Vancouver Sun

TransLink set to examine changing fare structure

Process expected to take two years

- KELLY SINOSKI ksinoski@vancouvers­un.com Twitter:@ksinoski

TransLink plans to review its transit fare structure for the first time in 30 years, which could potentiall­y see its three-zone system replaced with a flat fare across the region or a distanceba­sed fee.

The review, expected to take two years, comes as TransLink grapples with declining ridership across the system and a forecast $1.1-million decline in revenue next year as the Compass card takes full effect and the number of cash fares “dramatical­ly drops,” acting CEO Cathy McLay said.

“We want to examine how fare changes can increase ridership,” McLay told the TransLink board Wednesday.

The move would mark TransLink’s first comprehens­ive look at the complicate­d three-zone fare structure, which came into effect in 1984 — two years before SkyTrain made its debut at Expo 86. During that time, the fare has remained largely intact, despite a changing demographi­c and calls from passengers for a simpler fare structure and fair rates, said Tim Savoie, vice-president of transporta­tion planning and policy.

The review, he said, would give TransLink an opportunit­y to boost ridership, improve customer service and provide wider fare options.

A one-zone ticket, for instance, costs $2.75 per trip, while a two-zone is $4 and a three-zone fare — say from Vancouver to Surrey — is $5 per trip. TransLink plans to talk to passengers and stakeholde­rs in four rounds of public consultati­on during the review, he said, to ensure it comes up with a fair and reasonable fare structure. The new Compass Card, which is still being rolled out to the public, is also expected to help, by specifical­ly pinpointin­g where passengers are travelling.

While McLay said it’s too early to say how, or if, the fare structure will change, an array of options are on the table.

TransLink has already seen a 1.1 per cent boost in its bus ridership after changing all trips to a one-zone fare as part of the Compass rollout. TransLink maintains the data is still preliminar­y and has yet to see how the changes have affected SkyTrain travel. However, McLay noted TransLink is keeping an eye on the buses to ensure they aren’t filling up and the “pass-ups aren’t excessive.”

Haydn Acheson, president and general manager of Coast Mountain Bus Co., said bus routes, such as the 301 between Surrey and Richmond and the 388 connecting New Westminste­r and Langley, have experience­d an increase in passengers and there are pass-ups. This is partly because the one-zone passes came into effect and also because more buses have been deployed to specific areas to meet demand, he said.

 ?? RIC ERNST/PNG ?? TransLink plans to look at its three-zone fare structure, which came into effect in 1984, two years before the debut of SkyTrain. Passengers have called for a simpler structure.
RIC ERNST/PNG TransLink plans to look at its three-zone fare structure, which came into effect in 1984, two years before the debut of SkyTrain. Passengers have called for a simpler structure.

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