• @grue
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      11811 months ago

      Mass transit should be free and not have ads on it.

      In fact, all advertising in public spaces (including things like billboards mounted on private property but aimed towards the street) should be prohibited.

      • @[email protected]
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        3911 months ago

        If I were “dictator for a day” one of the odd things I would do is ban all billboards. I think this every time I drive down the highway.

        • @[email protected]
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          2811 months ago

          In Washington State, it’s relatively difficult to have billboards along highways. It’s one of the reasons our state is still beautiful to travel across.

          Every time I end up in other states that have much looser billboard placement laws it’s just awful and I wonder how people can live like that.

        • toiletobserver
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          911 months ago

          Many cities have taken baby steps, such as prohibiting tall signs. More steps to go

      • @psud
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        11 months ago

        For the public and environment policy that mass transit is made for (freeing up parking space; removing polluting cars from the road; reducing congestion; reducing carbon burn) yeah. Mass transit should have no usage cost

        I’ll accept public service adverts. Telling you about services, advertising health and well-being, telling you to keep your feet off the seats

    • DreamerofDays
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      1811 months ago

      Is the ad revenue on mass transit actually high enough to support its operation?(ignoring even maintenance or expansion, or the replacement of unrepairable vehicles)

      • @LufyCZ
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        2811 months ago

        It’s not, and I don’t even need to go look it up.

        Operating a subway is expensive. Maintenance, new lines, new trains, you name it, it costs shitloads

        • Aurelius
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          711 months ago

          It’s so expensive that the NYC subway used to be multiple private railroad companies but the business just wasn’t feasible (at a reasonable price) when the market had a downturn - which is why the city eventually took it over.

          This is why the track geographies are so odd in NYC

        • @dumpsterlid
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          611 months ago

          Operating a subway is expensive only when you don’t compare it to operating a city on cars shrugs

          • @[email protected]
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            11 months ago

            Yes exactly this. Car infrastructure is the most expensive transportation infrastructure per capita possible. It’s why the US spends tons of public money on transportation and has just crumbling highways to show for it.

            • @LufyCZ
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              211 months ago

              Might also be because of how massive the US is with relatively big distances between big cities

              • @[email protected]
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                111 months ago

                Most commutes are not between major cities, they are within metro regions, so the size of the US doesn’t explain the terrible infrastructure. Besides, for decades now, most of Europe has no political impediments to travel, same as the US. People can commute from Berlin to Madrid as if it were one country. Density matters, but not the size of the country.

                As for density, there are many US regions that are of similar density and distance apart as European cities, such as DC-NY-Boston, or Portland-Seattle-Vancouver, SF-LA, etc.

      • @psud
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        11 months ago

        It varies. Usually fares are just there to ration use of the mass transit, providing less than a third of its cost (ignoring capital)

        Also: why would you ration transit? You want as many people as possible to use it

        No one’s so cheap they cycle instead. Those who cycle do so for health. We could free up there roads for the die hard drivers

        • @dumpsterlid
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          211 months ago

          For bus systems at least the amount fares cover is typically on the order of 5% give or take in the US. The fact that bus fares exist at this point in the US has got everything to do with emotions, narratives and a political stance against providing a social safety net and nothing to do with cold hard economics.

      • @BowtiesAreCool
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        511 months ago

        The fares themselves usually account for a tiny portion of the overall revenue. For example, in 2021 the MTA had $7.8 Billion in revenue. And they are fighting for $100k of lost fares

    • @CluckN
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      011 months ago

      McDonalds should show ads instead of charging me for a burger

    • @Son_of_dad
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      -1711 months ago

      My city’s transit is already being treated like a homeless shelter, so having free transit would be amazing but a disaster.

      • @grue
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        2611 months ago

        Transit should be free and the money spent implementing the fare-collection system should be spent on housing the homeless instead.

      • @Maggoty
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        811 months ago

        So, give them homes. Tiny homes are cheap and for most homeless people not having a house or address is the number one reason they can’t get a house or address. The others need to be in a care facility. It should take a true renegade to remain homeless. But we value profits over everything else.

        • @Son_of_dad
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          511 months ago

          The biggest homeless issue in my city isn’t with the homeless who want help, it’s with the mentally ill ones who don’t want help or are too sick to ask. There’s really no way to deal with that tier of homeless unless you do it by force, which most anti homelessness activists are against.

          • @Maggoty
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            211 months ago

            They’re against the old school mental institutions that abused people. They very much advocate for concentrating services and shelters so homeless people aren’t trying to get all over the city for that stuff. Psychologists and Pharmacies would absolutely be included in those services.

      • @dumpsterlid
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        11 months ago

        edit sorry I have feelings about this lol, I didn’t mean to send all this energy at you, more like I needed to howl into the void

        This is such an enraging narrative and I encounter it all the time. My city has lots of homeless because the climate is temperate (and for other reasons but not the point of this post). My city also has free bus transit (no fares no nothing).

        People ALL the time hem and haw to me about being concerned if we have free transit it will be “overrun” by homeless. Often it is people I am talking to about mass transit living in my own city who have zero clue we have even have free bus transit.

        At the end of the day if you are “concerned about the homeless” using the bus too much or something you know the best solution? Use the damn bus, not only will you actually see with your own eyes that homeless are just using the bus like everybody else, you help push the needle of what the average bus user looks towards you and away from whoever you are imagining as bad.

        Free mass transit is the foundation of the best cities in the past and future, hamstringing transit because of a fear of homeless “ruining” it is the definition of shooting ourselves in the foot for no reason.

        Yes I see homeless on the bus a lot, I see lots of people on the bus. There tends to be a lot of humans on the bus.

        • @Son_of_dad
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          111 months ago

          I use the bus daily. And mentally ill homeless walking around pointing their finger at your kid and saying “bang!” Or telling your wife “I wanna touch you!” Is not ok. Those are the ones I’m talking about. The ones that make their issues into everyone else’s. When you start threatening my family, my sympathy for your situation and mental health vanishes

          • @dumpsterlid
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            111 months ago

            I have rarely if ever encountered homeless like that. Sure it makes sense to get upset about that, but a lot of people’s perception is that every single homeless person is like that.