As it turns out it doesn’t actually cost that much on regular transit, there’s an AIRPORT SURCHARGE because it’s an “airport train”.
No wonder Americans don’t use public transit, even when the system exists it’s ridiculously difficult and expensive to use.
That’s certainly the theory, but in practice most states don’t actually cover the full cost of roads with use fees and need to get taxpayers to fund most of it.
Public transportation often does better in this regard when you actually look at funding by source.
Additionally the people who have the highest usage, freight shipping, invariably have disproportionate influence on lawmakers and can argue that the fees they see should be proportionally lower than others.
Because gas taxes are paid at the pump, we can’t actually adjust them to exclude low income persons either, making them a regressive tax.
Public transportation is able to charge a few dollars per rider per trip. Given the density they can move, they can generate unexpected revenue per trip at lower costs, again due to density. A subway car is more expensive than a car, but also sees higher utilization and holds about 100 times more people on average.
Neither is generally able to afford to be built using only use fees.
In the end, even though I don’t think we should be reliant on cars, the part I’m least upset about is taxpayers funding a public good. Transportation benefits everyone, even if they don’t directly use it. It’s big, it’s expensive, and doing it right has different incentives from making money.
I’d be very curious to see where you pulled those numbers.
https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/state-road-taxes-funding/
As for the mass transit data, I just googled the budgets for different major mass transit providers, specifically Chicago, New York, and BART, then looked at the pre-covid funding sources from their public financials.
Assuming those are the numbers you meant. Curious why you found it so implausible that tax money went to road maintenance.
Those numbers absolutely don’t back your point. Most of those states provide greater than 50% of the revenue for their roads from local sources, whereas public transport is less than 50% in most cases. None of them get close to funding themselves.
Where’s your source for none of them getting close? If you’re going to be the “sources” person, you should probably cite yours proactively.
I’d say only three states actually paying for their roads without taxpayer funds is most states not getting by with just usage fees.
Also, what exactly do you think my point is?
I don’t think getting taxpayer dollars is a bad thing for a public good. I actually think it would be better if the majority of funding came from the general taxpayer because most usage fees are regressive when it comes to essentials like transportation.
This is from Wikipedia, but the only other instances I could find were clearly biased sources, like the Cato.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farebox_recovery_ratio
There’s actually a few that do break almost even, I didn’t think any did.
As to what your point is, I have no idea, and don’t care. My initial comment pointed out that conflating public transport with the tax sources for roads isn’t the ven close. I was correct, as pointed to your sources, and now my own.
Why the fuck are you even replying if you don’t care what the other person has to say?
Going through the list there, there’s more than a few that almost break even. There’s a whole slew in Japan where fees are in excess of costs as a whole. Hell, there’s more with a 200% ratio than there are states that don’t use taxes for roads.
You’ve actually convinced me that it’s more slanted towards public transportation than I thought it was before.
I’m glad you feel like you won, I guess? Seems like you could have gotten the same results and saved everyone time by patting yourself on the back if you don’t actually care what the other person is saying.
You asked for sources, I them to you, lmao. Also, I don’t give a shit about Japan. I live in the US, which is why we’ve been talking about the US. Did you hit your head recently?