Tube+bus or similar. It's just a case of - take the income TfL requires, divide it by the number of end to end journeys made, and that gives you your fare. You may want to scale it by zone, but that's not hard maths. Yes, some will whine, but *overall it will be fairer*. It will open up opportunities across the network for people who can all of a sudden afford to use it as what it is - a network. And you will be able to save a load of money and make the network easier to use overall by removing pointless duplication. You'll even make everything operationally easier in the event of disruption - no faffing about with transfer tickets, no making sure everyone gets the right onward bus - if a bus terminates short, it's simply a connection, and it costs nowt. If you have to transfer from Tube to bus, because the Tube is not running, touch in on the bus - free, it's a connection. Easy. That depends how you define "fair". You could equally say that it is unfair that a journey of a few stops would cost the same as a a three bus journey from one side of London to the other. Peter Smyth |
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