From Deseret News archives:
Mass transit runs better if riders pay fare
User fees for the light-rail and bus "infrastructure," as the senator convincingly puts it, took a hike last week along the Wasatch Front. And along with that came an interesting question.
If people pay once for transit through sales taxes and then again when they pay to get on board, is that a form of double taxation?
Or, put another way, why isn't mass transit free for everyone?
That very question was posed last Monday by a handful of advocates for the poor who rallied against the fare increases in front of the Salt Lake City Library. They offered one compelling argument: For riders on fixed incomes, any fare increase at all is a major adjustment.
But the question is particularly intriguing because transit here receives about 70 percent of its support from sales taxes, and in Utah sales taxes apply to many things, including groceries, which means they hit the poor unusually hard. You can cut out a lot of nonessentials. Food isn't one of them.
Let's look at the questions from a few different angles.
Obviously, UTA itself can't be in the position of deciding who qualifies and who pays full price not unless officials there want to start examining the tax returns of their riders.
Second, the idea of a totally free transit system is not new, nor is it untested. About 30 years ago, voters along the Wasatch Front rejected the idea when they decided to set up UTA, but the idea keeps popping up every now and then like a whack-a-mole. In fact, 11 years ago Randy Horiuchi and Brent Overson, both Salt Lake County commissioners at the time, asked the Legislature to consider a tax increase that would have made the system free. Lawmakers promptly ignored them.
Comments
- Jobless vie for holiday sales work 11:30 a.m.
- Handmade ornament collection 11:28 a.m.
- Queen tells paparazzi to back off 11:26 a.m.
- Romanians vote for president 11:19 a.m.
- Gender balance in science 11:14 a.m.
- Chinese target global market 11:03 a.m.
- Jazz upset by Wolves 11:02 a.m.
- Wolf recovery at crossroads 10:54 a.m.
- Holiday television program listings 10:53 a.m.
- USA Track modifies coach selection 10:47 a.m.
- Y., U. to learn bowl destinations
- Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
- Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
- The forgotten ship: USS Utah
- George lost in rivalry hatefest
- Snowy roads cause accidents, delays
- Tiger's SUV, personal life are a wreck
- BYU basketball: Cougars crush Dons
- Utahns want health care reform bills
- Kurt Bestor: Joy for the world
- Why is Y. ignoring spew of hatred?
310 - Letters: Liberal because LDS
249 - Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
202 - Hate not limited to 1 in-state rivalry
189 - Aggies shoot past Cougars
179 - N.Y. Senate rejects gay marriage
128 - George lost in rivalry hatefest
109 - Unbeaten BYU takes trip to Logan
105 - Harpring's NBA career is over
94 - Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
93
First, a big thank you to all who posted questions here for me to ask...
Glenn, may hold his convictions to be true. But he has a machiavelian system...
It would be nice to see famous people have values. Some do, but, as this...
Tell me what's different from what we've become accustomed to? Play up to...
continued.... In this case the owner of the sheep dogs has nothing to do...
This guy is one of the best actors not only in the state of Utah, but in the...
First view some roundabouts in Utah before stating that they are wonderful...
II am a recreational athlete who has signed up and paid to participate in...
As I listened to Tim Tebow after the Florida/Alabama game yesterday, I...
The letter-writer is right, Mormonism has similarities to both conservatism...
lets change the structures so we can get more women in these fields? I'm...


You can be the first to comment on this story.