Manitoba

Winnipeg Transit seeks plan to replace Peggo cards with modern fare collection system

Winnipeg is looking for a consultant to help plan a replacement of Winnipeg Transit's Peggo card fare collection with a modern system that offers more payment options.

Plan should look at use of modern payment methods, such as credit and debit cards, smartphones

A bus that says 66 Downtown on the front display drives toward the camera, passing busses driving in the opposite direction.
Winnipeg Transit must consider all riders, including those with limited payment options, when redesigning its fare collection system, says Kyle Owens of Functional Transit Winnipeg. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

Winnipeg is looking for a consultant to help plan a replacement of Winnipeg Transit's Peggo card fare collection with a modern system that offers more payment options.

Fare collection technologies could include using credit or debit cards and mobile phone apps for payment, said Kirk Cumming, Winnipeg Transit's IT manager.

The city issued a request for proposals on Friday based on a 2024 budget recommendation that the transit agency review its fare structure, policies and technologies.

The consultant will analyze the current fare collection system and options for replacing it, and create a strategic plan for an updated system that will be more flexible, include Handi-Transit services, and improve security and data collection, the RFP says. There's $275,000 available for the consultant's contract.

Operational concerns, including on-time performance, customer satisfaction and equity, all must be looked at, Cumming said.

"We want to make sure that we're aware of the consequences of our decisions on all these different aspects of our operation."

The city's existing bus fare collection boxes were put into place in 2013, and the Peggo card system was put in place in 2016, Cumming said.

Kyle Owens, president of the public transit advocacy group Functional Transit Winnipeg, said the new system must accommodate the needs and wants of people across the city.

"The good news in Winnipeg is that there is a lot of opportunity for improvement," he said.

It's easy to overlook the most vulnerable people when designing a new system, but it has to be accessible for people with disabilities and various income levels — including those who don't have internet access, a smartphone or an app, Owens said.

There has been a lot of frustration with the existing system, going right back to when it started, he said.

"The idea that we might be able to have a system that offers more options, more convenience to more people with fewer delays, is really exciting."

Cumming said Winnipeggers should know later this year which technology the city recommends.

The deadline to submit a proposal is noon on June 28.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tessa Adamski holds a bachelor of arts in communications from the University of Winnipeg and a creative communications diploma from Red River College Polytechnic. She was the 2024 recipient of the Eric and Jack Wells Excellence in Journalism Award and the Dawna Friesen Global News Award for Journalism, and has written for the Globe and Mail, Winnipeg Free Press, Brandon Sun and the Uniter.

With files from Susan Magas and Kalkidan Mulugeta