NTL Record

Title Transit Pricing Demonstration in Bridgeport, Connecticut: A Case Study
Record ID 48751
Personal Name
Creator
Donnelly, Robert M.; Schwartz, C.
Source 96p. in various pagings
Corporate Creator Comsis Corporation
Corporate
Contributor
John A. Volpe National Transportation Systems Center (U.S.); United States. Urban Mass Transportation Administration
Publisher United States. Urban Mass Transportation Administration
Publication Date 19860301
Language English
Abstract Sponsored by the Urban Mass Transportation Administration, Office of Service and Management Demonstrations, the Bridgeport Pricing Demonstration began in September 1979 and ended in June 1985. It was one element of a broader brokerage demonstration at the Greater Bridgeport Transit District (GBTD). The purpose of this case study report is to document the results of the pricing program, and their implications for other areas and transit agencies where similar actions might be considered. The focus of the demonstration was the development of innovative fare prepayment mechanisms and their use in marketing the fixed-route bus system. The pricing manager designed fare prepayment mechanisms guided by revenue maximization and market segmentation objectives. A Commuter Pass was designed for use by commuters, and was restricted to use on weekdays during peak-hours only. The Fare Cutter Card was developed as an unrestricted, partial payment pass that required a small on-board cash fare for each trip made. Sales of the innovative passes implemented in Bridgeport were modest due to the lack of a sizable commuter or very price-sensitive transit market there. In other urban areas with different market and service characteristics, ridership response to similar market-segmented and restrictive use passes might be stronger. Private sector involvement in the form of fare prepayment subsidization and joint marketing was also a major element of the pricing demonstration. The pricing manager actively pursued a program of basic transit marketing in Bridgeport, in which tokens and merchant discount coupons became a significant mechanism for various forms of transit promotion. Many of these efforts drew substantial employer and business community support and participation.
Rosap ID dot:10249
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/10249
TRT Terms Bus transit; Pricing; Commuting; Employers; Marketing; Peak periods; Small cities; Retail trade
Classification NTL - ECONOMICS AND FINANCE - ECONOMICS AND FINANCE;
NTL - ECONOMICS AND FINANCE - Transit Economics and Finance;
NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Transit Economics and Finances;
NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Social Impacts;
NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Transit Planning and Policy
Geographical
Coverage
Connecticut
Contract Number DOT-TSC-1753
Report Number DOT-TSC-UMTA-86-4; UMTA-CT-06-0008-86-1
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/48000/48700/48751/DOT-TSC-UMTA-86-4.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository