In my city tickets are cheap and convenient while fines are high and cumbersome. That's enough for me to just get a ticket.
@sarowie3 жыл бұрын
"convenient" is important. Where I currently life, the public transportation system is needlessly complicated with many "nice" option "for different customers" creating a situation where locals use a monthly/annual subscription and tourist... I can not explain a tourist what ticket is best for them. "Typically" for two person, it the "five person day pass ticket for the network" is the best option, but... if you do not understand why a ticket for 5 persons is the best and often cheapest option for two people, you can try to understand the point system or just use the "pay per ride system". If that is to simple, you can use "special offer tickets". Offcourse, you can also combine a "network pass" with a "pay per ride" ticket to reach your end destination, but then you might be cheaper off using the "special offer tickets for weekends" that is valid for 4 people and the bigger network. Confused? Yeah, here a discounts for students and other groups, that only apply to certain products on offer.
@cubiss12733 жыл бұрын
@@sarowie I hear that. At this time and age convenience is the selling point. If you use the public transport a lot there are quite a few choices for month/3month/yearly subscription that is paired with your credit card or dedicated ID. If you only travel occasionally, there are wireless payment terminals at each door in a tram/bus/whatever and you just use your card or phone when entering and leaving. You are then billed at the end of the day depending on how much public transport you used, capped at like 3€ if you use it all day.
@random81493 жыл бұрын
@@cubiss1273 May I ask in which city you live?
@cubiss12733 жыл бұрын
@@random8149 Sure. I live in Brno, Czechia :)
@sargis_023 жыл бұрын
@@cubiss1273 Nice city! I heard there is a famous university there, and a weapons factory
@Sqervay3 жыл бұрын
I (coming from a no-turnstile-country) was actually quite surprised seeing them everywhere in Tokyo. If there's one country in the world with enough cultural pressure to make everyone buy tickets, it has to be Japan, right?
@rickwalker79003 жыл бұрын
Tbh, the fare system in Japan is way too complex to have a turnstile less system
@tohwz39773 жыл бұрын
Their turnstiles are always open
@TomKellyXY3 жыл бұрын
I've lived in Japan for 4 years. It's basically the same thing with those Suica cards. Most of the time no one is checking if you scanned one. For the metro, some smaller stations don't even have staff there. It's a massive city well-connected to other prefectures so the zones are necessary. Tapping with Suica gives you a small discount and avoids buying separate tickets for transfers. They're also very understanding if you made a mistake. I once lost my very expensive bullet train ticket and managed to explain it at the gate by telling them my seat number. For reserved seats they don't check tickets, they do a headcount. Basically it's an honestly system with high compliance and the main reason for the design of ticket gates in Tokyo is for passenger convenience and handling a massive number of people. They have a museum exhibition showing that Tokyo would have queues backed up at the gate and it wouldn't cope with the capacity of the trains if they used the old 3-pronged turnstiles.
@ninjaz57363 жыл бұрын
Something interesting I experienced in Seoul was that they have gates, which are usually in the open position. Usually you just scan your card (or ticket, but the cards are just so useful and cheap that why not) and walk through, no problems. However if you have the audacity to try and walk through without scanning (or just funble miss the scanner like I did...), a flap from each side roughly between knee and waist height pops out and stops you as you try to walk through, and I'd imagine that it might catch people off guard if it's their first time doing it, it certainly makes you look like a bit of a fool. It's my favorite kind of enforcement: it looks like you can cheat, but if you try, it stops you right in your tracks after you have decided to do it, and makes a little example of you for both you and yourself to be ashamed at Oh and did I forget to mention it's almost as efficient as if there were no gates at all? It even solves ticketing between different lines / companies, by having a transfer gate between lines.
@TomKellyXY3 жыл бұрын
@@ninjaz5736 It's basically the same system in Tokyo (and in my experience Taipei. Hong Kong, and Singapore too). When the gates close on someone it's usually a minor inconvenience to hold up the queue but I wouldn't assume they're trying to avoid paying a fare. More often they've forgotten to top-up their card or renew a commuter pass (there's a fare adjustment machine in the gates to fix it). Occasionally in pre-covid times it was a tourist fumbling their tickets. Compliance is so high that I think staff are mainly there to give directions and monitor security issues.
@tothattila39843 жыл бұрын
I think the randomness of ticket checks also reduce the ticket evasion rate. Think about it. A machine is always in its place all the time. It's predictable, and that's why it's easy to evade. Now with random checks you don't really know when a ticket manager's going to show up. The pressure not only comes from the 'fitting in' part but also the anticipation. (Sorry for bad English, it isn't my first language.)
@eclogite3 жыл бұрын
It may not be your first language, but you sure type like it is
@tothattila39843 жыл бұрын
@@eclogite awww thank you :)
@Beregorn883 жыл бұрын
Ah, but you see, if the frequency of the checks is too low respect to the cost of the fine, it may just be less expensive to just pay the random fine
@fenrirsPride3 жыл бұрын
@@Beregorn88 Not in viennas case. in my 12 weeks of being in vienna for a course i got controlled at least 4 times. i think its about 100 euros if they get you. So if you live in vienna it's better to just get a card if you don't get around in your car. (Which is a nightmare there, especially parking.. Park & Ride is my best friend there.)
@letsplaypros13 жыл бұрын
Honestly in my city theres almost never ticket checks but everyone still buys tickets. Even though ive never seen anyone fined, they just had to walk off with the auditers and buy a ticket for the next bus/monorail
@jasonbraun1273 жыл бұрын
To me it's also the stress factor. If I know I'll hop off after one or two stations, then I might take the risk (if I'm really lazy or forget to take some money) but if I have to take a 10 minute ride or longer, then I'll gladly pay a few euros just so I don't have to be anxious the whole time.
@Yorick2573 жыл бұрын
It also depends on location. In my city, the checks are usually done on the border of the city center. The tickets are free for all registered residents of the city though, so... the only people who are in danger are tourists and transfer students
@sarowie3 жыл бұрын
@@Yorick257 That is somewhat touchy. As a tourist, it is sometimes hard to understand the maps, zoning, ticket options and validities. Especially, when a network has decided to use a mix of "start and destination" and "zones" as in: The tickets are for zones, but the ticket dispenser is asking for "start and destination", but then again prints out "zones".
@alinarainer93523 жыл бұрын
in vienna, that would make no sense since they control in stations of the subway and not in the trains. (Different for trams and busses)
@sohopedeco3 жыл бұрын
But, even if you pay, you'll remain anxious through the whole trip with the fear of losing you ticket. I traveled to Vancouver, which has that system, and I hated it.
@TomorrowWeLive3 жыл бұрын
Why don't you just use cards? Paper tickets are so outdated.
