By Robert Thomson
Sunday, March 14, 2010
In "The Paradox of Choice," author Barry Schwartz makes the case that more can be less. Sometimes, he writes, we have too many options for our own good. Rather than being thrilled with the range of possibilities before us, we become anxious about sorting through them all and making the right choice.
Metro riders now find themselves neatly bound within those pages. Never have they been presented with so many choices directly affecting their travels as the transit authority's board tries to balance its budget.
What we wished for
In previous rounds of transit budgeting, the Metro board has sought comment on a narrowed-down set of fare increases or service cuts. Riders chafed at that. Bring us in on the ground floor, they told the board. Board members listened to them and have released for discussion just about every budget-balancing idea they have heard of.
The list of options already was pages long when board members told the staff to look again to make sure the document included every concept that was legal and technically feasible from any responsible source.
More on:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/13/AR2010031301964.html?hpid=dynamiclead-------------------------
As a metro rider, I only have one thing to say: Two bucks, either-way, regardless of rush-hour or off-peak times. BE DONE WITH IT.