File #: 2020-0386   
Type: Informational Report Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 5/27/2020 In control: Executive Management Committee
On agenda: 6/18/2020 Final action:
Title: RECEIVE AND FILE status report on the recently initiated Comprehensive Pricing Study.
Sponsors: Operations, Safety, and Customer Experience Commit, Executive Management Committee
Indexes: Access Services Inc., Budgeting, Comprehensive Pricing Study, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), Governance, Informational Report, Metro Equity Platform, Metro Vision 2028 Plan, Paratransit services, Policy, Race, Research, Ridership, Security, Shared mobility, Strategic planning, Surveys, Vehicle sharing
Attachments: 1. Presentation
Date Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsAudio
No records to display.

Meeting_Body

OPERATIONS, SAFETY AND CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE COMMITTEE

EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE

JUNE 18, 2020

 

Subject

SUBJECT:                     COMPREHENSIVE PRICING STUDY

 

Action

ACTION:                     RECEIVE AND FILE

 

Heading

RECOMMENDATION

 

Title

RECEIVE AND FILE status report on the recently initiated Comprehensive Pricing Study.

 

Issue
ISSUE

 

This is the first official communication to the Board regarding Metro’s Comprehensive Pricing Study. The purpose is to report on progress to date and highlight key elements and expectations of the study.

 

Background

BACKGROUND

 

Vision 2028 identifies pricing as an important lever towards achieving Metro’s strategic goals, including the target of doubling the share of non-single-occupant vehicle trips.  Vision 2028 directs staff to conduct a comprehensive transportation system pricing study to determine options for meeting goals of revenue, equity, security, ridership, and user experience, and to recommend pricing policies arising from the study to the Metro Board. 

 

The Comprehensive Pricing Study is timely with the work of the COVID-19 Recovery Task Force and the recently approved Board Motion 2020-0355 (Emergency Relief: Full-Price Passes).

 

Discussion
DISCUSSION

 

The pricing of Metro’s suite of transportation services has been developed at different points in time to meet different service and policy objectives. With the adoption of Vision 2028, these pricing policies may no longer be optimally aligned to support Metro’s strategic goals. A comprehensive review will identify opportunities for appropriate change.

 

Study Objectives

The study objectives are:

1.                     Review current pricing policies (including incentive and discount programs) for transportation services provided by Metro including the following:

                     Metro conventional bus and rail transit

                     Metro MicroTransit

                     Metro on-demand ridesharing (e.g. Mobility-on-Demand)

                     Metro Bike Share

                     Metro Vanpool

                     Transportation parking or access on or adjacent to Metro properties (e.g. personal motor vehicles, scooters, Metro Bike Hub, bike lockers)

                     Metro ExpressLanes

 

2.                     Develop a complete understanding of the capital and operating costs, and non-financial elements, associated with Metro’s transit fare and user fee collection and enforcement systems for its transportation services.

 

3.                     Identify and evaluate pricing policy options relative to the goals of revenue, equity, security, ridership, and user experience. Additional considerations may include the environment/health, viability (e.g. technology, resource requirements) and governance (e.g. coordination and integration with municipal transportation services and pricing policies). Trade-offs will be identified. 

 

4.                     Present pricing policy recommendations to the Metro Board of Directors.

 

The study team will coordinate with other concurrent Metro initiatives that have pricing, equity, and customer experience elements, including the COVID-19 Recovery Task Force, Traffic Reduction Study, NextGen Bus Plan, and Long Range Transportation Plan. Where appropriate, the study will identify relevant guidance for the pricing of non-Metro services, such as municipal transit and parking, and services partly funded by Metro in partnership with other agencies (e.g. Access Services paratransit and the Metro Freeway Service Patrol).

 

Study Principles

The conduct of the study is grounded in the following core principles:

                     Evidence-Based: data, evidence, and robust deliberations will guide the development of appropriate pricing policies

 

                     Inclusive: the study will create space for involvement by all affected departments at Metro as well as agency partners, and will create opportunities for meaningful dialogues and engagement with communities throughout Los Angeles County

 

                     Transparent: the process and work will be undertaken in a manner that is visible to internal and external stakeholders

 

                     Traceable: the process and work will be documented so that decision-points can be traced back to a key data point or deliberation

 

                     Consensus-Driven: recognizing that pricing is a value-laden topic, the study will succeed only if there is broad-based consensus on potential new pricing policies.