@zsofeen3 жыл бұрын
Some people here in Hungary, Austria's cosiest neighbour (lol), actually argue that getting on the bus for a single stop's distance shouldn't cost exactly the same as it does for a 60min+ trip on the line going from one end of the city to the other -- and yet it does, and it keeps public transport surpisingly easy and straightforward for everyone, including those of us who really don't feel like doing math. Just buy a ticket, single price, and you go as far as you want to go. However, therein lies the catch: most of our fare evaders are exactly those who hop on for only 1 stop or 2, especially if they do so relatively irregularly. It's a fair enough assessment that the longer you stay on board the more potential you have to be caught, but if you do regularly travel, even if only such a minimal distance, you'll find it easier to simply buy a monthly or yearly pass -- for the cost of about 20 single tickets, you have truly unlimited, risk-free permission to travel whenever and wherever, however short or long. in short, for regular commuters, fare evading is simply not worth risking it -- the math says no. And yes, we do the turnstile-less, human-inspector style too.
@martinytcz17623 жыл бұрын
In Czechia, each region has their own transport authority whom sets the rules, but all of the systems are either zone or zone-relational tariffs (zones being what most people are used to from London etc., meanwhile zone-relational calculates how many km the zones are apart and calculates a fare based on that). If you don't wanna mess with how to use a zone-relational tariff (and it's really easy, just say from where to where you're going, because 1 zone == 1 city/town), you can buy a daily/weekly/monthly pass for the entire region - this is actually really nice for going on trips and stuff, generally ends up being cheaper and has a lot less hassle than regular tickets. The main advantage of having a regional transport authority, is that you don't have to check what operator operates which route, the ticket is valid for all forms of transport, whether it be buses, trains, or even boats. We have also recently gotten OneTicket, which is a national ticket system spanning across regions and operators. The issue with it is that it's only meant for rail and usually ends up being ever-so-slightly more expensive on routes where you don't switch operators, but it adds a layer of simplicity to rail transit, which is a thing that we've needed for a while now.
@liamtahaney7133 жыл бұрын
honestly, I would love a random 2 hour lecture on public art.
@BenjiQ5753 жыл бұрын
Yeah, probably learn something, right? Is this more of that European socialism I hear about? Where you break a rule and they fix you so you enjoy life more and stop breaking rules?
@oneofmanyparadoxfans54473 жыл бұрын
@@BenjiQ575 If that's what their idea of rehabilitation is, I wouldn't mind becoming an EU citizen.
@wturner777 Жыл бұрын
That would be better than having to pay a big fine, or even jail time for fare evasion.
@alexnefi3 жыл бұрын
As an Austrian I was shocked to find that even all the train stations had ticket gates in the UK. The stations felt a lot less like a public place.
@LeopardAzure3 жыл бұрын
That's defo not the case. Within cities they'd usually have them, and the big commuter towns might, but once you get out into residential areas (or even just non-main stations in smaller cities) there's usually none in sight. However, those routes are the ones that usually get ticket checks on the train itself.
@nanoic29643 жыл бұрын
In the Tyne and Wear metro in Newcastle upon Tyne the barriers are often deactivated.
@queeny56133 жыл бұрын
Yeah thats the case at big stations but on the smaller village county trains there are non. I never buy tickets for my 2 hour riud trip commute each way each day and never get caugh5
@whynot2173 жыл бұрын
Completely true and tickets are rarely checked.
@SmallSpoonBrigade3 жыл бұрын
I'd assume it depends where you live and how much space they have for turnstiles. Here in Seattle, we have a similar set up. They randomly check everybody on the train.
@somedudeok14513 жыл бұрын
Instead of permanent steel turnstiles, we sometimes have human turnstiles in specific stations, which you cannot hop. I mean, you can, but since they're real people, you're usually disinclined.
@tomasdionnet8123 жыл бұрын
Damn, in Buenos Aires we have turnstiles in almost every station and fare evasion reaches 30% on average and 70% in some railway lines. We definetely need to learn much about Europe
@Septimus_ii3 жыл бұрын
Not all of Europe unfortunately - this is more of a German thing
@BOMBI777663 жыл бұрын
not really, the people in Buenos Aires just need to pay the damn fare.
@metaplays98173 жыл бұрын
@@Septimus_ii German? pfff
@dadbodii3 жыл бұрын
@@BOMBI77766 why pay for fares when the government constantly fucks you over, is corrupt, and the transportation sucks anyways? They can suck a fat one if they think I’m giving them another cent
@Mann_mit_Kaffee3 жыл бұрын
@@metaplays9817 get over it
@mfvieira893 жыл бұрын
It's the same in Porto, Portugal. You have to validate the electronic ticket but there aren't any physical barriers, only people that randomly check for tickets and fine you
@Usmodlover3 жыл бұрын
He did mention Porto in the video, but that is neat!
@bakpfeife22243 жыл бұрын
Same in Germany. It's just more efficient
@realhawaii5o3 жыл бұрын
Yes! I knew there would be someone else that knows about Porto!
@truedarklander3 жыл бұрын
Lisbon just does high things 🤷♂️
@Blueturtle13 жыл бұрын
Same in Ireland, most of the time no one checks your ticket unless your taking a really busy route
@logicalenigma63173 жыл бұрын
This is similar to the Light rails in New Jersey. The tickets are literally $2.25 and the checks are random. The ticket for not having a ticket is ~$70 the last time I heard and failure to pay the fine can straight up result in a warrant being issued for your arrest. It's truly worth it to just pay the $2.25.
@3bydacreekside3 жыл бұрын
....is that Jersey law? I live in Pittsburgh and damn I just want to be careful lol. We have a lovely tram system
@megarockman3 жыл бұрын
@@3bydacreekside less a state law and more a function of how the fare collection system works. Light rails in particular generally don't have the infrastructure to physically force riders from needing to enter the train through specific gates via all-around fencing because the system is not physically enclosed -- compare to, e.g., the NYC subway where all access to the trains via stations is controllable via walls or elevated platforms.
@miladragon3 жыл бұрын
Yeah same in Minnesota and California, in my experience. This isn't unusual
@skylark.kraken3 жыл бұрын
365 Euros for a season ticket is basically free, that's amazing
@co2_os3 жыл бұрын
Being an anxious driver, and with increasing gas prices. My dream is to live in a place like this.
@gamefoun3 жыл бұрын
@@co2_os that's why walkable cities and good public transport are important
@larali40513 жыл бұрын
Tomorrow Austria will also start something called "climate ticket", where you pay around 1000€ a year and then you can use about every public transport in Austria, including the transport systems in cities.
@tjtourette52613 жыл бұрын
365 € is what gets you around 2 months worth of public transport in major German cities
@martinytcz17623 жыл бұрын
Prague's season ticket is 144€, and the quality of the system is very much comparable with Vienna (though it is smaller)
@pelegsap3 жыл бұрын
tbh, I've never seen any check-barriers in Germany, even outside the big cities. I actually live in a village and the system is exactly the same.
