Skip to main content

Gate latching ensures customers pay metro fares

Fare accountability, improved passenger data and efficiency are all expected to improve since gate latching began in the TAP universal payment system designed and integrated by Cubic Transportation Systems for the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro). The aim is to help ensure customers use their TA car to pay fares. Gate latching ushers in a new era of partnership between LA Metro with Metrolink and its municipal operators to create a seamless regional transit network bound by
July 3, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Fare accountability, improved passenger data and efficiency are all expected to improve since gate latching began in the TAP universal payment system designed and integrated by 378 Cubic Transportation Systems for the 1795 Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro).  The aim is to help ensure customers use their TA car to pay fares.

Gate latching ushers in a new era of partnership between LA Metro with Metrolink and its municipal operators to create a seamless regional transit network bound by TAP technology throughout Los Angeles County, the agency’s vision since the universal fare system was awarded to Cubic in 2002.  
       
“Latching means that the Metro rail stations will be seamlessly connected to stations and bus lines all over the region and an accurate method of accounting for fares is in place,” said Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa.  “With added accountability, we’ll have better data that will help us tailor services and transit demand.”   

Metro CEO Art Leahy noted that, “Currently, we send people to physically count riders, a time-consuming and expensive process.  With TAP, we get real time, comprehensive data the Metro Operations team can use to adjust service to meet passenger demand.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Report identifies Nashville region transportation needs
    January 30, 2013
    The results of an IBM study of transportation in Nashville and the surrounding region to accelerate its move to better, safer and more reliable transportation for the Nashville region’s citizens released by the Transit Alliance of middle Tennessee and IBM pinpoints areas that could benefit from immediate investment and would help relieve current stress. It also identifies long-term initiatives that could help spur future economic growth and livability in the region. The Transit Alliance commissioned IBM to
  • Moscow Metro ticketing: your face here
    January 18, 2022
    Metro users in Russian capital Moscow no longer need a card to pay for travel – they just need their face. So does the system actually work? And what about security concerns? ITS International sent Moscow Metro a series of questions – and here are the answers…
  • New Haven shows small can be beautiful
    October 22, 2014
    Connecticut’s new administration is using smart policy and ITS solutions to bridge social divides. Andrew Bardin Williams investigates. With only 130,000 residents, New Haven can hardly be called a metropolis. Measuring less than 502km (18 square miles), the city is huddled against the coast, squeezed between two mountains (appropriately called East Rock and West Rock) that, at 111m and 213m (366ft and 700ft) respectively, can hardly be called mountains. The airport is small and has limited service, and th
  • Cubic’s Ventra system achieves one billion transactions in Chicago
    May 19, 2016
    Cubic Transportation Systems’ (CTS) Ventra, the account-based open payment system launched in 2013 for the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) and suburban bus operator Pace, has processed more than one billion account-based journeys. CTA, with daily ridership of 1.6 million journeys, is the first major transit system in North America to implement account-based open payment and is Cubic’s first large-scale deployment of its NextAccount technology. Ventra supports both account-based processing through an a