NTL Record

Title A Taxi Scrip Program in Seattle, Washington
Record ID 50276
Personal Name
Creator
Koffman, David
Source 82p. in various pagings
Corporate Creator Crain & Associates
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 19820901
Language English
Abstract The Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle (Metro) took over a taxi user-side subsidy program from the City of Seattle in December 1978, which was based on the sale of discounted taxicab scrip. Metro expanded the program, raised the discount, and conducted a marketing campaign, which all lead to greatly increased program registration and use. In the script program, participants may buy up to $2000 worth of scrip per year at discounts which vary between 40% and 60%. The scrip may be used for taxi rides on 26 participating taxicab companies and the companies turn in the scrip to Metro for reimbursement. Metro participated in a case study which would provide information about the program to planners, policy makers, and operators nationwide. The Seattle scrip program differs from user-side subsidies in four ways: 1) the program serves a much more populous area than any evaluated so far; 2) there was no limit on scrip purchase or program use for the first two and a half years of operation; 3) the program incorporated an income test for eligibility; and 4) Metro also operates a substantial amount of fixed-route, accessible bus service, which might also serve some travel needs of taxicab scrip users. The case study, which focuses mostly on 1981 operations, relied on interviews with Metro staff, analysis already conducted by the staff, scrip purchase records, taxi logs maintained by the companies, a survey of scrip registrants conducted by Metro, and interviews with taxicab operators. The program shows that: 1) a user-side subsidy can work in a larger city; 2) unlimited scrip purchases (up to May 1981) did not lead to excessive use, but did permit a few people to profit illegally from buying and reselling scrip to taxi drivers; 3) use of an income test did not lead to administrative or other difficulties; and 4) scrip users are a very different group from users of lift-equipped, accessible, fixed-route service.
Rosap ID dot:11668
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/11668
TRT Terms Aged; Fraud; Persons with disabilities; Taxicabs; Travel demand; User side subsidies
Classification NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Paratransit;
NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Social Impacts;
NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Transit Economics and Finances;
NTL - PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Transit Planning and Policy
Geographical
Coverage
Seattle (Washington)
Contract Number DOT-TSC-1408
Report Number UMTA-MA-06-0049-82-2; DOT-TSC-UMTA-82-26
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/50000/50200/50276/DOT-TSC-UMTA-82-26.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository