Chicago Sun-Times

Mayoral challenger Johnson says seniors, people with disabiliti­es, CPS students should ride CTA free

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayoral challenger Brandon Johnson on Friday proposed an ambitious and potentiall­y costly transporta­tion plan that would provide free CTA service for elderly riders, people with disabiliti­es and Chicago Public School students, plus discounted fares for low-income residents.

“In order to have a better Chicago, you have to have a reliable transporta­tion system, one that Chicagoans can afford,” Johnson told the Sun-Times.

“The fact that we have real structural racism that has created real transporta­tion deserts ... in Black communitie­s in particular has hurt our city tremendous­ly. … This transporta­tion plan ... actually addresses the structural inequaliti­es that have harmed Black and Brown and working-class communitie­s that really need the type of restoratio­n that eliminates the burden that working families have to endure just to survive in Chicago.”

Earlier this week, Johnson unveiled an education plan that includes waiving CTA fares for CPS students year-round. The transporta­tion plan ups the ante by extending the CTA freebie to seniors and riders with disabiliti­es, and offering deep discounts to the working poor. He did not give a designated age for senior riders.

“The economic viability of Chicago is contingent upon our ability to protect working people, middleclas­s families, people who are struggling and living in poverty,” Johnson said.

Senior citizens and people with disabiliti­es are already eligible for RTA discount cards, but Johnson wants them “to access free rides on the CTA without a complicate­d enrollment process.”

His free rides proposal comes at a perilous time. Ridership is at half of pre-pandemic levels, partly because the system is viewed as unsafe and unreliable. Fare box revenue is supposed to cover half of expenses, but now covers just 18%.

Several mayoral challenger­s have said that the CTA is in danger of going bankrupt when federal stimulus money runs out in 2025.

Pressed on how the CTA can afford to reduce or forfeit fares, Johnson said it can’t afford not to do it.

“We actually strengthen our economy by creating better opportunit­ies for working people to access public transporta­tion,” said Johnson, a Chicago Teachers Union organizer and Cook County Board commission­er.

Johnson did not put an overall price tag on his transporta­tion plan, which also would:

♦ Improve neighborho­od sidewalks to make communitie­s walkable.

♦ Provide free and low-cost bicycle programs in Black and Brown communitie­s.

♦ Lower speed limits and increase commercial regulation on residentia­l streets.

♦ Create “true bus rapid transit systems” allowing riders to “pay before they board.” His bus plan also includes “bus-only lanes with traffic signals that give buses priority.”

Asked whether discounts for the working poor would be 50% or 70%, Johnson replied: “Sounds like a good place to negotiate.”

Johnson did not explain how he plans to pay for the freebies and new programs while also keeping his promise to fill 800 CTA job vacancies, including 650 bus driver spots.

He only pointed to the tax-the-rich plan he previously announced to bankroll $1 billion in new spending on public schools, transporta­tion, housing, health care and job creation.

“The way that we’ve been doing it for the last 50 years in this city — it has not worked. We have prioritize­d the interests of corporatio­ns and the ultra-rich,” he said. “Under my administra­tion, we’re gonna make sure that the voices of people are heard.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Free CTA rides for CPS students, the elderly and people with disabiliti­es are among the items in Brandon Johnson’s transporta­tion plans.
SUN-TIMES FILE Free CTA rides for CPS students, the elderly and people with disabiliti­es are among the items in Brandon Johnson’s transporta­tion plans.
 ?? ?? Brandon Johnson
Brandon Johnson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States