@bartholomewdan3 жыл бұрын
Now that I think about it, neither have I.
@gotofalograce99263 жыл бұрын
but I'm pretty sure that the fare evasion rate is higher than in Vienna
@luchusemann28393 жыл бұрын
@@gotofalograce9926 which might be due to the fact that the Deutsche Bahn is simply a piece of crap. Maybe this is only true for my city and its vicinitiy, but over here you consider yourself lucky if the train is less than 10 minutes late. I avoid it wherever I can, but when I have to use it, I’m basically preparing myself for waiting a good 20 minutes more than what the schedule says.
@BlaudracheLP3 жыл бұрын
@@luchusemann2839 The ÖBB also got it's problems but is usually a reliable form of transport. And the inefficency of the DB is known beyond german borders.
@SiqueScarface3 жыл бұрын
@@luchusemann2839 That's what you get when you try to optimize away wasteful redundancies to save money. Apparently, the redundancy is a necessity to have some reserve in unforeseen cases. McKinsey's consultants seem to believe that you can have a system that runs at nearly 100% efficiency and still has reserves, and they don't see the contradiction.
@trailblazercombi3 жыл бұрын
Haha, that was a weird experience indeed :D I went to Wien on a trip before with friends, we bought tickets and then we were like, "where do we check them? There are no turnstiles"
@sarowie3 жыл бұрын
That also lets to funny experiences in Germany, where certain tickets (but not all) need to be "entwertet" (literally invalided, but meaning "validated" as in "time stamped to become valid") before starting your journey.
@Lolwutfordawin3 жыл бұрын
@@sarowie the worst is Berlin, where you get a ticket, hop on the train and then realize there is nowhere to stamp your ticket. Apparently you have to do it before getting on. And they don't put the stamping machine next to the ticket machine. No, they hide it at the other end of the bloody platform. I swear, Berlin's system is designed to make tourists pay 60€ on top of the ticket price.
@lo45683 жыл бұрын
As someone living in Vienna, for me it was the total opposite when I went to Rome! I was like: wot ze fack is zis bullshit. Please just let me enter the train lmao.
@lo45683 жыл бұрын
Also, public transport in Rome sucks, it's disgusting and dirty, would not recommend. Love my viennese public transport though. 💗
@musik722313 жыл бұрын
I mean to be honest with yall we do have a ticket stamping machine at the entrance of the stations where you validate your ticket so technically there is something Inbetween but you can just pass through there is no kind of blockage whatsoever
@atorwilliams3 жыл бұрын
I'm a Canadian living in Vienna for school and I always find it so odd seeing places I know/live beside in these videos
@AverytheCubanAmerican3 жыл бұрын
Fancy seeing the use of the NYC Subway turnstiles in this vid... The MTA has been losing millions because of fare evasion. And now the pandemic has put another dent in the MTA's financial situation. Hemorrhaging more than 200 million each week. Inspired by the Santiago protests in 2019, people did a mass fare evasion before the pandemic to advocate that public transportation is a basic right and thus, should be free. But the chance of the MTA actually changing the fare to free is the same as a kangaroo punching you in the face in Atlantic City on St. Patrick's Day...it won't happen. To the MTA, every dollar counts because of their situation. But they have implemented a Fair Fares program as a compromise to help those with low income. It slashes the fare in half
@Tapakapa3 жыл бұрын
I chose that kind of turnstile intentionally because NYC is the typical turnstile jumping location in my mind. Before seeing films set in NYC, I'm not sure I've ever seen anyone jump a turnstile.
@giancarlo18223 жыл бұрын
Why do i always see your comments everywhere
@kirkrotger92083 жыл бұрын
@@Tapakapa It's a real problem here. And the funny thing is, on select buses, which is NYC's approximation of BRT, we do have off-board fare collection where you have to get a receipt prior to boarding and fare evasion is far lower. The reason they don't do it on the subway is because some stations get so crowded during rush hour, it would be practically impossible to enforce.
@JONTHEWHEREHOG3 жыл бұрын
mta deserves it
@memesthatmakeyouwannadie31333 жыл бұрын
The MTA decided the easiest thing to do was to hire literal thousands of cops to stand around and enforce fares rather than just cut the fare.
@berrryypie3 жыл бұрын
Finally, he remembered his password.
@yawnrock3 жыл бұрын
Yes, he did. He finally did.
@AxxLAfriku3 жыл бұрын
I STRONGLY DISAGREE! Being as famous as I am on KZbin, I know that it gets hard to read every comment I get. I try my best, but I am just so famous, that I can't do it much longer. Sorry, dear thekd
@seniorvenusdigital39043 жыл бұрын
its been 3 weeks stfu
@Laittth3 жыл бұрын
It's literally only been 3 weeks
@misanthropistbig85973 жыл бұрын
@@Laittth ya and now he has his password
@Scintillate93 жыл бұрын
nyc is infamous for its turnstiles. because I use a wheelchair and it’s so hard to get a pass that lets you through the gate that means I’m basically locked out of every station, even the very few ones without stairs :(
@timetravellingblockhead21223 жыл бұрын
):
@MsZiomallo3 жыл бұрын
Isn't it mandatory by law (in US it's ADA) to mount lifts there?
@txquartz8 ай бұрын
@@MsZiomalloNot when the station was built pre-ADA. They do have to add them at major renovation time. About 25% have them.
@trueriver19506 ай бұрын
The stations without stairs should have wheelchair accessible entry: I can see there's not a lot of point installing wheelchair accessible entry that only leads to stairs, but when that not the issue then surely ADA applies?
@pjrt_tv3 жыл бұрын
In NY, the long island railroad still uses people to check tickets. It isn't supposed to be random but due to the short distances it takes (compared to other regional rail) it is very possible for you to get on and off before anyone checks your ticket. And interesting side effect is that your can re use your ticket that day if you didn't get checked.
@2712animefreak3 жыл бұрын
This system is used by many railway companies in Europe. In my experience, at least in Croatia, Slovenia, Hungary, Austria and Czechia. In Croatia, on the suburban line in Zagreb, I can usually travel for about 3-5 stations without having my ticket inspected, especially during rush hour.
@johntriplett31883 жыл бұрын
Same for SEPTA in Philly.
@gamefoun3 жыл бұрын
@@2712animefreak yep, I'm Czech and this is definitely the case. In trains there's usually an inspector walking around, inspecting and marking the tickets. Some stations don't even sell tickets, so you may have to buy it on the train from the inspector, which means you travel free if they don't reach you in time. Though I usually didn't face that, as I just bought monthly tickets to get to school, and those basically give you unlimited rides on the chosen section.
@Hen163 жыл бұрын
It’s the classic trick of having to explain yourself to a person being enough of a deterrent
@alkalinekats83003 жыл бұрын
I used to live in Denver, and when I did take public transportation I never encountered a turnstile, oh my gosh I was extremely unaware that they even existed until I took a trip to Washington DC
@itsjacob72393 жыл бұрын
I stopped in Paris once to get a coach to London, I had to wait by a trian station and saw nearly every single person jump the turnstyle as if it were normal. It was late at night mind you
@10hawell3 жыл бұрын
In Poland, these guards are called "canaries" which sounds lovely
@iuriepripa31713 жыл бұрын
are they, per chance, dressed in yellow?
@10hawell3 жыл бұрын
@@iuriepripa3171 They are usually incognito, sometimes in a black or yellow reflective vest. The name comes from the color of the ribbons on their hats they used to wear
@choreomaniac3 жыл бұрын
It used to be that you stamped the tickets ourself with a constantly changing pin pattern on the bus or trolley. Then they changed to ink time stamps.
@BlaudracheLP3 жыл бұрын
Then the railed Hussars arrived
@리주민3 жыл бұрын
Does that mean if something is not right (eg gas leak), they are the first to die, as a warning for the customers? "Canary in a coal mine," if you would.
@PotatoSmasher4203 жыл бұрын
I was about the write "Same in Prague", but then you mentioned it in video :)
@Nikolapestanac3 жыл бұрын
Whenever i go to belgrade, you aren't normally checked for your tickets on trams, but there are sometimes random checks done by humans, but they never made a fuss if you forgot to pay for you ticket, they simply let you pay for one in front of them, and then walk away.
@hugo946083 жыл бұрын
Ah memories of my trip to Paris,when a group of 10 people went with me through the turnstile a la Human Centipede with only my ticket.... 10 meters down the hall, ticket check 😂
@mekhane.broken96783 жыл бұрын
"Working with unknown number is kind of pointless " Tell that to my math teacher.
@derschwabl3 жыл бұрын
Liebe den Stil der Videos. Der Wien Bezug im Stile von CPG Grey is einfach leiwand! Weiter so!
@gab_v2503 жыл бұрын
2:25 and sometimes a bus/train that can catch fire from one moment to another (it's the case of Rome, where it - and the city's public transport company ATAC - had become a kind of meme in all of Italy)
@Nosirrbro3 жыл бұрын
I guess the trains haven't been running on time for a while now
@storrentMC3 жыл бұрын
It works the same way in some places in America. The Dallas, Texas public transport system works like this. Fares are $6 for all day, and $3 for either AM/PM. Students and seniors get discounts.
@dayviduh3 жыл бұрын
In Los Angeles nobody checks your ticket unless you get on the random train car w the police standing in there 🤣
@MDLC4243 жыл бұрын
Surfliner they check it (almost) every time. Metrolink they really don’t care.
@Kas-tle3 жыл бұрын
For Los Angeles it really depends on where in the system you are. Going through union station at high commute time on a regular basis, I would say I had my card checked once or twice a week. But on the more distant stations of the light rail lines, I find it very rare that there are any ticket checks. With Metrolink it seems to depend on how the conductor is feeling that day. The Surfliner checks them consistently, except in cases where the train is crowded to the point of standing room only.
@Adamzychu3 жыл бұрын
That's how it works in most places in Poland I think(at least for busses/trams), and probably a lot of places around the world. There are only these 'validations machines', you have to check your ticket with, but these are already inside the vehicle and serve just to mark a ticked as "used" because you can just buy more of them earlier and use as needed. ...Usually it's much easier/cheaper to get some long term ticket, but I still refuse to believe less than 2% people avoid buying one here too.
@jakedotnet3 жыл бұрын
Those also exist in Vienna. At least two years ago when I was last there. I still have four stripes left on my 8 day ticket...
@stekra31592 жыл бұрын
Buying a ticket is just easyer
@nihatakdamar77113 жыл бұрын
I think it also has to do with fear and uncertainty. If you just have to jump over something, there is only one moment where you have to be careful not to get caught. With random checks, you aren't even safe when you get in the vehicle.
@clawed2793 жыл бұрын
In Auckland NZ it's only the major train station that has turnstiles, and all the ticket stuff is handled by scanning a card. We've also got officers manually checking if people have scanned their card before hopping on a train and dishing out hefty fines.
@d0rban Жыл бұрын
And in Wellington we just have officers walking throughout the train between stops to check tickets and Snappers while it’s in motion
@zayneytem3 жыл бұрын
What a good timing! I did need a toaster.
@TheTonyMcD3 жыл бұрын
Well unless you have 62% of a toaster lying around, you are out of luck.
@Marconius67 ай бұрын
Add to this that stations without turnstiles are much easier to design, because you don't need to airtightly separate one part of the station. So shops amd routes can be laid out freely, and there doesn't need to be a huge area with a long row of turnstiles somewhere. Getting on a bus is much easier and quicker as well when there's no ticket checks every time, which means the bus can get moving along much faster as well, making for a faster trip for everyone.
@Finfie3 жыл бұрын
I think there is another factor to consider. If everybody would evade paying, it would generate a lot more money to check tickets more often. If nobody would be evading, there would be fewer checks, since employing people to check tickets is also costly. In reality it is somewhere in the middle, and you can just vary the number of ticket checks in such a way that you maximize your profits. In the end the goal with random checks is not to make you more honest, it is to generate a constant profit independent of the percentage of ticket evasion. Therefore, this strategy should be far superior to alternatives.
@warmike7 ай бұрын
Saint-Petersburg goes a different route. There are turnstiles, but in front of the line of turnstiles there is always a security guard and sometimes a cop. That is pretty effective at discouraging fare evasion.
@andarted3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: The cover of the magazine says _'super chancellor stops comet'._ [2:18] Sad fact: That's an accurate depiction of those subway magazines. And the rest of the austrias media isn't so much better.
@Rok_Satanas3 жыл бұрын
I lived in vienna and getting a yearly ticket is a bit over 1Euro a day, so it's just plain easier to get a Jahreskarte (Year Card) Which you can pay in a monthly amount or the whole sum.
@realhawaii5o3 жыл бұрын
I'm used to this here in Oporto area. Both in the metro and suburban trains. We just validate the ticket. Very cool!
@DesertCookie3 жыл бұрын
Never having seen a turnstile in my life after using German public transport for my entire school life, Prague's public transport really overwhelmed me. It was so cumbersome compared to just getting in a bus, tram, or train.
@qwertyuiopzxcfgh3 жыл бұрын
Here in the Netherlands it's about half/half. The more crowded, urban stations all have gates, the more quiet, rural stops do not (this goes for both trains and rapid transit/heavy rail/metro/subway/underground/whatever you want to call it). Still, turnstile jumping almost never happens, because it's too obvious. Most people just tailgate.
