Universal transit pass
In North America, a Universal Transit Pass (U-Pass)—also known as a Universal Access Transit Pass—is a program that provides students who are enrolled in participating post-secondary institutions with unlimited access to local transit.[1]
Programs are funded through mandatory fees that either eligible students pay for each term in which they are registered or are included in the students' tuition. For example, the University of Washington and the U-Pass program in Chicago have mandatory U-Pass fees.[2][3] Fees are transferred to the local transit authority to fund the required transit service. Because fees are collected from a large participant base, U-Pass prices are lower than the amount students would otherwise pay for monthly passes or tickets over the course of a term. The U-Pass price charged to students depends on a variety of factors which differ among municipalities, transit systems and post-secondary institutions.
Advantages and disadvantages
[edit]Potential benefits
[edit]U-Pass programs offer students a way to lower their transportation costs while at school and also benefit the local community and the environment. U-Pass programs can provide the following benefits:
- Save students money — a U-Pass costs less than the amount students would otherwise pay for regular monthly passes or tickets over the course of a term
- Reduce demand for parking on campus (thus less resources spent on constructing parking facilities and more valuable land available for university development) — the more incentive there is for students to take public transportation, the less students there will be who drive to school in their own vehicles.
- Improve the transit system that the university's students and employees rely upon — U-Pass programs often allow for more bus routes and/or better transit service to the institution
- Reduce traffic congestion around the campus and local community — the more people willing to take the bus to university, the less traffic there will be in and around the area
- Contribute to fewer emissions and a reduction to greenhouse gas emissions (consistent with the American College and University President's Climate Commitment)
- Stimulate public transportation ridership, particularly during off-peak, non-commuting hours, thereby filling excess capacity
- Provide a regular and reliable revenue source for transit authorities that may otherwise be low on funding
- Create a sense of brand loyalty and transit travel patterns among students who will be prospective customers in their post-college years
- Reduce the cost burden for local taxpayers to fund public transportation
Potential costs
[edit]U-Pass programs that require a 100% adoption rate by universities may subsidize the U-Pass at the expense of students who drive, walk, or bike to school and who do not use transit to get to other locations.[4][5] Some U-Pass programs offer exemptions for students with mobility restrictions and students who live out of the program range, such as exemptions for students who live in Quebec but commute to school in Ottawa, Ontario.[5]
Other disadvantages include:
- Not able to benefit from the lower cost of U-Pass if students are travelling to school with a different transit system that does not receive U-Pass funding
- Additional load puts more strain on existing resources[6]
- Being charged while taking a term off (e.g. vacation, study abroad, work out of town), courses not offered on campus (e.g. distant learning, graduate thesis, research projects), or being an exchange student
Canada
[edit]Thirty academic institutions throughout Canada currently participate in a U-Pass program.[7]
In 1973, Queen's University at Kingston implemented the "Bus-It" program with Kingston Transit, making it the first university in Canada to implement a universal transit pass program.[8] Nearby St. Lawrence College also participates in this program. Students are required to pay for the service as part of student activity fees.
City/region | Transit system | Institution | Institution specifics | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Brandon, MB | Brandon Transit | Brandon University | The Brandon University Students' Union offers a UPass program with Brandon Transit. The UPass was last negotiated in 2015 at $16 increasing by $1/year for 5 years.[9] | |
Assiniboine Community College | The Assiniboine Community College Student Association offers all ACC students a free bus pass with Brandon Transit.[10] | |||
Winnipeg, MB | Winnipeg Transit[11] | University of Manitoba | U-Passes at the U of M are provided through the University of Manitoba Students' Union for undergraduates[12] and the U of M Graduate Students' Association for graduate students.[13] | U-Pass has been offered to full-time students in Winnipeg as of at least the 2017/18 school year, and are issued on reloadable "Peggo cards" that are preloaded with a semester pass. Upon obtaining a U-Pass, a validation sticker is placed on to the user's student ID.[11] |
University of Winnipeg | U-Passes at the U of W are provided through the University of Winnipeg Students' Association.[14] | |||
Halifax, NS | Halifax Transit | Saint Mary's University | In 2003, St. Mary's University instituted a UPass program. | |
