Rail Users Ireland Forum

Rail Users Ireland Forum (http://www.railusers.ie/forum/index.php)
-   Events, Happenings and Media (http://www.railusers.ie/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=25)
-   -   [article] Free travel payment based on 1973 survey, committee hears (http://www.railusers.ie/forum/showthread.php?t=14729)

Mark Gleeson 15-03-2013 08:23

[article] Free travel payment based on 1973 survey, committee hears
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Irish Times
Annual payments of some € 61m to CIÉ for the State’s free travel scheme is based on a passenger estimate from 1973, the secretary general of the Department of Social Protection said today.
Niamh O’Donoghue was speaking at the examination of her department’s accounts by the Public Accounts Committee.
Committee chairman John McGuinness expressed shock at learning of the 30 year lag in data during the meeting.
Ms O’Donoghue told the committee that the department had “absolute figures” on eligibility, in that 1.1m people that qualify for the scheme.
Mr McGuinness asked if she was satisfied it was value for money.
The benefits available for people on the free travel and the number of beneficiaries had increased at no cost, she said. CIÉ also believed they were being underpaid, she added.
“I am shocked you continue pay the company money and do not know the numbers” that use it, Mr McGuinness said.
The public services card being introduced by the Department would allow usage to be monitored, she said..

© http://www.irishtimes.com/news/free-...ears-1.1326052

Colm Moore 15-03-2013 12:21

Maybe, just maybe, I'm wrong, but wasn't 1973 a total of 40 years ago - or have I been over-estimating my age all these years?

James Howard 15-03-2013 15:44

The staggering thing here is that 25% of the country's population gets their travel needs provided for 61 million euro. At the rate of an annual "All Service" pass (€5340.00), this would actually cost €5.8 billion!

All right, so a 50% bulk discount is somewhat fair - what do Eircom charge the government for the roughly 25% of all landlines paid for by the state?

But at that rate, all of Irish Rail's money worries would be over. We would have TGVs to Westport on that sort of budget.

Mark Gleeson 15-03-2013 15:48

Its true that if Irish Rail got even 75% of the fares due their financial troubles would be over

Those with long memories will recall that the Luas was not going to accept the free travel pass and due to howls of complaint a deal was done

I'm guessing the RPA cut a far more realistic deal since they had leverage at the time

Jamie2k9 16-03-2013 01:07

http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakin...se-588072.html

Thomas Ralph 16-03-2013 18:06

They've been threatening to clamp down on it since two Popes ago. As long as the situation persists that the passes are crap bits of paper with no general obligation to have a photo ID, anyone can use most passes, even before you start on with the counterfeit passes in circulation.

The powers that be simply need to declare that as of 31 December 2013 all current passes are void and you have nine months to attend one of a wide range of locations in person to have your identity verified and photo taken and get a new pass in the form of a plastic card posted out to you. Those with companion passes and disability passes would need to supply evidence that their circumstances continue to require them. The new passes could be equipped with Leap-style chips to work the ticket gates at railway stations. Arrangements could be made for those who would experience hardship to apply by post.

Mark Gleeson 16-03-2013 18:11

The problem here is any crack down will only last until someone starts to moan to the equally tribunal that 'they' are not being treated equally

Thomas Ralph 16-03-2013 20:50

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Gleeson (Post 71047)
The problem here is any crack down will only last until someone starts to moan to the equally tribunal that 'they' are not being treated equally

They're being treated far more favourably than someone younger/not disabled :mad:

longword 17-03-2013 11:28

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Gleeson (Post 71047)
The problem here is any crack down will only last until someone starts to moan to the equally tribunal that 'they' are not being treated equally

Then the Government can do exactly what they did with the Mobility Allowance. Cancel the scheme entirely with immediate effect pending implementation of a replacement scheme that works and can pass as 'fair'.

