Makes sense to me. In practice they'd probably allocate overhead cost such as vehicles too.
On the flip side, Metro's current security budget for 170 completely, utterly useless guards could take a big dent out of that. Additionally, fine revenue would, I assume, go to the jurisdiction in which it was made.
I agree about turnstiles. It's just not a magic bullet. Even if you buy Stenger's rationale that it's much cheaper than $100M to build out, just having a valid fare doesn't mean you eliminate crime. Just look at how many people are selling stolen transfers and digging through trash cans to get tickets. And it's not like criminals can't just walk up and buy a ticket and then do whatever they want on the train.
On the flip side, Metro's current security budget for 170 completely, utterly useless guards could take a big dent out of that. Additionally, fine revenue would, I assume, go to the jurisdiction in which it was made.
I agree about turnstiles. It's just not a magic bullet. Even if you buy Stenger's rationale that it's much cheaper than $100M to build out, just having a valid fare doesn't mean you eliminate crime. Just look at how many people are selling stolen transfers and digging through trash cans to get tickets. And it's not like criminals can't just walk up and buy a ticket and then do whatever they want on the train.