@ThisIsTheBestAnime3 жыл бұрын
Besides, hardly anyone uses physical tickets anymore here. It's very convenient to scan your universal travel card at departure and destination and have the system charge your balance the correct amount automatically, train transfers included (given you don't transfer between different providers). Route planning can be done easily through an app or website, which shows alternative door-to-door routes, associated trip durations, pricing and more.
@bramvanduijn80867 ай бұрын
I've seen forced gates in NL quite often though. They're more fragile than those turnstiles. Personally I was and still am offended that I have to through such a cattle gate. I am not a cow and I do not appreciate being treated like one. And now I understand it is not just more expensive but also less effective? Now I am not just offended but also disappointed.
@pandus47z2 ай бұрын
Same in Russia, but most turnstiles here are doors, so tailgating is the only way
@MegaLokopo7 ай бұрын
It is the same in salt lake city, utah in the us. a 2 dollar fair gets you unlimited travel for 2 hours. They may or may not check your ticket randomly, but if they decided to check tickets on your train, they will catch you because they stop the train until everyone's tickets are checked. last I checked it is a hundred dollar fine for not having a ticket.
@danielsaroch24243 жыл бұрын
It's normal for me :D Ahoj from the Czech Republic. Amazing videos keep up the work.
@marekfiferna3 жыл бұрын
~3.6% fare evasion in Prague's public transport. Considering the Czech mentality, that's an unexpectedly good result, and apparently it keeps dropping every year. I guess that the availability of SMS payments and discounted long-term tickets/cards (Lítačka) had a significant effect on this.
@NeasCZ7 ай бұрын
One more thing to mention is that while the controls are random, ride often enough and you WILL get checked. Over long enough period of time, what you paid in fines is gonna be more than what you would have paid for the tickets, since those are cheap and fines are not.
@schrodingerskatze43087 ай бұрын
This, I don't live in Vienna, but Heidelberg also only has buses and trams with the occasional inspector. I use that quite a few times every day and have my ticket checked at least 4-5 times per year. The fee is only 60€ here for that, but a bit more often than that and you might as well just buy a ticket, unless you try to get out as soon as you see them outside, which is very stressful, and almost nobody likes that.
@aidantonk40993 жыл бұрын
In Denver, the lightrails work pretty much exactly like that
@jinxedpenguin3 жыл бұрын
Common in most of the US! I live in Denver too but it’s the same in Charlotte or Houston as well
@Nosirrbro3 жыл бұрын
yeah pretty much the same for the TRAX in salt lake as well I believe
@Nabu3142 жыл бұрын
I live in Vienna, and one thing that MAJORLY pissed me off, happened a few weeks ago. When riding the bus, you currently cannot walk up to the driver to buy a ticket because of COVID-regulations. They just dont open the front door and wont let you come near them. Now I tried to get onto the bus up front by the driver and told him that I need a ticket. Driver told me "Meh, doesn't matter, just hop in back there.", and so I did. At the next stop 2 ticket inspectors came in and asked for the fuckin ticket I didn't have because the driver wouldn't give me one. I tried to argue that I couldn't buy one because the driver didn't let me, and they just told me I could've gone to a ticket automat by one of the Metro Stations, but the station I got onto the bus was like 1,5km from the next Metro Station, so it absolutely was not possible unless I wanted to waste one hour. Long story short, I had to pay 105€ and I still wish I could punch all of them in their bloated faces.
@TheTiberius742 жыл бұрын
you can buy a digital ticket with your Smartphone. unless of course you carry a landline with you everywhere...
@automation72957 ай бұрын
It's funny how people say they want to punch people in the face, but yet too afraid to do so.
@akoiya63003 жыл бұрын
Where I live, there are ticket people who ask (on the train) if you have a ticket, if you don't they ask where you got on and where you will get off and sell you a ticket. Some times I would be able to get away with not getting a ticket on a busy train by looking like someone who does have a ticket. Then I became a regular and the ticket man always recognized me, asked me how my day was and immediately printed my ticket before I could break out my wallet.
@the1gip2 жыл бұрын
One of the arguments made in London at the time barriers were introduced when the Overground system came in, transforming unloved, grimy wayside stations into a newly branded network with better service, was that by limiting the platform area to those who have business there, you eliminate a lot of gangs of youths loitering and being threatening to others.
@SabreVDM3 жыл бұрын
2:17 That is literally my Patreon character doing the exact thing I’d do in that situation: looking at the short times and wondering ‘Why doesn’t Australia have this?’
@matthewm33 жыл бұрын
How did you get here yesterday?
@thatdude90913 жыл бұрын
If I had to guess, Patreon
@matthewm33 жыл бұрын
@@thatdude9091 makes sense
@oliverspiler91013 жыл бұрын
Very consistent in uploading! Appreciate it
@hellabisys3 жыл бұрын
Here in New Zealand, we have a similar turnstile-less system, but instead of a random spot check, on trains there's someone who takes note of who gets on at each stop and walks through the train collecting only those people's tickets. On buses, there's the option of buying a paper ticket and presenting it to the driver, but most people have a card to tap instead, and since the only place to get on is in clear view of the driver, while there's technically nothing stopping you from just walking on, no-one I know has ever done so
@TomorrowWeLive3 жыл бұрын
A fellow JAFFA?
@hellabisys3 жыл бұрын
@@TomorrowWeLive Nope, a Wellingtonian
@mascan79057 ай бұрын
I'm guessing the crime rate on the metro is pretty low as well. In NYC, it's really high, and they stopped arresting people for turnstile jumping, thus then it gets even higher.
@Aprill2643 жыл бұрын
the Netherlands has something similar a lot of large train stations have turnstiles but most small stations do not, and they don't exist at all on busses
@Yorick2573 жыл бұрын
Turnstiles on busses are pure evil! The bus either has to stand for a good couple of minutes or leave a lot of people behind during rush hours
@jakedotnet3 жыл бұрын
Train stations in Belgium and the Netherlands were a bit confusing with an Interrail ticket, I think you couldn't use it to open the turnstiles.
@Aprill2643 жыл бұрын
@@jakedotnet i myself only have experience with the OV-chipkaart, but I think you should be able to scan the tickets too
@pandus47z2 ай бұрын
@@Yorick257 we used to have this in Moscow before 2018. Back then boarding a bus could take around 20 minutes during the rush hours
@nodontdothat53462 жыл бұрын
i legit did not know these (turnstiles) were used in this way i have never left my hometown for more than a road trip i guess but still wow
@petitkruger21753 жыл бұрын
londons tube map is super easy to follow! *crys in zone 9*
@coolwei14273 жыл бұрын
*CRY IN THE ABANDONED AREAS*
@brinjoness33863 жыл бұрын
unless you are a yank in which case it's best you stick to the central line.