 

 

 

Study Governance

Because pricing touches on nearly all aspects of Metro’s business, an ‘all-of-agency’ approach is required to identify and implement the appropriate pricing policies. Departments ranging from the Office of Management & Budget to System Security & Law Enforcement are key partners and their contributions will be fundamental to the success of this initiative. The following project advisory groups will be established:

 

 

Executive Steering Group

Technical Working Group

Role

Strategic oversight and coordination; review findings

Technical advice; data provision; review analysis and findings

Membership

Members or designates of the Senior Leadership Team

Staff nominated by Senior Leadership Team

Meeting Frequency

Key milestones

Weekly to Bi-Weekly

 

Further, a communications and engagement framework will be prepared to ensure in-depth engagement with residents, workers, and employers in the county, with particular attention paid to Equity Focus Communities.  Appropriate communications and engagement techniques will be identified in respect of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Study Timeline

The study consists of two phases. In Phase 1, pricing policies will be identified and evaluated. Recommendations on changes to pricing policies will be advanced to the Board for consideration. Phase 1 is anticipated to be completed in early 2021. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the timeline will evolve as circumstances warrant. The Board and relevant committees will receive progress updates at each milestone.

Phase 1: Pricing Policies

A.                     Project Definition and Start-Up (Jan - May 2020)

                     Engage Senior Leadership Team

                     Establish project advisory groups

B.                     Research and Engagement (June - Fall 2020)

                     Research

                     User and community engagement (e.g. online surveys, virtual dialogues)

                     Develop Evaluation Framework and Performance Measures

 

C.                     Generate Policy Options (Fall 2020 - Winter 2020)

o                     Engage Community on Policy Options Development

o                     Engage Metro staff on Policy Options Development

D.                     Policy Options Evaluation (Fall 2020)

E.                     Recommendations to Board (Spring 2021)

 

Should the Board approve the recommendations, Phase 2 will involve the design, implementation, and monitoring of those recommendations. Pending directions from the Board, scoping for Phase 2 will begin upon completion of Phase 1.

 

Equity Goal

Depending on its design, transportation pricing can either help or hinder efforts to promote racial, social, and economic equity amongst Los Angeles County residents and workers. For this reason, equity is one of the topline goals in the study. The development of appropriate performance measures to evaluate policy options relative to the goal of equity will involve pivoting off Metro’s Equity Platform, the “Understanding How Women Travel Study”, user experience surveys, and dialogues with community stakeholders. 

Staff have identified an initial list of equity-related performance measures. Further research, dialogue, and analysis will be undertaken to refine and expand on these and other performance measures, subject to the availability of reliable data and appropriate quantitative and qualitative methods. This work will be coordinated with the Executive Officer of Equity and Race.

Sample performance measures include:

                     Annual out-of-pocket costs as % of household income for extremely-low and low-income households

                     Cost of trip-chaining for extremely-low and low-income customers

                     Access to opportunity (employment, education, health care, social) opportunities by race, gender, income, age, and household size

                     Non-work trips in evenings and weekends by extremely-low and low-income customers

                     Ease of understanding and complying with pricing policies (e.g. means-testing requirements) to access transportation services.

 

 

Financial_Impact
FINANCIAL IMPACT

Receiving and filing this report has no financial impact or impact to budget. Through the evaluation process, the cost and revenue impacts of policy options will be quantified and reported along with other performance measures.

 

Implementation_of_Strategic_Plan_Goals

IMPLEMENTATION OF STRATEGIC PLAN GOALS

 

The conduct of the Comprehensive Pricing Study is a direct implementation of Vision 2028 (Initiative 1.3.a: Develop simplified, sustainable, and comprehensive pricing policies to support the provision of equitable, affordable, and high-quality transportation services).

 

Next_Steps
NEXT STEPS

 

The Comprehensive Pricing Study will proceed as set out in this report. Staff will return to this committee and report on progress in early Fall 2020. Through this study, Metro is demonstrating its leadership in evidence-based policymaking to improve mobility and equitable access to opportunities, and in the creation of a transparent and collaborative planning process. 

 

Attachments

ATTACHMENTS

 

 

Prepared_by

Prepared by: doreen Morrissey, Principal Transportation Planner, Office of Extraordinary Innovation 213.418.3421

 

Raymond Kan, Senior Manager, Office of Extraordinary Innovation 213.364.3048

 

 

Reviewed_By

Reviewed by: Joshua Schank, Chief Innovation Officer, Office of Extraordinary Innovation (213) 418-4435