2015 Public Transport Fare Review
2015 Public Transport Fare Review - Aligning fares for introduction of Integrated Fares
Auckland Transport
says the focus of this year’s public transport fare review
is to better align short and long distance fares in
preparation for a change to a simpler zone based system
(integrated fares) next year.
Auckland Transport’s General Manager Public Transport, Mark Lambert, says, “As we continue to pick up the pace of transport changes in the city, improving the fare structure with integrated fares will allow the introduction of the New Network which will see more frequent services on key routes at a minimum average of every 15 minutes, 7am to 7pm, seven days a week.
“This is along with the introduction of the AT HOP card, electric trains on the rail network, the first step towards the construction of the City Rail Link and an investigation of the benefits of light rail. All of these initiatives are designed to give Aucklanders choices that will offer them the freedom to most effectively use that valuable commodity, time”.
The changes to public transport fares through the 2015 review will see:
• Small increases of between 5 and 10 cents for short distance (stage one and stage two trips) for those using the AT HOP card
• No increases on longer AT HOP trips on buses and trains, other than for stage five journeys which receive a tertiary concession
• Stage six and seven child fares, using AT HOP, reduce by 5c and 16c per trip respectively.
• Some cash fares will increase by 50 cents to increase the incentive for passengers to take advantage of fare discounts that AT HOP provides
• Some fares on Hobsonville and West Harbour ferry services decrease by between 24c and 50c a trip.
• Tertiary and child concession fares will now be available on the InnerLink bus service
There will also be some changes to pricing for the CityLink bus service. This service had received funding from the Heart of the City business organisation and Waterfront Auckland however that subsidy has now ended. Auckland Transport therefore, reluctantly, has introduced a 50 cent (adult single trip), 40 cent (tertiary student single trip) and 30 cent (child single trip) fare for a AT HOP card users. Single trip cash fares will be $1 for adults, 50 cents for tertiary students and 40 cents for a child.
Mr Lambert says that on average fares contribute 47% to the total cost of providing public transport services – the remainder is provided through government (NZTA) contributions and rates subsidies. He says while petrol and diesel prices have fallen over recent months, and fluctuated in recent weeks, fuel prices make up only a small percentage of operator costs and by far the largest expense is wages.
Public transport patronage growth has continued strongly during recent fuel price reductions showing that customers are choosing to use improved services rather than sit in traffic congestion, he says.
Latest figures show that public transport patronage is at an all-time high. Public transport patronage totalled 76,480,955 passenger trips for the 12 months to January 2015, an annual increase of 9.4%.
Rail patronage alone totalled 13,000,000 passenger trips for the 12 months to January, an annual rise of 20.0%. A rise of two million journeys in one year.
For more: https://at.govt.nz/farechange
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