@floris32392 жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands only metro's in Amsterdam and Rotterdam had turnstiles. Yet, with the introduction of the contactless ov-chipcard they have become common on all major train stations. And they are actually quite handy as the ov-chipcard has a check-in / check-out system. And the turnstiles or barriers greatly reduced the number of missed check-outs.
@Aehnen_Kohben3 жыл бұрын
When I visited Vienna, I couldn’t believe that public transport was soo cheap. When it’s cheap and you get a good service, it’s worth paying for but in Manchester, particularly with rail networks, it’s expensive and the service is poor.
@Josukegaming Жыл бұрын
Really well made video! In the Netherlands they have turnstiles, but only in busier and bigger train stations. Once you get to the more rural sratuons, there are tap on / tap off pillars for when you get on and off the train instead of turnstiles. Doesnt actually block you from getting on if you haven't paid.
@reilly61873 жыл бұрын
I thought you were cpg grey
@galileogalilei92976 ай бұрын
heavily discounted
@giovannicorso75836 ай бұрын
he is, but more Wiener Schnitzel
@AstropilotStudios3 жыл бұрын
Thanks CGPGrey 2. Very cool to drop in my recommendations.
@YMandarin3 жыл бұрын
cursed name
@Trolligarch3 жыл бұрын
"365 Euros for an annual pass" Londoners who have to pay over 3000 Euros for an annual pass: 👁👄👁
@martonlerant56723 жыл бұрын
As a person from the northern-balkans country of Hungary who visited London.. ...your public transport was a big letdown. We expected to find somethjng nice considering how long your undergound eail systems are and how long ytime you had to improve on them. Nope! - prices sky high - teensy-weensy rail carriages, where you can barely stand upright without banging your head - not even remotely enough of them to serve to population - worse fucking hygenie than what we have on our public transport - and thats a BIG fucking achievement.
@samuelsmith27073 жыл бұрын
@@martonlerant5672 Being so old, is what causes so many problems, as it was built with much less people in mind. It's much harder to upgrade the rail network than to build it right in the first place. We have the same problems with our sewers aswell.
@2712animefreak3 жыл бұрын
@@samuelsmith2707 Budapest was the second city in the world to have an underground railway, yet M1 is neither dirty or crowded.
@martonlerant56723 жыл бұрын
@@samuelsmith2707 Issue isnt the age of the oldest parts of the network. That was clear both in London - and here in Budapest on our oldest line (dating from 1894). The issue is no new lines since the 1990s - as London didn't stop growing, unlike its undergound rail system. ...and ofc. lack of maintenance. Not cleaning the thing, and leaving it in a decrepit state has nothing to do with its age.
@stekra31592 жыл бұрын
Ther are more annual pass holders every year than drivers 2019 852.000 year tickets
@mitchmclean54353 жыл бұрын
In Sydney, Australia they pursue a hybrid option. They have turnstiles on major or inner-city stations (e.g. Town Hall) but go without them on minor suburban ones (e.g. Hawkesbury River). They have also changed to a tap-on tap-off Opal card system.
@hesterclapp97173 жыл бұрын
What about this: No tickets Government funds transport with transport tax This means you're paying for it whether you use it or not, which encourages people to use it, as well as making it easier because there's less faff
@devifoxe3 жыл бұрын
But... But.... This is communism..... And communism is bad!!!! (Sarcasm) Also poor people tha they really need it are going to use use it... And you can not have that....
@wclifton968gameplaystutorials3 жыл бұрын
That would probably be quite expensive for the tax payer especially if it means that rail-based transport is free aswell which is why tiny countries like Luxembourg can only really get away with it since their network is so small and subsidising free public transport is only slightly more than subsidising paid transport. It would especially be hard to implement if public transport was operated mostly by private operators in a free-market like it is with bus transport outside of London & Northern Ireland in the UK where companies compete on price and the best service, you make it all free and then there is essentially no need for competiton or really any private operators in the market so over time, service levels degrade in value as subsidies fall
@chrish.9423 жыл бұрын
That is basically the intention between the turnstileless system as well. I'd we willing to bet that due to sampling bias (noone checks tickets in 16. and 10th districts and less checks at non-peak (work-based) times) and survivorship bias (people with neither money nor ticket hide, run, fight or are simply let off) there's more like 5% of people going ticketless on any given day. There are people who are strategic about avoiding controls and skipping fares as well (I used to be one between being eligible for the extremely cheap school ticket and the still laughably cheap student ticket.) So factoring in time of day, the fact that "human turnstile" controls are only easily implemented at certain sub stations, remoteness and type of public transport as well as where you enter within a vehicle (leave plenty of people left and right so they get caught or have to fumble their ticket out which gives you time to slip away).
@bramvanduijn80867 ай бұрын
@@wclifton968gameplaystutorials You can save a lot of money on infrastructure maintenance, since rail based transport has much lower maintenance costs than car infrastructure and you still need to move the roughly same number of people roughly the same distance. Not to mention that transport is a trivial factor in a country's budget. I looked up the numbers for The Netherlands (because those numbers are easy to find) and infrastructure & watermanagement is about 3% of the government budget, or 13 billion (9 zeroes). about 2% of that 13 billion is rail while road maintenance and expansion costs are about 25% of that 13 billion. If you make trains free in the Netherlands, that would cost 3.94 billion each year (= operating costs of the privatized Dutch rail), making rail cost about 1% of the national budget. So if the reduced strain on the road network is 1/25th of the current road maintenance costs, then you're breaking even. If it is more, you're making a profit. And that's not even mentioning that rail is much cheaper and simpler to scale up than car traffic, nor that the entrance gates are not free so not having to pay for those would save a bit of money too.
@israelcruz71803 жыл бұрын
Works like this in Phoenix Arizona USA. And it's fantastic keep things moving quickly
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un3 жыл бұрын
Caracas: *It's free subway fare*
@PrimedPixelMusic3 жыл бұрын
It can't just be me who got a turnstile ad with this vid
@drsherifff3 жыл бұрын
Yoooo new tapakapa banger! Dankeschön!
