News

Cambridge Residents Slam Council Proposal to Delay Bike Lane Construction

News

‘Gender-Affirming Slay Fest’: Harvard College QSA Hosts Annual Queer Prom

News

‘Not Being Nerds’: Harvard Students Dance to Tinashe at Yardfest

News

Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee Over 2015 Student Suicide To Begin Tuesday

News

Cornel West, Harvard Affiliates Call for University to Divest from ‘Israeli Apartheid’ at Rally

T Fares Rise To $1.25

By Sam J. Lin, Crimson Staff Writer

Many students returning this week after winter vacation got a surprise when they used the T to get back to campus: a fare increase.

The Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority (MBTA) raised fares for its subway, bus and commuter rail systems on Jan. 3, leaving some riders inconvenienced and annoyed.

The fee for riding the T, previously one dollar, has been raised to $1.25, and riding the bus now costs 90 cents, up from 75 cents.

“We felt that the fare increase was absolutely essential to closing a hole in the T’s operating budget,” said Lydia Rivera, a spokesperson for the MBTA. “The T’s fiscal stability was threatened, and we needed more revenue to pay a $4 billion debt; this was a last resort.”

The promise of improved service may make the higher fares easier to swallow.

The MBTA will use the additional revenue generated by the fare increase to maintain, as well as upgrade, existing services and systems. Potential upgrades include the purchase of new buses that utilize compressed natural gas, new cars and new signals for the Green Line and new double-deck trains and signals for the commuter rail.

“We have to continue to advance systems and maintain what we already have,” said Rivera.

The MBTA spokesperson said she did not anticipate any lost ridership due to the fee increase.

However, studies have shown that fare increases in public transportation are often accompanied by slightly reduced ridership, according to David E. Luberoff, associate director of the Taubman Center for State and Local Government at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

Luberoff cited a 1992 article in the Journal of Transport Economics and Policy that found a 10 percent fare increase typically leads to a 5 percent decrease in patronage.

“What usually happens is ridership declines slightly, but the overall revenue usually goes up a little more than ridership decline,” said Luberoff, who co-authored the 2003 book Mega-Projects: The Changing Politics of Urban Public Investment.

The reduced ridership can be attributed to people resorting to other modes of transportation or carpooling.

Even if Boston commuters do seek other transportation options in protest, the fare hike is here to stay.

In late August, Massachusetts lawmakers passed a piece of legislation which undid a part of state law that required fares to return to their previous level if ridership dropped by more than 4 percent.

However, Luberoff said he finds it hard to imagine that a fare increase of 25 cents would drive a person to use a car instead of using the T.

“I use the T particularly when I need to go to downtown Boston, and even with the increase it still makes it a bargain when faced with the likeliness of congestion and costs of parking,” he said.

Although the fare increase was approved in November and has been advertised since then—one student even purchased numerous T tokens at the $1 price in anticipation—many students said they were caught off guard when they arrived back at school following winter vacation.

“I found out about it on the way back from the airport,” said Jennifer C. Hsieh ’07.

“I was surprised, and I didn’t have a quarter with me, but luckily the guy behind me helped out.”

Hsieh said she might look into taking the bus more often because of the raised T fare.

Many T riders, such as Michael M. Mathai ’06, found the $1.25 fee inconvenient compared to the previous dollar fee.

“The dollar was a round figure,” he said.

Although many grumbled about the higher cost for public transportation, they did not anticipate changing their habits.

“It’s still the best public transportation ever,” said Brenden S. Millstein ’06, who said he paid $5 to use the BART subway system in San Francisco earlier in the morning to get to the airport to return to Boston.

According to the MBTA, Boston’s public transportation fees are still the lowest compared to other metropolitan areas, according to the MBTA spokesperson—even with the recent price hike.

The last time T fares were raised was in January 2001, when public transportation users decried the end of the 85-cent T ride.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags