In his weekly column today, Daily News transit writer Pete Donohue takes on a subject near and dear to my heart: bus fare beating. It’s time, he writes, for the MTA and NYPD to crackdown on the legions of fare-beaters who hop aboard the bus without paying. The MTA says it loses out on $14 million a year, and cops in 2010 gave up a meager 1324 tickets along non-Select Bus Service routes. With numbers that small, the minuscule threat of a $100 fine won’t deter those who waltz right past the bus driver to hop in through the back door without paying.
Donohue spoke with the NYPD while researching his column, and the cops claim they can’t spare more of their 31,000 officers for fare enforcement. They would rather target the subways anyway, but Donohue rightly suggests that the NYPD or MTA reassign some personnel along the 10 worst bus routes. While Transit’s security team has been pulling in fines along the SBS routes, making sure folks pay for regular bus service is just as important.
Yet, despite the hand-wringing, I can’t help but wonder if further crackdowns on fare-beating isn’t really worth it. It’s true that the bleed rate is up slightly from 2009 when the MTA lost $8 million to fare-beaters, but the overall percentage of those skipping out on the fare is under two percent of all bus riders. Every business has a bleed rate, and it would be impossible to zero out this figure. How much should the NYPD or MTA spend to lower that $14 million total anyway?