@PhantomKING113 Жыл бұрын
Here in Asturias, Spain, the way it works is aa follows: In most sattions theres the metal things, but not in really small ones in small villages and whatnot. Also, I'm pretty sure the machines will always let you get out if you oresent a ticket even if it isn't for the right destination, because they can't really trap you there, although obviously the same can't be said for entering. The whole train network that conects with places like Gijón, Mieres, Avilés and lots of other cities and towns from the central station in Oviedo is... rather cheap, I think if you start from Oviedo everything is less than 3€. There's also some additional discounts you may get (for example, with the whole Ukraine thing, to help in saving in gasoline, a program was initiated by which, if you do more than 16 travels by train in like 4 months or so, all the train travels you do in those 4 months are free). Despite this, people do get in and out illegally. There are officials, in uniform, who check tickets occasionally, but I'm unsure if they really fine you that much. Most of the people I've seen get illegal free rides were going to San Juan de Nieva in summer, a nice beach, and such a small station that there are no ticket-chacking machines there. As for the urban bus, it has 1 entry door (2 exit doors), and the driver can see pretty much the whole bus thanks to a series of mirrors, so people are generally forced to enter through the entry door and pay to the bus driver (or use a card-reading machine if they have cards, which btw make travelling almost outrageously cheap). There's no metro in Oviedo, or in any place in Asturias for that matter (although Oviedo does have 3 train stops, so that's handy). So... yeah, it's either the bus or walking (which aren't bad options with how small Oviedo is, compared to other cities). There are also buses that go between cities, mainly by the company ALSA, and they work just like urban buses except in big stations you can't just pay to the driver, but rather have to get a ticket with your seat in it and show it to the driver as you enter, who usually marks it as used by breaking a corner off it or something similar. In small villages, you can just pay the driver directly, as there's often nothing remotely close to a ticket machine. All the buses and trains I've been in were reasonably clean, although the trains occasionally smell a bit funky in some parts, but you can always, you know, sit elsewhere, where the smell js less noticeable.
@richardavsmith3 жыл бұрын
I got a turnstile advert after this video from ThruLane. I thought it was a joke by you at first. Why are they... Why are they advertising on KZbin?
@richardavsmith3 жыл бұрын
How often do people watch videos before they buy a turnstile for their business?
@TheNoGamer443 жыл бұрын
@@richardavsmith Just got one today. Works well, now I can get money from people using the toilet in my house.
@bramvanduijn80867 ай бұрын
@@TheNoGamer44 What's your ROI?
@Sir_Uncle_Ned3 жыл бұрын
Here in Western Australia, we don't have turnstiles at all, we have fare gates at some major train stations, but several lesser stations are completely open. Revenue protection officers make random checks of trains, usually during peak times. And our primary ticketing system is an RFID card similar to London's Oyster Card that is good for everything. Just tag on when you start your journey and wherever you go or what mode of transport you take, you just tag off at the end and the system calculates the cheapest fare for you. Plus you get a discount on fares with SmartRider and an even bigger discount if you set your SmartRider to automatically add money once it gets below a certain amount
@LambdaTF23 жыл бұрын
Still waiting on my 0.28 worth of a toaster :/
@Ornateluna3 жыл бұрын
Here in latvias capital Rīga we also just buy a ticket and occasionally someone in uniform comes and checks it and it's just so nice and easy. When I went to the UK and saw all of those gates it felt very weird and uncanny
@egg-xb1ip3 жыл бұрын
1:24 i’m in the 98.9%
@eddiejc13 жыл бұрын
There's a similar system for the light rail (a.k.a. trolley) line in Baltimore. You buy a ticket, and get on the car and unless there is a big event, you only get checked occasionally but you'd better have the card because there's a BIG fine. Somebody from Boston wrote a complaint letter to the Baltimore Sun about getting fined, but my reaction as a non-Baltimorean was "Did you really think you were going to ride the trolley for free?"
@hb11343 жыл бұрын
Similar system again here in Budapest, with sometimes extra ticket checkers at the stations. The quality of the vehicles is varied, and at best pretty okay, so fare evasion here is more prevalent (hard to find statistics, but various sites report between 12% and 40%).
@chandlerbryant66803 жыл бұрын
while the public transport in Cali usually gets a bad rep, I was in Monterey and San Jose for Christmas Week a few years ago. The light rail was very convenient for me at least as someone who had either the option of dragging my suitcase behind me while walking everywhere or taking the rail or bus. While in Monterey, I mostly walked of course. Very walkable city, though it needs to get rid of its zoning laws much like everywhere else in America. But in San Jose I was completely lost as to where to go so I had to use public transport or stay within certain confines. The light rail system was incredibly easy, and yes I ashamedly a few times went on the line without getting a ticket because it seemed so easy to do and I needed to save every penny I could. But going all over the city via train and being in walking distance to either a bus to take me the rest of the way to somewhere or within walking distance of any place I wanted to be as a visitor was very nice. The tickets were pretty cheap as well.
@bliblablubdiedadup7423 жыл бұрын
14 days in vienna without getting checked, but it was so cheap that i don t regret paying.
@LanzFamily3 жыл бұрын
i've been living in vienna for 2 years and use public transportation every day, so far i've only been checked once
@BankruptGreek3 жыл бұрын
19 years in Greece never been checked xD mostly ticket-less
@duckles4263 жыл бұрын
~5 years in Dublin never checked
@Thbrotatos Жыл бұрын
Subways in Philadelphia are the way you described in the video, SEPTA (regional rail) however, has someone that checks nearly every time, as well and the turnstiles. Definitely have to pay for the ticket on the SEPTA here almost no exceptions.
@pietvanvliet19873 жыл бұрын
My favourite James May story is the one where some californian asks a German if they will drive without a (valid) licence. The German's answer (IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO DRIVE WITHOUT A LICENCE!!!) is the exact reason why German speaking countries can have public transport without the annoying turn styles.
@lizyarikus3 жыл бұрын
In the times we're currently living in, not travelling anywhere lately made me completely forget, for a couple of seconds when the video started, that machine ticket-checkers are the normal way out in the wide world. We don't have them. We pay right after entering the bus, or microbus, or trolley, to the conductor, who is going back and forth and handing out tickets (or to the driver, depending on the transportation type), with cash (card options have started popping up in 2020, but the machine is still attached to the conductor and are not in every bus, it varies even in the same routes, this one has it, the next bus by the same number, that comes in 10 minutes, might not). The rest of the world is missing on the experience of a conductor (who is probably a retired lady) in a stuffed bus yelling "PEOPLE BY THE BACK DOOR WHO HAVEN'T PAYED YET, PASS ON THE MONEY". (or, how to say you're from a post-Soviet country, not saying you're from a post-Soviet country)
@ThisIsTheBestAnime3 жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands, most people don't even buy tickets anymore, we just have a chipped card that we can scan at every bus, train, metro, and tram, even at public bike rentals and some regional group taxis. Even better, if you take a train trip from one side of the country to the other, with 4 transfers, you only need to scan twice if you don't switch providers, once at your departure station and once at your destination. I don't even need to charge the card, since I have it set up to refill automatically when my account balance is too low. Domestic travel here is extremely streamlined.
@lizyarikus3 жыл бұрын
@@ThisIsTheBestAnime While we live in 2021, Netherlanders live in 3021. Respect.
