It is my testimony at a CDOT Public Hearing on proposed fare hikes on Metro-North:
My name is Jim Cameron and I am a
resident of Darien and have ridden Metro-North for 25 years. I served 19 years on the CT MN Rail Commuter Council,
4 as its Chairman. I am also the founder
of The Commuter Action Group, a rail advocacy organization.
First, I would like to commend Gov
Malloy and CDOT for yesterday’s announcement of the purchase of 60 additional
M8 rail cars to handle our rapidly expanding ridership. This is very good news, if long overdue.
But commuters should know that this car
order has nothing to do with the proposed fare increase. Fares only pay a part of operating costs, not
capital spending.
This proposed fare increase is really
the responsibility of the one-party Legislature, which completed its budget
process with a $192 million deficit and told the Governor, “you fix it”. Every state agency has suffered cuts and
layoffs because the majority-controlled Legislature didn’t do its job. Now it’s transportation’s turn to feel the
pain.
You will hear today from angry
commuters, lawmakers who have gathered petitions and some who offer creative
accounting solutions to fill your budget gap.
But all of these are just band-aids on a dying patient and none address
the real, long-term problem.
If our trains and buses rely on the
Special Transportation Fund as it exists and is funded today, we will be back
for more hearings like this for years to come.
What we need is systemic change in how we fund transit. Yet I know of
nobody in Hartford with the guts to be honest with commuters and taxpayers
about what is coming.
In January, the Governor’s
Transportation Finance Panel identified potential solutions, none of which will
be popular but all, or many of which, will be necessary:
Tolls on our highways. A vehicle miles tax. Re-directed or increased sales taxes. Raising
the gasoline tax. Higher DMV fees. Land value appreciation recapture at transit
oriented development sites. Advertising
wraps on our trains. And yes, annual
fare increases. This is CT’s future and
lawmakers, the Governor and CDOT know it.
So let’s be honest with commuters. Yes, our fares are already the highest in the
US, but they will go higher, much higher, unless we adopt other funding
mechanisms to keep mass transit running, expanding, improving… and affordable.
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