Politics & Government

VTA Approves $1.3M to Reduce Fare for Low-Income Riders

According to local community organization, low-income riders in Santa Clara County spend more of their income on public transportation than in any other Bay Area county.

The Metropolitan Transportation Commission has awarded the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority $1.3 million for a two-year pilot program offering reduced fares for low-income customers.

The two-year program will begin later this year with help from Santa Clara County's Social Services Agency.

Local organization People Acting in Community Together raised the issue to multiple city and county officials during a community meeting in September.

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Officials from the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Board of Directors who attended were Santa Clara County Supervisors Dave Cortese and Ken Yeager, San Jose City Councilman Sam Liccardo and Mountain View City Councilwoman Margaret Abe-Koga. Cortese and Liccardo are also commissioners for the MTC.

Currently, a monthly pass on the VTA system costs $70. A single ride costs $2.

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"Low-income people in Santa Clara County pay the largest percentage of their income on transportation compared to any other county in the Bay Area—over 33 percent," said PACT member Sandy Hietala in a report released last year titled "Moving Silicon Valley Forward: Housing, Transit, & Traffic at a Crossroad."

The program will be funded through the MTC's Transit Incentive Program.
          


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