Chicago Sun-Times

Metra: Service cuts most likely solution if state slashes funding

- BY ROSALIND ROSSI Email: rrossi@suntimes.com Twitter: @rosalindro­ssi Staff Reporter

A severe state funding cut to Metra would likely result in trims in service because raising fares to cover such losses would take much more time, Metra officials cautioned Thursday.

Eliminatin­g runs of trains — rather than raising fares even more than the 2 percent proposed as of Feb. 1 — “may be the only option,’’ Metra CEO Don Orseno said after an address to the City Club of Chicago on Thursday.

“It depends on how quick and how severe” any loss of state funding is, Orseno said.

A combinatio­n of fare increases and service cuts may be possible, but fare increases take time to impose, Orseno said.

Metra Chairman Martin Oberman was even more emphatic Thursday that the “most likely” scenario would be service cuts if Metra suffers a $20.8 million loss of funding threatened at one point by Gov. Bruce Rauner, whose budget plan has been stuck in a stalemate for months.

At the moment, “We are not looking at raising fares” beyond the 2 percent proposed to make up such a loss, Oberman said.

That’s because raising fares would take “a couple months of lead time,” Oberman said. For example, he noted, if approved next week by board members, fare increases proposed in mid-October as part of Metra’s 2016 budget would not go into effect until Feb. 1 due to the public hearings, board vote and payment system changes required first.

“The bottom line is you would cut a significan­t number of trains,” Oberman said. “And in our business, you have to cut a lot of trains to save any money because train crews may make three, four, five runs a day, so if you are going to save on personnel costs, you have to cut four or five trains.

“You don’t just cut one train, as an example. So we’d have to go throughout the system and reduce service. That’s basically what would happen if that money didn’t come through,’’ Oberman said.

Oberman’s and Orseno’s comments came as Metra prepared to face its second day of public hearings on a $945.5 million budget for 2016 that includes the second of 10 years of proposed fare increases. The fare revenue would help overhaul the oldest fleet among peers; bankroll an expensive federal safety mandate; and cover typical annual increases in operating costs, officials say.

Under the 2016 spending plan, fares would rise a flat amount per ticket, regardless of the distance traveled. The most popular ticket — a monthly one — would rise by $2.50. Users of a 10-ride ticket would pay $1.75 more. A one-way ticket would see a 25-cent boost. There would be no change in the price of a one-way reduced-fare ticket.

Comments about the budget also can be sent by 8 p.m. Friday to 2016budget­comments@metrarr.com, faxed to 312-322-7094, or mailed to: the Assistant Secretary to the Metra Board, Room 1300, 547 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL 60661.

 ?? | RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Metra CEO Don Orseno speaks to the City Club of Chicago on Thursday afternoon.
| RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES Metra CEO Don Orseno speaks to the City Club of Chicago on Thursday afternoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States