For Immediate Release
Lower Costs Expected
To Put More Drivers on FasTrak®
Contact:
Rod McMillan, MTC/BATA 510.817.5860
John Goodwin, MTC/BATA 510.817.5862
FasTrak Customer Service Center
475 The Embarcadero (at Broadway)
San Francisco
Hours of Operation:
M-F 7 am-7 pm
Sat. 9 am-1 pm
Closed Sundays
OAKLAND, Calif., September 18, 2006. . . The
Bay Area Toll Authority (BATA) is making it easier than ever
for motorists to take advantage of the region’s FasTrak electronic
toll collection program. Beginning October 1, the opening prepaid
toll balance required for new customers will drop to $25 from
the current $40.
“We’re responding directly to demand from motorists
who don’t use the toll bridges as part of their everyday
commute,” said Rod McMillan, director of Bridge Oversight
and Operations for BATA. “We’ve heard from drivers
all over Northern California, and they’ve consistently
told us they’re interested in FasTrak but they’re
reluctant to invest more than about $25 upfront for a service
they’re likely to use only on weekends.”
In addition
to reducing the opening prepaid toll balance, BATA on October
1 will cut to $20 from the current $30 the refundable toll
tag deposit required for FasTrak customers who open
their accounts with cash or a check instead of a credit card.
For existing customers who already have paid a $30 deposit,
BATA will automatically transfer the $10 difference to their
prepaid toll balances. No deposit is required for customers
who link their accounts to a credit card and request no more
than three toll tags.
The new cost structure is part of the
FasTrak Strategic
Plan that BATA adopted in June 2006 to expand and improve electronic
toll collection in the Bay Area. The plan’s goals are
to make the toll plazas at the region’s seven state-owned
toll bridges function more efficiently by boosting the percentage
of motorists who use FasTrak and to make it easier for
motorists to sign up and use the FasTrak system. A FasTrak-only
lane can handle about three times as many vehicles per hour
as lanes where drivers stop to pay cash. This allows many more
vehicles to pass through the toll plazas — creating a faster
trip on most bridges. Presently, there are more than 530,000
FasTrak account holders in the Bay Area. During peak periods,
FasTrak-equipped vehicles account for about 70 percent
of morning commute traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge and 42
percent on the state-owned bridges.
In the summer of 2007,
BATA will convert more lanes to FasTrak-only
at the Carquinez, Dumbarton, Richmond-San Rafael, San Mateo-Hayward
and San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge toll plazas. The FasTrak Strategic
Plan also calls for open-road tolling (allowing motorists to
pass through the toll facility at highway speeds using their
FasTrak toll tags) at the new Benicia-Martinez Bridge
toll plaza when the new span opens in late 2007.
FasTrak can
be used in all lanes at all Bay Area toll plazas. The conversion
of more cash lanes to FasTrak-only
will be accompanied by lane striping and signage improvements
to separate FasTrak traffic and cash tollpayers as far
in advance of the toll plazas as possible. In addition, the
Strategic Plan calls for FasTrak-only lanes to be grouped
together at the left side of the toll plazas to the extent
feasible, with cash lanes to the right side of the toll plazas
and plaza approaches. The complete FasTrak Strategic Plan
is available on the BATA Web site at bata.mtc.ca.gov.
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) is the transportation
planning, financing and coordinating agency for the nine-county
San Francisco Bay Area. BATA, which is directed by the same
policy board as MTC, administers toll revenues from the Bay
Area's seven state-owned toll bridges. Toll revenues from the
Golden Gate Bridge are administered by the Golden Gate Bridge,
Highway and Transportation District, which joined with BATA
to operate a single regional FasTrak customer service
center in San Francisco.
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