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Originally Posted by CrossedTheTracks
Maybe I'm not thinking this through, but you don't need "tap out" for the above, except for "zone fare systems" and "phenomenal data".
Heck, you don't even need "smart cards" for all-door boarding. You just need to mandate proof-of-payment on all vehicles, all the time. Have a pass or transfer? You can board on back doors. Need to pay cash or use a ticket? Board at the front, and get a transfer. Attach a ticket validator next to rear doors on high-volume buses to make it even better. (Not sure this makes overall sense given extra costs of enforcement, just saying it's all technically possible. You can of course half-do it by implementing only on 3xx routes, for example.) Of course smart cards would be nicer, but we don't need to wait.
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One of my pet peeves with Transit - likely not unique to Calgary's agency - is they seem incapable, unwilling or oblivious to make changes quickly. I understand they are funding constrained, and have mandated coverage rates and specific requirements that hand-tie them, but surely all agencies have the same problem? It's not like they don't know what to do, they have excellent planning and wish-lists compiled of all sorts of useful projects.
An example is the 4th Street SW transit-only lane. Received approval over a year ago, after a few years of internal discussion, but no direction on timelines to implement. I had to follow up with my Councillor directly to find out what the delay was. Turns out decided to wait a bit longer and see how the 5th Avenue lane-reversal pilot works out (never mind it is a completely different orientation and traffic pattern and includes all cars not just buses). So another year until they think about it again, + design and build time. We might not see the southbound lane for 4 or 5 years.
It's relatively such an easy win for transit for such a little cost, it boggles my mind that it and other simple win projects (i.e. all door boarding, stop spacing optimization etc.) don't get looked at closer.
I can understand why mega-corridors like the WLRT and SELRT take a few decades to implement, but how can an approved lane take this long?