Dalhousie University | In 2006, Dalhousie negotiated extra routes to the university for their new UPass. | |||
NSCAD University | NSCAD created their own UPass program a few years after Dalhousie. | |||
Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) | NSCC created their own UPass program a few years after Dalhousie. | |||
Hamilton, ON[15] | GO Transit | McMaster University | Through McMaster Student Union | |
Mohawk College | Through Mohawk Students Association | |||
Redeemer University College | Through Redeemer University Student Association | |||
Oshawa, ON (RM of Durham) | Durham Region Transit and DRT-GO[16] | Durham College | Mandatory U-Pass | A U-Pass is mandatory for all students of Durham College, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, and Trent University Durham GTA and are included with full-time student fees. This pass offers unlimited travel seven days a week on Durham Region Transit services and certain GO Transit routes operating within Durham Region. It previously offered travel on GO Transit buses travelling into and out of Durham Region; this was discontinued in 2013. |
University of Ontario Institute of Technology | Mandatory U-Pass | |||
Trent University Durham GTA | Mandatory U-Pass | |||
Ottawa, ON (National Capital Region) | OC Transpo (including O-Train) and STO[17] | Carleton University | The U-Pass program at Carleton is the result of successful referendums in 2012 and 2016 organized by the Carleton University Students’ Association (CUSA) and the Graduate Students’ Association (GSA).[18] Following the introduction of U-Pass at the university, driving decreased by 33%.[19] At least one newspaper has reported that students at Carleton faced overcrowded buses as a result of the U-Pass.[20] |
|
University of Ottawa | The U-Pass program at U of Ottawa is provided by the Student Federation of the University of Ottawa (SFUO).
Following the introduction of U-Pass at the university, car use remained unchanged, thus the gains of transit-use came primarily from students who walk/bike. This raised some doubts at the university as to the environmental and social benefits of the U-Pass, considering that walking and cycling produces no pollution, whereas bus use causes pollution. Some students at U of Ottawa have taken SFUO to court in order to recover U-Pass funds after allegations arose that the SFUO did not properly administer the U-Pass referendum question.[24] | |||
Saint Paul University | U-Pass is supported by the Saint Paul University Student Association[25] | |||
Algonquin College | In 2014, the Algonquin Students' Association sponsored a U-Pass Referendum. In March 2015, the U-Pass Agreement was formally signed with the City of Ottawa for the upcoming academic year.[26] | |||
London, ON | London Transit | University of Western Ontario | In 2012, University of Western Ontario and Fanshawe College created a UPass program. | |
Fanshawe College | ||||
Mississauga, ON | MiWay[27] | University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM)[28] | The U-Pass program at UTM is provided by the UTM Students’ Union (UTMSU) and the UTM Association of Graduate Students.[29]
UTM introduced its U-Pass program in the fall of 2007, offering full-time UTM students unlimited ridership on MiWay during the September-to-April school year. Undergraduates and UTM-affiliated graduate students are charged a mandatory fee each fall.[28] The program has proved to be very popular at the university and has since been extended to the summer and to include part-time students.[30][31] |
|
Thunder Bay, ON | Thunder Bay Transit | Lakehead University[32] | Given to all undergraduate students enrolled in at least 3.75 FCE. Other students have the option to opt in through LUSU.[32] | Provided through a sticker issued annually, spanning from 1 September to 31 August.[33] Usually a grace period is provided in September for students to update to change U-Pass stickers. |
Confederation College[33] | Mandatory for all students in Confederation College. Only students living outside of service area is allowed to opt out, only after providing proof of address.[33] | |||
Waterloo, ON (RM of Waterloo)[34] | Grand River Transit | Wilfrid Laurier University | Both universities in Waterloo have implemented U-Pass programs in their tuition fees, allowing full-time students year-round unlimited travel on the Grand River Transit bus system anywhere in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo using their student card.[35] | |
University of Waterloo | ||||
Vancouver, BC (Metro Vancouver) | TransLink | Introduced in 2010, U-Pass BC provides post-secondary students access to the TransLink system in Metro Vancouver, which includes bus, SeaBus, and SkyTrain services, as well as discounts on West Coast Express. Privately funded post-secondary schools are not currently eligible to join the U-Pass BC Program; it is only available to public post-secondary schools within the Metro Vancouver region.[36] | ||
Victoria, BC (Greater Victoria) | Victoria Regional Transit System (BC Transit)[37] | University of Victoria | At UVic, the U-Pass was approved in a referendum by the University of Victoria Students' Society (UVSS) in 2000. The UVic student card is encoded with the U-Pass privileges and the student can have their card encoded at a U-Pass activation kiosk. | Residents who are 13 to 18 years of age can apply for a free annual BC Transit Youth U-Pass (12 years and under always ride free).[38] Youth U-Passes are also available for Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations youths, St. Andrew's Regional High School students, and Artemis Place Secondary students.[39] |
