Admiral Beez
Superstar
Operators have no incentive to care if the passengers pay.I’m glad you said this. Talk to any operator and this is exactly why they hate this initiative.
Operators have no incentive to care if the passengers pay.I’m glad you said this. Talk to any operator and this is exactly why they hate this initiative.
Kids riding free encourages fare evasion by teens.
They are in the habit of not paying, its difficult to break.
Do you have kids? I'm guessing not.The age at which payment is supposed to begin, is one difficult to distinguish from the age when one is free, and neither age (12/13) is required to, or likely to carry photo ID.
Like there isn't any kind of difference between a childless couple making $120,000/yr and a couple with one or more kids making $120,000. Daycare alone cost us $900/month; and we fully recognize that was not expensive.12 and under is free is cost in-efficient, and since it goes equally to the rich as to lower income folks its not redistributive.
"ideal" in a world where only other people have kids, right?2/3 and under is free is fine, if you're in a stroller on a parent's lap.
Otherwise eliminating age concession of all types is ideal (the savings can be used to lower adult fares if desired)
Proof? Because there's that line where parents can claim their 4 or 5 year old is really 3 and get them in for free.It results in lower fare evasion, greater enforcement, and is much cheaper to administer.
It's a terrible one; that does nothing but discourages low income parents from using the TTC at all.It's hardly the only change the TTC requires, but it would be a good one.
Operators, just like everyone else, can still be pissed off when they see people not paying for something they should be paying for. They know they can’t do anything about, but it doesn’t mean they don’t care.Operators have no incentive to care if the passengers pay.
Kids riding free encourages fare evasion by teens.
They are in the habit of not paying, its difficult to break.
The age at which payment is supposed to begin, is one difficult to distinguish from the age when one is free, and neither age (12/13) is required to, or likely to carry photo ID.
Kids 12 and under who are free also get in the habit of using the TTC, period.
Do you have kids? I'm guessing not.
My daughter, who is literally turning 13 this week, has had a children's presto card for two years. We were given notification it will stop functioning as an unpaid pass on her birthday, and in order to receive student discount it needs to be renewed with identification. There is no cost to do so, just proof of age required.
Like there isn't any kind of difference between a childless couple making $120,000/yr and a couple with one or more kids making $120,000. Daycare alone cost us $900/month; and we fully recognize that was not expensive.
"ideal" in a world where only other people have kids, right?
It's a terrible one; that does nothing but discourages low income parents from using the TTC at all.
Operators, just like everyone else, can still be pissed off when they see people not paying for something they should be paying for. They know they can’t do anything about, but it doesn’t mean they don’t care.
Agreed.
My father did care that people were not paying at first then when his superiors stopped supporting his efforts to enforce the fares he gave up caring.
He used to park the bus until someone paid and call for a supervisor. He even publicly shamed a few people until they did as well.
When he retired, they told him to carry on driving as it was not worth the hassle.
Exact same with my Father. Drove from '74 to '06.
I’m glad you said this. Talk to any operator and this is exactly why they hate this initiative.
I realized you hate me; but its a bad look on you to everyone else that you're so antagonistic all
No I don't have kids
I have niece who I took on transit plenty, and I was a kid; and this math question and a public policy question not a you get points for having kids question.
That's nice.
Now, if your daughter enters on a another child's pass (free) and is confronted by transit enforcement she can claim to have no ID on her......and there is no enforcement option, and therefore enforcement doesn't even try.
If you have a $120,000 per year in household income you do not require discounts, most particularly discounts that are the exact same if you earned 1/2 as much, or 1/4 as much.
There is very little evidence that it significantly increased ridership among low income parents.
There is evidence it increased ridership among children of all demographics.
Bull. And even if true, not the kids fault.Kids riding free encourages fare evasion by teens.
Congrats! My youngest turned 13, two weeks ago! And the card flipped to an adult. So I got it reset to a student at Shoppers Drug Mart (but they didn't ask for any ID, even though I had it with me ... nor did Metrolinx ask for any when I first got it).My daughter, who is literally turning 13 this week, has had a children's presto card for two years. We were given notification it will stop functioning as an unpaid pass on her birthday, and in order to receive student discount it needs to be renewed with identification. There is no cost to do so, just proof of age required.
It's not hard to enforce free fares by requiring adult accompaniment or a children's presto pass. Of all the parents of my daughters friends however, I only know one couple who let their sub-13 year old travel on the TTC by themselves, and they only did so a month before that kid's 13th birthday.
Congrats! My youngest turned 13, two weeks ago! And the card flipped to an adult. So I got it reset to a student at Shoppers Drug Mart (but they didn't ask for any ID, even though I had it with me ... nor did Metrolinx ask for any when I first got it).
We're the opposite; a daughter who was more than likely to lag behind to check out the spider she just saw, or to oogle a storefront. We weren't aware of the kids pass for a long time; at least not until she was of an age (11) where there was some ambiguity, so there was never a problem getting onto rides. She's always been encouraged to tap, even though she knows she doesn't *really* need to.He's had it since he was 4! We developed a little problem back then, as he took to taking off running as soon as you tapped at a fare line, leaving you trapped on the other side! So we got the card, to let him tap - and the "problem" went away.
He certainly was riding by himself - I don't see the big deal if he's walking home from school by himself. Heck, it's probably safer! As were his friends, because since Grade 6 or so, they used to go a couple of stops to the nearest park to play soccer at lunch hour. I certainly see lots of kids that age, and younger, going home on streetcar ... for very few stops normally.
Well, that's the thing. We're within a stone's throw of Yonge & Bloor.I suppose it might depend where you live - though 506 hardly has the most stellar reputation. In my experience the suburban routes - even on the big arteries, were very quiet and tame compared to the streetcars.




