Steve X
Senior Member
I don't think that's entirely true. People with metropass make many more short trips than if they were paying separate fares. Some of those trips are so short it doesn't justify $3 in the first place and wouldn't have been made without a metropass. Vancouver has a better fare system than the flat rate system here. People would likely pay $2.20 for a 10 minute ride there than $3 here.The convenience of the Metropass is not having to carry around tokens. Presto is already putting some pressure on the TTC, since a lot of people (especially commute-only users) are going to realize that there's no more convenience difference and it's cheaper to pay for 40 trips/month than a metropass.
The break even cost for an adult metropass is at 49 trips exceeding the number of weekday commuter only trips in a month. If people are only taking it for 40 trips a month, they are loosing $27 ever month just to have a metropass. That's too much to pay for convenience.
The only game charger with presto is the introduction of daily capping (They said it will happen but I still don't think it's implemented yet). One doesn't have to choose to buy a day pass or not. If people chooses to make all their errands on a few selected days in a month. They can do 6-8 trips on those days and occasion trips on the other days. They could make 60 trips a month and pay for 40 trips which is cheaper than a metropass. Of course those trips will be short trips oppose to long commuting trips. The cost to operate the service would roughly be the same as today and TTC is not going to rack up expenses. They just won't make the revenue.