Sunday, May 21st 2006


16 days and counting
posted by Mike Mennonno @ 10:08 am in [ MBTA - ACHTUNG, baby! - fare hike ]

So why, exactly, should anyone boycott the T and attend a rally in Copley Square on JUNE 6TH?

A poll at Universal Hub shows those opposed to a one-day boycott and rally are neck-in-neck with those in favor. (Sure, only about 75 people have taken the poll so far, and a quarter of them chose: “Don’t take the T but love polls,” but somehow I think the level of resistance or apathy towards organizing and demonstrating shown in the results is probably pretty accurate.) So it’s a good question.

As I have said before, I’m more an agitator than an organizer, and I’m actually fairly uncomfortable in the role of encouraging public spectacles. I think most people should remain indoors at all times, and never show themselves publicly. But there are times when a demonstration is in order, and I think this might just be one.

What, in my view, would a demonstration achieve? Well, for one, it shows that there’s a significant level of interest and involvement in the issue on the part of those affected, that requires the powers that be to take notice.

In this case, while the MBTA is calling meetings and “workshops” it’s really the legislature that must be lobbied. By demonstrating outside of the MBTA-sanctioned “workshops” taxpayers and MBTA customers are showing that we understand that we have a stake in the system, that, in fact, it is our system, many of us are paying for it two times over, and we’re willing to take responsibility for reforming it ourselves.

And it needs reforming. If the legislature does not address how the T is funded, how it is managed, and how it is maintained, we are looking at a spiral of rising costs and declining services.

I also believe, as I have stated before, that fair fares are a social justice issue. I am not for silly proposals like free fare on the T. But I am very much for fares that take into consideration that for many there is no alternative to the T, and that realistically consider the social impact of constant fare increases on those who have already overstretched resources.

So, some of the more astute smart allecks out there will say, “hey, those people who have no alternative to the T can’t boycott the T, now, can they?” Well, no, they can’t. But maybe you can for them. And there’s also a rally that you can come to regardless. You don’t have to boycott the T on the 6th to come to the rally.

If you can’t afford to boycott the T, you can still come to Copley Square and show the legislature that you understand that this is about more than an isolated fare hike, that this is part of a much bigger, even more troubling trend that if not addressed by lawmakers will result in a downward spiral.

The rally is not to stick it to the T, it’s to widen the discussion of what’s wrong with the T, and to show legislators that taxpayers and T customers are serious about a system that works for those who need it and those who use it.


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