Trimess

Friday, May 3, 2013

TOP COMMENTS ON JOE ROSE'S TICKET MACHINE EXPOSE

What we have here is an incredible collection of highly articulate comments from Oregonian readers on the subject of the Trimet TVM's and Trimet's manipulation of the facts surrounding their reliability. You read through this and you have to wonder how is it these Trimet managers just get away with it all? It's impossible right? Nope, its called GOVERNMENT.
When I'm in Berlin, Germany...which is fairly often...I always use public transportation. In a couple hundred weeks of being there, in all seasons and conditions I've yet to run into a non-functioning machine. Keep in mind the system is ancient by PDX standards, and a lot of the stations and track dates back into the late 1800's. The ticket machines don't (of course) but there are some really old-looking ones around, and some that look like (I'm sure they didn't) survived the WWII bombing. In was was East Berlin there are ticket machines that clearly pre-date the demise of the wall, and East Germany did NOTHING in the way of maintenance on anything, let alone ticket machines. In Portland we "accept" this pathetic level of performance because they know they can get away with it. BTW, fines in Germany for riding Schwartz (riding "black" which means without paying) start at about 70 Euros...or about $100 and when you hit three they can start talking about...yup...jail time. Fare inspectors don't wear uniforms and could be just about anybody...including "hippies" and folks with more tattoos than skin. You really don't want to get caught, and if you said "the machine wasn't working" the whole car would probably laugh at you. 


I'm glad to see some real data! I've experienced some failed ticket machines, but I thought it was just my bad luck.
I've had plenty experience with TriMet personnel telling stories that were clearly untrue. About ten years ago, I had a senior TriMet person tell me that she'd had been asked for proof of fare EVERY time she'd ridden MAX.
It's frustrating to me that TriMet is so unbending about their fare enforcement that they won't even give you a break when you explain that the fare machine was broken.
I've given up on TriMet and ride my bike. It's more reliable.


Ha! Too bad we can't fine Trimet every time the machines don't work.

Why hasn't TriMet moved to electronic fares, like most LEADING transit agencies?

Heck, even Spokane (yes, little po-dunk Spokane, with its bus-only transit system) has electronic fare cards. So does Seattle, Los Angeles, New York, London...the list goes on and on.

And they work.

Unlike TriMet.


Because they recently signed a new 20-year contract with the private firm that still maintains the old bus fareboxes...you know, the ones that can't distinguish the difference between a dollar bill, a $5, a $10, or a $3. Yeah, the same old fareboxes that constantly get jammed, to which adding fancy new printers is a worthy expense.

"We want to encourage riders to pick up some extra tickets when buying their groceries," Altstadt said, "so they'll have tickets on hand and won't have to rely on the machines."

You can translate that as, "Buy a bunch of tickets you may lose or never use before fares go up again. That's free money for TriMet."


Maybe TriMet should "pick up some extra" buses when they buy stuff, so that TriMet will have adequate vehicles on hand and won't have to rely on turning away riders due to crush load buses or mechanical failures.

What's good for us to plan ahead, is good for TriMet to plan ahead. But as TriMet will blame the economy, labor, healthcare, etc., as to why they can't afford buses - not everyone can afford to buy extra transit fare.


TriMet apparently was going for the triple crown of infuriating responses with three tone-deaf and clueless responses in the same pronouncement:

1. The machines are functioning 90% of the time. (Wrong).
2. 90% is good. (Not).
3. The solution is to buy tickets elsewhere. (Seriously?)







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