Times of Oman

Free public transport takes off in Montpellie­r

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Since the 21st of December 2023, the half a million inhabitant­s of the southern French city of Montpellie­r and its surroundin­gs no longer have to pay for public transport. Many of them are pleased with the measure – but there are caveats.

Thirty-one-year-old Rayene Chabbi is relieved she no longer has to pay for the bus and the tram she takes to work on weekdays, like on a recent Monday morning.

In the past, she’d often drive her parents’ car the seven kilometers (four miles) to the office.

“Free public transport is a really good idea – especially for people like me who think twice before spending €50 ($54) on a monthly subscripti­on. I only earn €1,950 gross each month,” she told DW while waiting for her bus.

“It’s similar for my sister who now also uses public transport,” she added.

Less stress, better for the environmen­t

Half an hour later, Chabbi gets off a tram in Montpellie­r’s northeaste­rn neighbourh­ood of Castelnaul­e-Lez. “Taking the car would have taken at least ten minutes longer and I would certainly have been stuck in traffic jams. I like this stress-free way of travelling. Plus, I’m protecting the environmen­t,” she said while walking the few hundred meters to the company Simax, where Chabbi works as the manager’s assistant.

The mid-sized company, which provides management software for businesses, co-finances the free public transport scheme via a two-percent wage tax, as do about 2,500 other companies in Montpellie­r that employ 11 staff or more. Overall, the measures cost €30 million ($32 million). That’s compared to the city’s total budget of €1 billion.

CEO Miren Lafourcade doesn’t mind paying up – on the contrary.

“Our company used to be in an area with poor public transport connection­s. That’s why we moved to this location, which is just a 3-minute walk from a tram stop. For once, the taxes we pay are being used for something that benefits society,” she told DW.

Simax currently employs 60 people and has an annual turnover of €1.5 million ($1.6 million). It aims to recruit up to ten more staff this year – with sustainabi­lity, which includes public transport, set to remain a crucial element of its expansion plans.

Part of larger climate adaptation scheme

Julie Frêche, vice-president of the metropolis of Montpellie­r and in charge of transport matters, is pleased with such efforts.

“We aim to implement positive environmen­tal politics. Free public transport increases citizens’ purchasing power,” she said to DW.

“Plus, the measure improves air quality,” Frêche added.

Montpellie­r is also taking other climate adaptation measures – especially as temperatur­es here can reach almost 50 degrees Celsius in the summer.

The city is planting greenery and will add 50,000 trees by 2026.

“We are also constructi­ng 235 kilometers of additional bike lanes and adding five bus routes to the 41 existing ones and a fifth tram line,” Frêche stressed.

But not everywhere in Montpellie­r is served in the same way

That new tramway will also connect Saint-Jean-de-Vedas. The neighborin­g town, part of greater Montpellie­r, has about 12,000 residents – and counting. Numerous new apartment blocks are springing up here.

That’s why Hugo Daillan thinks more public transport connection­s will be needed.

The 28-year-old lives in central Montpellie­r and works in a flower shop in Saint-Jean-de-Vedas. He’s traveling with a group of public transport passengers when he speaks with DW.

“This is Saint-Jean-de-Vedas’ only tram stop. The tram only runs every 15 minutes, even though at the end of the workday, people need to get home. And so many people here take the car instead. The transport connection is so bad, that the local town hall has set up a shuttle in one district – which you have to pay for,” Daillon told DW while pointing at the destinatio­n board.

He also stressed that the “free” public transport scheme wasn’t actually free. “The price we are paying is that that money can’t be invested in expanding the current transport network,” he said.

“When making public transport free, you need to make sure all parts of the city have access to the transport network, especially in a growing city like this one. Or else you only please people in the well-connected centre and forget about those living in the outskirts,” Daillan said.

Alexandre Brun, lecturer for geography at Montpellie­r’s University Paul-Valéry, agrees with that view.

“The city should also build new connection­s between suburbs so that you no longer have to travel through the city center to get to another suburb,” Brun told DW.

He also fears the wage tax could deter companies from setting up offices in Montpellie­r.

“And we still need additional companies to bring down unemployme­nt,” he added.

Montpellie­r’s unemployme­nt rate stood at 9.6% in 2023, about two points above the national average.

Drivers and economists are fans

But drivers questioned in SaintJean-de-Vedas seemed to welcome the free transport scheme – at least those who don’t have to commute to the city centre.

“It’s very convenient. I now regularly take public transport to go shopping in the city centre,” Claire Maurin, a 40-year-old nursery school teacher told DW.

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