@FormulaManuel3 жыл бұрын
Änd aua nekst pihß 😂 Griaß eich Leitln, i bin da Kwotndialektkommentah ✌🏻🇦🇹 hobts an schenen Tog olle miteinond
@andi8p5693 жыл бұрын
Ehdli sach min fründ
@Minus-Premium3 жыл бұрын
No
@SteinGauslaaStrindhaug3 жыл бұрын
In Oslo we never really had turnstiles on the metro; we used to have ticket stamping automats but no gates. And they were going to add digital scanning turnstiles; but there were endless delays with the new digital system, so even though the new turnstiles with glass gates were installed they were not activated and were in a permanent open position for years and years, so they started to wear down without ever being used. And once they were installed they realized they were not accessible for wheel chairs because they were too narrow; so they immediately had to remove some to make the passage easier. And then they got in trouble with the Norwegian Data Protection Authority for wanting to register everyone every time they passed; so they were not allowed to make the registration mandatory, only requiring you to validate your ticket once for the whole validity period instead; meaning the gates were illegal to use; so they were taken down. They still use the old gigantic box without the gate as the ticket scanner on some stations without the gate; but I think they're starting to be replaced with smaller validation scanners.
@dijikstra83 жыл бұрын
Nice, I wonder how it came to be that Stockholm got fare gates when they're not used elsewhere in the Nordics, or in Germany and large parts of Eastern Europe for that matter. Our politicians are obsessed with preventing "cheating", they even blamed revenue shortfall during Covid (when people had to board busses in the back due to driver safety, but they refused to move the readers because it would be too expensive, so people couldn't actually reach the readers, aside from the fact that more people worked from home) on cheating...
@moonam83893 жыл бұрын
They do this on Manchester Metrolink too
@SnazBrigade3 жыл бұрын
I only ever jumped a turnstile once and that was because all 6 ticket machines at the station didn’t except credit cards. This was this year btw.
@bulldozer89503 жыл бұрын
There’s a simple way to prevent fair evasion. Make the punishment high enough that anyone who can buy one will. And make the cost low enough that everyone who needs one can buy one. Vienna has got it figured out
@SorenCowellShah3 жыл бұрын
Similar in Portland, OR. While buses always check tickets, they don’t on the light rail (besides random checks), and since the transit company is moving towards digital fares, I’m not even sure how they would check them anymore. I’ve ridden it quite a bit and I don’t remember ever getting checked.
@earicsohtun72023 жыл бұрын
welcome back my second favourite stick man ♥️
@Tapakapa3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, my third favorite viewer ^_^
@earicsohtun72023 жыл бұрын
@@Tapakapa 🥺
@ernielyngdoh48453 жыл бұрын
@@earicsohtun7202 congratulations
@hooty783 жыл бұрын
I only took the metro twice without a ticket and both times someone came to check tickets and fined me. That's enough for me to buy a ticket everytime
@JamesLewis987 ай бұрын
It's called a high-trust society, which comes from a homogeneous population with a shared culture, morality, and language. Every member of the society feels like an owner rather than a mere user of the public services.
@sbosch14416 ай бұрын
While I think one could make the case for Vienna having high amounts of trust, I'm not sure it would be accurate to describe it as a homogenous population and claim that to be the root cause of this. In terms of religion, different types of Christianity as well as islam are presnt in large numbers. Ethnically, large amounts of people initially from the Balkans, Germany, and turkey are in Vienna - again very heterogenous. In terms of population growth, the city has grown about half a million since 2000; a figure that is often thrown around is that over half the population has some degree of migrant background. I would suspect that the success of the Viennese transport system has more to do with how it is run. The city of Vienna seems to be unafraid of less market oriented policy (it has one of the largest social housing stocks in Europe) and I get the impression it tends to approach things like transport in a more government-intervention sort of way than other cities.
@racg1743 жыл бұрын
i love this video because i lived in vienna for a while and when my girlfriend discovered i never paid for the metro she had a breakdown. fair evasion was natural to me having grown up in london haha
@zerophoenix67583 жыл бұрын
Over here in Queensland, Australia we use a "touch on and touch" off system along with random human checks. So the vast majority of people have a card which you simply tap against a dedicated card reader thing at the beginning and end of your journey. So don't have to worry about figuring out the correct fare for zones, or bother having an annoying paper ticket. Also none of those rollers.
@ThisIsTheBestAnime3 жыл бұрын
Same in the Netherlands.
@TomorrowWeLive3 жыл бұрын
In my city tickets are rare. Most people have cards which you scan. There never used to be gates in most stations, but recently they've started introducing them. Ticket inspections don't happen every trip, but they check everyone. Fare evaders are relatively common--it''s an extremely multicultural city and the evaders are always (brown) immigrants. I would imagine that's why Vienna doesn't require them (yet). As she becomes more """diverse""" and """"vibrant""" she will, just like cities in the US.
@Azaghal19883 жыл бұрын
This is also how it is in germany. We're to scared to be embarrassed by not having a ticket to try. Also our public transportation is good enough to be supported.
@andreas40102 жыл бұрын
I think fare doging is much more common, even with the frequent ticket checks The issue is price and ease of use 70€/month for a transit pass that only goes around 3km from the city center, is too expensive and not worthwhile
@surfie0073 жыл бұрын
In Brisbane, Australia only the train stations in the CBD have barriers. The majority of stations just have points to tap on/off throughout the station
@archontiverius3 жыл бұрын
Same in Sydney. Generally speaking most peoples destination station is in the CBD, so it's kinda redundant to have barriers at suburban stations. Plus seeing alot of stations run with no or limited staff these days, it's hard to catch barrier jumpers at these stations, and ridership (thus potential fare dodgers) are often low enough that the fines wouldn't pay for installing and maintaining the barriers anyway, so there's no point.
@quuaaarrrk80563 жыл бұрын
Where do I claim my roughly quarter of a toaster?
@Tapakapa3 жыл бұрын
That's the challenge, innit.
@quuaaarrrk80563 жыл бұрын
@@Tapakapa Damn, how else should I toast my 0,28 bread?
@graham10343 жыл бұрын
In Vancouver, Canada we had no fare gates on our mass transit until a few years ago. They weren't added to reduce fare evasion though (which was already very low). Instead it was to be able to charge variable rates based on distance travelled. The added cost of maintaining the gates is actually quite a bit higher than the increased revenue from the drop in fare evasion.
@lohphat3 жыл бұрын
The pee-reeking buses and turnstile model is that of the NYC subway...before the new OMNY contact-less NFC readers were added over the last 2 years. Man, you hit me right in the feels.
@timeimp3 жыл бұрын
As a Sydneysider, we have ticketed barriers at some stations. But the fines are so painful, its easier to just tap on and tap off.