Royal Roads | ||||
Camosun College | ||||
Kamloops, BC | Kamloops Transit System (BC Transit)[40] | Thompson Rivers University | The TRUSU UPASS is an unlimited transit pass for the City of Kamloops provided to every student enrolled at Thompson Rivers University. The UPASS also provides a 50% discount to a monthly membership to the Tournament Capital Centre and free access to the Canada Games Aquatic Centre.[41] | |
Edmonton, AB (Edmonton Metro Region) | University of Alberta[43] |
| ||
MacEwan University | ||||
Northern Alberta Institute of Technology | ||||
NorQuest College | ||||
Concordia University of Edmonton (CUE)[44] | Beginning January 2024[45] | |||
Regina, SK | Regina Transit[46] | University of Regina | The U-Pass was approved by the student body at URegina in a referendum that took place in March 2015. This referendum gave URegina Students' Union (URSU) a mandate to negotiate a U-Pass deal with the City of Regina which would cost between $70-$90 per student. After several months of negotiation with the City of Regina, URSU, and Regina Transit came to an agreement, which was approved by the Regina City Council in September 2015.[47] | |
Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies | ||||
Sherbrooke, QC | Société de transport de Sherbrooke (STS) | Université de Sherbrooke | Université de Sherbrooke started its universal transit pass in 2004. A deal was struck between the STS and two students associations: the Fédération étudiante de l'Université de Sherbrooke (FEUS), and the Regroupement des étudiantes et étudiants de maîtrise, de diplôme et de doctorat de l'Université de Sherbrooke (REMDUS), which allows for students to take the bus simply by showing their student ID card.[48] The same year, the university received the Transport 2000 prize for this achievement.[49] |
United States
[edit]137 academic institutions throughout the United States currently participate in a U-Pass program,[7] including the following.
University of Washington, King County, Washington
[edit]One of the first U-Pass programs in the United States was started at the University of Washington (UW) in conjunction with King County Metro (KCM) in the Seattle area. This program began in 1991 and now offers students access to most public transportation services in the Puget Sound region. The program was initially introduced as a short-term pilot program, only the largest transit operator in the Seattle area, KCM and the main UW campus in Seattle were involved. The pilot was so successful that it became permanent; participation is now mandatory for students at all three UW campuses, and six additional transit agencies have joined the program. Students access the bus service by using their university ID card. The UW U-Pass program is paid for mostly through a student and activity fee of $76 per quarter. The fee is highly discounted and includes full fare coverage on a number of metro, commuter, shuttle, vanpool, and car-sharing transit options.[50]
Participation is optional for faculty and staff, who pay $136/quarter for the program. The university, in turn, pays transit operators on a per trip basis according to a negotiated trip rate. The negotiated trip rate varies by operator, but is lower than the cash fare. Studies of UW's U-Pass program demonstrate that since the program began, drive alone commuting has decreased by some 38%. The U-Pass program resulted in a significant increase in demand for transit services and over time as ridership has increased, so has transit service to the campus. The program also generates approximately $7.5 million annually for King County Metro alone.[51]
Chicago, Illinois
[edit]The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) launched its U-PASS program in 1998. Within three years, 22 colleges and universities had joined the program, by entering into a contractual agreement with CTA to provide the U-Pass to all full-time students. The CTA currently contracts with 52 area colleges and universities to offer all students discounted rides for a semester.[52]
All enrolled students are required to purchase the U-Pass. The pass enables the students to make unlimited trips on all CTA buses and trains during the academic year. Students pay for the pass as part of the regular tuition and fees assessed by the participating institutions. The institutions are charged for the U-PASS based on a daily per student charge that was initially set at 50 cents and increased on a regular basis. Since the fall of 2013, the new rate is $1.07 per day, or about $15 per semester. On a monthly basis, students save a minimum of $66 per month over the full-fare price. U-Pass provides more than 35 million rides annually for students.[53][54]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Han, Dahai, Jie Yu, and Edward Beimborn. 2019. "Elements of Successful Universal Student Transit Pass Programs from Planning to Implementation: A Benchmark Study." Transportation Research Record 2673(4):833-43. doi:10.1177/0361198119834916.
