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On Sun, 9 Jan 2005 10:16:48 -0000, "Solar Penguin"
wrote: What's silly about that? In the present system, even if you just take a *local* bus ride, just a couple of stops or so, you have to pay the same as a journey the *whole length* of the bus route! Think how much money you could save if you only paid for the short journey you actually travel, instead of all those miles you don't! I'd agree with that, but I think a more sensible arrangement (less complex, and easier to understand, while fairer) would be to have a few levels of fares defined either in terms of the Zones or in the way some European systems do - by having a "short journey" ticket for journeys involving no changes and up to a set number of stops in addition to the full price ticket. Face it, twenty years is *too* long. It's definitely time to get rid of the zones by now. Long overdue in fact. I disagree, and most European transport operations would also do so. We should have a proper integrated fare structure, true. But it should be based on point-to-point fares, not zones. Face facts, the zones are just a con to make us pay for distances we haven't travelled. snip Do you know how the point-to-point fares system on, say, National Rail works? The answer is that it is based on a system of "key stations" for longer-distance fares. Thus, a local station will have fares to destinations within a limited radius of itself. It will then have key stations from which it gains its longer-distance fares, which may themselves have key stations from which they gain even longer-distance fares. Often, there is no add-on fare for the additional distance between the origin and the key station, or no discount for the distance not travelled to the key station. It would be a nightmare to manage a full set of separate fares to and from every station on the National Rail system without doing this unless we went to a kilometric system. There are arguments for this, of course, but it too has its disadvantages. Fare stages on buses have disadvantages as well - let's say there are two bus routes from a city to a given estate or village, but one takes a bit longer than another by going via a number of other estates. The shorter journey is cheaper because there are fewer fare stages passed. Why should the passenger be penalised for taking the longer route? All most passengers want to do is travel from A to B as quickly as feasible at their given departure/arrival time. The product being sold is movement from A to B, not the actual bus ride, and traditional fare stages are often incompatible with that. Another example, you have a choice of fast Metropolitan Line trains or slow Jubilee Line trains when travelling from Wembley Park to Baker Street. Common sense says that the faster trains should be more expensive. Why? In my mind, an integrated city transport system should involve modes feeding modes with a single fare structure. The fare for a given journey should be for the optimum journey, which in the case above is the faster service. On a journey originating off LUL, that may involve a combination of train, bus, tram and Tube. "Encouraging" people to travel on slower services is only sensible where the fast service is much more overcrowded than the slower one, and it works both ways. Indeed, Virgin Trains used to have a cheaper specific fare from Macclesfield to Manchester (they may still do) to fill empty seats. This made it *cheaper* than the local service. Indeed, I'd simplify it further to one fare set for all modes. A single ticket (be it zonal or based on short/normal journey length) would be valid by all modes for as many changes as required to complete the single journey. To protect against fraud it could have a time limit (say you must be on the last mode within 2 hours). Separate bus and Tube fares only make sense in the context of wanting to attract people off a crowded Tube, and even then (there is some justification there) I find it ridiculous that one is effectively penalised (unless using a one day bus pass or ODTC) for using connections on buses or using a bus and a Tube. This is particularly pertinent if there is no direct bus service between the start and end of a given journey, because the passenger is being penalised because TfL won't provide a direct bus, not for any fault of their own. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
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