Mark Gleeson 17-03-2013 17:45

The mobility allowance was small fry, 700,000+ passes is a huge number and while cancelling the scheme is nice from an accountancy point of view it doesn't help anyone

Irish Rail lose 30 million in revenue overnight and the government would probably last a week before they would either reinstate or Enda would be heading for the Aras for a dissolution

Thomas J Stamp 19-03-2013 14:24

with the new SW pass which is coming out soon they could surely solve this system.

haddockman 19-03-2013 14:49

The new cards are already available but it could take 5 years to convert all the DSP passholders and in the interim the old passes would remain valid.

Colm Moore 19-03-2013 22:07

Quote:

Originally Posted by haddockman (Post 71067)
The new cards are already available but it could take 5 years to convert all the DSP passholders and in the interim the old passes would remain valid.

Actually, things can be done much quicker than that.

It seems that each Social Welfare Local Office (not branch office) is expected to sign 200 people up to the new Public Services Card (PSC) each week. There appears to be 50 such offices, although distribution is somewhat uneven - 5 in each of Kerry and Mayo, but only 4 in Cork - despite 3 times the population and twice the land area.

That is about 509,600 maximum that can be processed each year, with a population of a bit more than 4,500,000 it will take more than 10 years to record everyone, when you account for the more than 500,000 people that will be born or immigrate in that time.

However, there are only 1.1 million FTP pass holders and many of them (those living in an urban area) are required to have ID already. So potentially they could have it done in two years or less. However, the FTP isn't the only source of loss, so all active welfare claimants are being moved to the PSC.

Separately, I think the DSP productivity levels leave something to de desired. I signed up for a card voluntarily and it seems that it takes 3 front-office staff to process those 200 cards per week, although I suspect the back-office requirement is modest. Some better management, streamlining and economies of scale would work wonders.

haddockman 20-03-2013 02:02

I didn't think you could sign up for a card without being invited by the DSP?

shweeney 21-03-2013 12:39

Quote:

Originally Posted by James Howard (Post 71040)
The staggering thing here is that 25% of the country's population gets their travel needs provided for 61 million euro. At the rate of an annual "All Service" pass (€5340.00), this would actually cost €5.8 billion!

All right, so a 50% bulk discount is somewhat fair - what do Eircom charge the government for the roughly 25% of all landlines paid for by the state?

But at that rate, all of Irish Rail's money worries would be over. We would have TGVs to Westport on that sort of budget.

Slightly bogus calculations - someone would only buy an annual pass if they knew they were going to use it (and frequently). Pensioners (who afaik make up the bulk of the free travel scheme) get their pass whether they plan to use it or not. My folks have free travel but rarely use it.

Maybe they should charge a nominal fee for the pass (€100?), or as suggested by many make it a discount card rather than a free pass.

James Howard 21-03-2013 18:00

I was being a bit of a smart-ass on the 50% suggestion, but 1% is equally absurd. You can be very sure that Eircom get a lot more than 50% of the retail rate for a phone line that in a lot of cases will go equally rarely used.

I think the fair solution would be to add a surcharge to tickets amounting to something around 20% of face value when using any peak services. This could be waived for travel for medical appointments and other state services. There is no real marginal cost for off-peak travel where the services have to be provided anyway, so it makes sense that the status quo should continue off-peak.

However, doing anything about this is politically extraordinarily difficult due to the face that the 1.1 million pass-holders makes up about half of an election turnout.

ACustomer 21-03-2013 20:05

The scheme costs about €70m and there are 1.1m beneficiaries. The cost is less than one-fifth of one percent of all Government expenditure, and abolishing it would severely p*ss off about one-third of the electorate. So any Government which really interferes with this has a death-wish.

Mind you, given some of the things people think up.,.... (Cyprus?)

Mark Gleeson 21-03-2013 22:42

Then lets imagine the CIE group tomorrow morning, say double the payment or we will refuse all passes from 1st April?

And before anyone laughs, the doomsday scenario has been worked out by both sides


All times are GMT. The time now is 23:44.

Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.