"Since poverty in Toronto is concentrated at the fringe of the city, I dont think a fare zone system is a good idea."
I also don't.
fiendish:
I agree completely with the essential social and political points of your rant, but not with the specific springboard from which it so gracefully sprang. I don't like the idea of zoned fares in principle. In a way, it seems to run contrary to the purpose of public transportation, which is in part to ensure that most people in a city can get where they want to go affordably and efficiently, and to encourage them to do so. Raising fares for those further from the core will inevitably discourage ridership, decrease the number of people willing to schlep downtown to work or shop, and will also effectively 'punish' those who live 'too far' from the centre. Many people choose to live in the more distant realms of town for financial reasons, not because they necessarily adore the suburban life. Heaping more costs onto people living away from the core because that's where they can comfortably afford to live doesn't seem right to me. In Ric Burns' excellent documentary tv series about NY, he notes that the flat subway fare was first implemented in NY, and that the decision was 'democratic' in nature: the thinking at the time was that no one who lived in Bronx, for instance, whether by necessity or choice, should have to pay more to get downtown - where the city wanted people to be - than anyone living anywhere else. The fare structure was consciously egalitarian - I'd like to see this principle upheld here in TO. Keep the flat fare, but hike it up to a level more appropriate to the TTC's needs. Personally, I'd be happy living downtown and paying $4 or whatever per short trip if it meant keeping the fare flat and properly funding an expanding system.