- ^ "University of Washington: Finance & Facilities - Tuition Components". University of Washington. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "Chicago Transit Authority: U-Pass". Chicago Transit Authority. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "Winnipeg student associations push for yearly transit pass". The Uniter. 3 Oct 2012. Retrieved 9 Oct 2012.
- ^ a b Raaymakers, Peter. "Ignorance about U-Pass is stoking the controversy". Spacing Ottawa. Retrieved 9 Oct 2012.
- ^ "University bus passes cheap? Depends who you ask". Guelph Mercury. June 9, 2011.
- ^ a b "Universal Access Transit Passes". The Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education. Archived from the original on 24 October 2015. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "History of Sustainability at Queen's". Queen's University. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
- ^ "U-Pass". Brandon University Students' Union.
- ^ "ACC Housing and Transportation".
- ^ a b "U-Pass". winnipegtransit.com. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass". UMSU. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass | UMGSA". www.umgsa.org. 2017-09-18. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass « The UWSA". The UWSA. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "University and College Bus Passes". City of Hamilton. 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass Framework". www.durhamregiontransit.com. 2020-08-26. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass | OC Transpo". www.octranspo.com. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass - Carleton University". carleton.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ a b "OC Transpo Marketing Plan, City of Ottawa, 2011" (PDF). OC Transpo. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
- ^ Mathew, Bonita (15 Oct 2010). "Bus overcrowding blamed on U-Pass". Centretown News.
- ^ a b "U-Pass". OC Transpo. Retrieved 9 Oct 2012.
- ^ Pagliaro, Jennifer (28 Jan 2011). "U-Pass gets a chance in Ottawa". Macleans On Campus. Retrieved 9 Oct 2012.
- ^ a b "Transit". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 9 Oct 2012.
- ^ "Students sue over U-Pass". The Charlatan. January 12, 2011. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
- ^ "U-Pass - Home".
- ^ "About". Algonquin College of Applied Arts and Technology. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "Transit passes". City of Mississauga. 2020-01-29. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ a b "U-Pass | Student Affairs & Services". www.utm.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "U-Pass – UTMSU". Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ Clay, Chris (May 10, 2011). "Students make MiWay their way". Mississauga News. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ Clay, Chris (May 7, 2012). "Students have it their way on MiWay". Missassauga News. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ a b "Lakehead University Student Union - Unlimited Bus Pass". lusu.ca. Retrieved 2024-05-19.
- ^ a b c Administrator, Site. "Universal Bus Pass (UPASS) | Confederation College". www.confederationcollege.ca. Retrieved 2024-05-19.
- ^ "University College students". www.grt.ca. 2021-04-19. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "University Students". Grand River Transit. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
- ^ "U-Pass BC". www.translink.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "BC Transit - U-PASS". www.bctransit.com. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "City of Victoria U-PASS". Retrieved June 10, 2024.
- ^ "BC Transit - Youth U-PASS Program".
- ^ "BC Transit - U-PASS". www.bctransit.com. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "UPASS". 13 August 2013.
- ^ a b Edmonton, City of (2021-05-07). "Universal Transit Pass FAQ". www.edmonton.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "Universal Transit Pass (U-Pass) | Graduate Students' Association". www.ualberta.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "u-pass". OURCSA. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ^ "U Pass FQA". OURCSA. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ^ "City of Regina | Fares & Passes". City of Regina. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "UPass – University of Regina Students' Union".
- ^ "Transport en commun pour les étudiants - Développement durable - Université de Sherbrooke".
- ^ "Transport 2000 remet son prix au recteur Béchard". February 2005.
- ^ "University of Washington: Commuter Services - Student U-Pass". University of Washington. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "University of Washington/King County Metro: 2008 U-Pass Survey Summary Report" (PDF). Opinion Research Northwest. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "U-Pass". Chicago Transit Authority. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "Chicago Transit Authority Renews, Expands Popular U-Pass Program". Chicago Transit Authority. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ^ "Transit Cooperative Research Program: Fares, Policies, Structures and Technologies: Update" (PDF). Transportation Research Board. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
External links
[edit]Canada
- BUSU U-Pass
- ACCSA U-Pass
- Transport Canada
- UVic U-Pass
- UBC U-Pass
- SFU U-Pass
- SMU U-Pass
- Calgary Transit U-Pass
- City of Edmonton U-Pass
- Sherbrooke University U-Pass
United States