tp49 said:
If you consider a couple of factors the $1.50 really is not that steep. First, NYCTA has not raised the fare in at least 10 years.
Actually TP49, the last fare increase was 1995 only seven years ago. Back then it went from $1.25 to the current $1.50.
It should also be noted, that many of the other cities that you mentioned including the MTA do receive state and local funding. However, unlike the other cities that you've mentioned, the MTA also owns and operates 2 tunnels and 6 bridges. They charge $3.50 one-way, or 7 bucks round trip. Of that, close to half of the money collected at the bridges and tunnels goes right into the subway system and not into the budget for the bridges.
Supporting the subway is one of the excuses that the MTA has used to raise tolls on those bridges and tunnels. Saying, "If you don't want to ride the subway, but instead want to contribute to the traffic mess, then you are going to be penalized." The penalty being, you help to support the subway.
Also the MTA keeps fares on the LIRR & Metro North, lower than they probably should, since they want to encourage people to ride the train in rather than ride. While there is some logic to that, the other side of the coin is that as a city resident the MTA is using some of my money to help the commuters instead of me. So they are paying less to use the same transit services within the city as I am, since the city doesn’t tax them. If they were paying a larger share of the commuter train costs, then it would be more equitable.
Perhaps the biggest thing that has people up in arms around here is the fact that just a year ago the MTA was sitting on a rather large surplus. People want to know where that money disappeared to. It wasn't spent fixing the subway after the WTC, the Feds paid for that. It just seems to have miraculously vanished, after the elections and right before contract talks with the union.
On the other hand, there are ways for people to get the fare below $1.50. I for example always buy at least a $15 dollar metrocard, since any amount over $15 gets you a 10% bonus. So if you buy a $15 dollar card, which at a buck fifty a trip would equal 10 trips, the 10% bonus makes your card worth 16.50 and you get one extra trip for a total of 11. This comes out to about a $1.35 average per trip.
One can also buy the unlimited ride metrocards, the one-day funpass, a 7-day card, or a monthly card. These cards also provide nice discounts, reducing your fare below the normal $1.50.
I also agree with some of the other things that you've said, including the fact that we do have a vast and extensive system. One can ride it anywhere for only a buck fifty, unlike the DC system where you pay for the distance that you travel.