unforgettableid
New Member
You made a lot of good points. But let me quibble with one.
I'm not sure I want to pay an annual membership fee which is 20–30% higher.
Bike Share is competing with personal bike ownership. If membership costs go up enough, some members will stop renewing their memberships. They'll buy their own bike, and will pay for the bike-maintenance costs themselves.
I think it's an excellent idea for Bike Share to offer premium memberships with 45-minute trips.
But, if it does offer premium memberships with 45-minute trips, I insist that it should continue to also offer traditional memberships as a lower-cost option. At least for the first year or two.
If the traditional memberships turn out to remain reasonably popular, the city could continue to offer them indefinitely. If not, the city could abolish the traditional memberships, and could force all annual members onto the premium plan.
A 20-30% increase for a $100CAD annual pass is very low when the current monthly cost of the annual membership is equal to roughly 2-3 30 minute single rides a month. Compare that to the cost of a TTC metropass and the number of single trips it takes to get to an equivalent monthly amount. So I'm not sure the data or comparable examples from other cities indicate that a significantly large increase in annual membership prices would be justified.
I'm not sure I want to pay an annual membership fee which is 20–30% higher.
Bike Share is competing with personal bike ownership. If membership costs go up enough, some members will stop renewing their memberships. They'll buy their own bike, and will pay for the bike-maintenance costs themselves.
I think it's an excellent idea for Bike Share to offer premium memberships with 45-minute trips.
But, if it does offer premium memberships with 45-minute trips, I insist that it should continue to also offer traditional memberships as a lower-cost option. At least for the first year or two.
If the traditional memberships turn out to remain reasonably popular, the city could continue to offer them indefinitely. If not, the city could abolish the traditional memberships, and could force all annual members onto the premium plan.