Toronto Star

City expects TTC to hike cash fares in 2016

Budget committee asked transit staff to report on a number of fare scenarios

- TESS KALINOWSKI TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

TTC riders are already being warned to brace for higher fares again next year and transit officials are warning that the long-untouched cash fare is due for a hike, if not in 2016, soon after that.

The TTC is predicting a $99-million shortfall on a projected estimated operating budget of about $1.8 billion in 2016.

But in its very early projection­s, the city, which subsidizes about a third of those costs, is figuring in a fare increase equal to about $30 million. Council won’t vote on the city budget, including the TTC subsidy, until early in the New Year.

So it is still very early in the process, cautioned Councillor Josh Colle, the TTC board chairman.

However, on Thursday, that board’s budget committee asked transit staff to report back on a number of fare scenarios, including increases, freezes and the implicatio­ns of restrictin­g an increase to the cash fare or Metropass versus spreading the pain across the system.

“Commission­ers earlier on in the (budget) process have to see what all those options are — a big increase, a modest one, no increase at all — because that forces decisions. So that report will come back to the next budget committee and certainly the fare increase is something we’ll have to consider,” he said.

The staff report would also look at the implicatio­ns of Presto fare-card implementa­tion on the fare structure. The cards are supposed to be available across the TTC by the end of next year.

The $3 cash fare has been static since 2010, when it was increased 25 cents.

Adding another quarter to that price would still allow riders to pay in cash using the coins they would typically have in their pockets.

“At some point there will have to be a really significan­t cash fare, probably not this year, when we want to move to Presto. Somewhere in the not-too-distant future, cash fare will probably have a serious jump just to get people to the card.”

This year, the TTC hiked the price of a token by a dime and upped the cost of a Metropass by $93 a year to put an additional $29 million toward operating.

Colle said he wants to upend the TTC budget process by providing the board and riders with potential en- hancements — particular­ly more express bus service — and making the case that the city should help pay for it.

The current process assumes the same subsidy as last year, so costs are allocated to fit that amount.

The budget committee presentati­on suggests the TTC is looking for a $573-million subsidy next year from the city, about $90 million more than this year.

The annualized cost of the $95 million in service improvemen­ts this year, including free rides for children 12 and under and the restoratio­n of service cut in 2012, will be $45 million.

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