Yeah but theres a catch as well - the timetables/schedules are scrapped too. So you wont know when will the bus arrive or will it even arrive at that day.
It doesn’t sound great when you realize you cant really enjoy a free bus ride when theres no bus coming.
Eh I wish - Im not sure which media can be considered as reputable sources in Serbia, but you can find more info here. Just use a translator or something.
Tl;dr - they’ll basically switch to a dynamic plan which indicates when circa the bus will arrive, but this is just a ploy to hide that busses are not arriving on time or at all.
I wouldn’t praise this move at all, it is not doing anything good for those living in Belgrade.
At least they even have decent transit. So many places in north america have never on time hourly bus service that takes 3 times as long, or buy a car. Thats it. Those are the only options unless you have the time and capability to walk 7 kms one way to your grocer, and another 10 to your employer.
D-ticket was well intentioned but a bad idea from the start.
Discalimer: not a German and I only used it once (well twice because it was impossible to buy just one month)
The administrative overhead of centrally gathering all the funds and then portioning them to individual agencies must be hell. And according to what criteria? It makes the responsibility for funding even more murky than it is.
Regional tickets also have to keep existing so it means the entire old ticketing system must remain functional even though few people are using it.
Germany led the way on tariff integration with it's "Verkehrsverbund". The difference being that service planning and ticketing were done by the same agency. Involving the central government doesn't seem like a good idea, sooner or later national politics will start influencing local transit.
First time it ever occurred to me, but now that I've read it, of course! Why wouldn't every city make this free?! Solving transportation woes is a surefire way to stoke your economy, and removing payments is going to make public transportation more efficient and cheaper to maintain (no ticket kiosks getting vandalized, no payment processors to pay). Seems like a win win for any congested city.
I see what you're saying here, but how does someone throw away a free train ride or use too many transit trips they don't need? I get sometimes homeless people will sometimes try to use transit as a place to sleep, but decent security and staff could easily handle that if it becomes problematic. I think the freedom of movement and environmental benefits are worth dealing with a couple of hiccups in free transit.
honestly when it comes to holidays the best part is having a cheap and easily navigable public transport system so you can get around to do all your cool shit painlessly. Serbia had suddenly become an interesting prospect!
Meenwhile, Nato europe about to make people into soylent green.
This is not only an efficient path to decongestion, and assiciated productivity improvement, plus poverty benefit, it us also social harmony instead of pig fucker liars vs nazi divisiveness.