The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC), Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) and more than 20 other transit agencies that support the Clipper[1] fare payment system in the San Francisco Bay Area of the USA are trialling a contactless transit pass that will allow passengers to take unlimited free journeys on bus, rail and ferry services in the region.
The Clipper BayPass will be distributed to some 50,000 Bay Area residents over the course of a two-year pilot scheme, enabling them to travel on services operated by participating transit agencies without charge.
“Participants in the BayPass program will continue to use their Clipper cards — either traditional plastic cards or Clipper cards on their smartphones or Apple Watch — to tag on (or off) at faregates, on buses, on rail platforms or at ferry ramps,” MTC explains.
“Aside from travelling at no charge, the Clipper BayPass will function like any other Clipper Card.”
The passes will initially be distributed to participating students at San Francisco State University[2], San Jose State University[3], the University of California’s Berkeley[4] campus and Santa Rosa Junior College[5] before being offered to residents of affordable housing communities managed by MidPen Housing[6].
“This limited distribution, which will be based on random assignment, is designed to measure the impact on travel of an all-system pass when compared with students not using Clipper BayPass,” the MTA says.
The information collected will be used “to help shape the development, pricing and implementation of one or more new multi-agency passes or fare caps that eventually will be used by vastly more riders,” MTC chair and Napa County