Neither lowering fares or simply increasing enforcement can solve fare evasion alone. Investing in better services and winning public trust are just as important.
Neither lowering fares or simply increasing enforcement can solve fare evasion alone. Investing in better services and winning public trust are just as important.
From TFA:
A more crucial question is: if public transport is nearly free but still generates overhead to manage and enforce fares, why not make it completely free and eliminate the overhead entirely?
I mean if they chose to make it almost free, they might as well go all the way.
Because people don’t value free things as much.
https://ninesquared.com.au/insights/nearly-free-fares/
I don’t know if I buy this. In Melbourne we have the free tram zone in the city and people aren’t vandalizing the trams. We have free access to public parks, art galleries, libraries, public toilets. I don’t think people are more likely to vandalize those places because they’re free.