lensovet wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 11:06 pmNo, I'm making a point that you just choose to willfully ignore. Which is that POP leaves money on the table, which isn't an issue for a system that doesn't make any money in the first place.
None of these systems make any money. You're completely ignoring the reality of the situation. I'm using LIRR as an example, as Patrick O'Hara has published detailed analyses of their fare collection system. They spend $247M/year collecting tickets, and they don't even get all of them, so some end up getting "saved". Even if you assume that his numbers are overly optimistic, as you'll still need a conductor or two to operate larger/busier trains safely, plus the cost of fare enforcement, the numbers are still overwhelming.
Let's assume you only save 70% on conductors and fare enforcement instead of the 90% that Patrick O'Hara suggests. That's still $172.9M plus overhead. Let's be generous and assume that the current system only has a ticket re-use rate of 5% or $28.44M in addition to the $568.8M in farebox revenue. Adding the current $28.44M to the $172.9M that they could easily save on conductors is $201.34M, which is likely a very conservative number. Another very conservative estimate for LE and uncollectable fines would be to subtract $30M, leaving $171.34M in savings.
With POP, if the penalty is 10x the fare, you only have to catch 10% of the evaders to break even. Either you have a ton of evaders, catch them 10% of the time and you break even, or you set the penalty high enough and catch them frequently enough that fare evasion is very low. Either way, the railroad wins.
So the $171.34M in savings, which again is a very conservative number, and the real number is likely higher is only the direct savings assuming nothing else changes.
The bigger and more important change is that with OPTO it is much easier to add off-peak service that would have been excessively expensive before and build more of an off-peak ridership. This uses existing infrastructure that is underutilized about 18 hours of the day and all weekend so the marginal operating are relatively low. Depending on how the numbers shake out, you either add a whole bunch more service at relatively low cost/loss, which is a beneficial public service, helps economic growth of the area, etc, or they could actually be profitable on a marginal basis.