Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

AutoModerator t1_iuv7hh0 wrote

Reminder: this subreddit is meant to be a place free of excessive cynicism, negativity and bitterness. Toxic attitudes are not welcome here.

All Negative comments will be removed and will possibly result in a ban.


I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.

1

Pyrollusion t1_iuvgmvq wrote

That ticket is a joke compared to what it was before.

−32

BobbyP27 t1_iuvhv23 wrote

Inflation is harsh in Germany, it was only 9 EUR in August.

109

astromech_dj t1_iuvlbd4 wrote

Is that what it’s like having grown ups running your country?

422

BobbyP27 t1_iuvs9ok wrote

For June, July and August, to help stimulate economic recovery from COVID Germany had a 9 Euro ticket for a month, for all local public transport and all local and regional trains, the same validity as this one.

50

AndyPanic t1_iuw0189 wrote

It’s only a first step. Because as of now public transportation doesn’t have enough capacity, railway infrastructure is not up to standard. So a lot of things have to happen to really make it a success. But it’s a start.

70

GreatRyujin t1_iuw47mf wrote

Stop bitching about everything just because it could've been better.
Living in a democracy inevitably comes with compromise and this is a historic step and should be celebrated!

17

lostsoul2016 t1_iuw5wfv wrote

Great idea but wondering how many would need that.

−7

PanzerSucette t1_iuw799y wrote

While loving the initiative, its gonna be the same problem as when they offered the 9euros thing in august : Make more ppl use overcrowded services. During the last 9euros offer, you jsut couldnt have a place/seat. The problem is not really the price but the offer. Not enough trains/bus/wagons etc

11

3lektrolurch t1_iuwdh7a wrote

We need to modernize and renew our rail network ASAP. We missed to do so in the last 16 Years under Merkel and now face a potential partial collapse of some rail connections. Depending on where you live disruptions of train traffic are a daily occurence, which sucks, because I love riding the train when it works.

34

Shiro1_Ookami t1_iuwdj4t wrote

This ticket is cheaper than most basic public transport subscriptions. Even the monthly ticket for Nuremberg/Fürth is more expensive than that and It is useful if you use the whole area of one transport association more than twice a month. You don’t habe to care about borders… etc.

14

willie_caine t1_iuwn6e4 wrote

Earlier this year the government committed to state investment in the railways of over €60bn over the next 10 years, and this year alone DB is investing €13bn, focused on improving infrastructure and capacity. They ordered 43 new trains too, it seems.

18

Benji_Ba t1_iuwnl8f wrote

It's not only for trains but all public transportation in the city like tram and bus. I used to pay 70 bucks per month just for the city I live in and that was not even valid for the whole city.

2

willie_caine t1_iuwnsbn wrote

Loads! It costs the same as my current monthly ticket, but that's only valid for my local region. Lots of people are caught out by crossing boundaries between networks and can find themselves needing multiple tickets - this all goes away. Not to mention anyone just wanting to travel a bit.

9

3lektrolurch t1_iuwntrf wrote

Which is good, but we passed on the oppurtunity to use the low interest rates of the 2010s and instead held on to nonsensical austerity measures instead of building up our infrastructue.

8

SarcasticAssClown t1_iuwpdxc wrote

Plenty of companies rolling that one back already, at least partially - which then opens another dilemma: if you only have to go to the office thrice per week, but still needed the same expensive monthly pass since still cheaper than single tickets.

So I honestly like the solution, 9€ and literally everyone was in the trains. Including a lot of folks with no idea how to behave in a communaly used train...

3

Reddit-runner t1_iuwsrnj wrote

>This ticket will mostly be used by people who already own a subscription.

Maybe by a majority, but not by an overwhelming majority.

If you want to stay in an other city for even just a weekend this ticket already makes sense.

5

ZiamschnopsSan t1_iux68oj wrote

You forget to mention that Germany public transport is dogshit and I wouldn't use it if they paid me 49 bucks a month

−20

Gasur t1_iux6vjn wrote

In the west of Germany, there is a string of major cities more or less in a line stretching from north to south. Almost 32 million people live in these cities or their metropolitan areas. I imagine it would be super useful for people living there to only have to pay a modest monthly fee for unlimited usage of all those public transport systems.

I live in the UK, and in London there is a unified public transport service. When I have to go on business trips to other UK cities, there are usually many different bus companies and sometimes if I buy a daily ticket for one bus provider then I can only take their buses. I would love a unified national ticket like this.

2

Hiko0 t1_iux7x7m wrote

I wonder what this will mean for domestic tourism. It‘s great to know that you can travel anywhere within Germany and you can use unlimited public transportation at your destination, too.

43

ScubaClimb49 t1_iux8s1l wrote

Not my country but I question the wisdom of stimulating demand for an highly energy-intensive service during an energy crisis

−12

ZiamschnopsSan t1_iux8wcf wrote

Lmao German public transport is never on time never drives where you need to go smells like a rest stop bathroom is full of crackhead and is overpriced.

No German likes their public transport system.

−12

nebendachs OP t1_iux9t6a wrote

So you complain about the punctuality, availability, smell, clientele and price of the service, yet now that they’re addressing one of these points in a mayor way you still complain? Do want a better service or do you just want to bitch about the existing one?

11

Reddit-runner t1_iuxltii wrote

>€49 for just travelling around a local city for a couple of days is a lot.

Well buddy, how much do you think it costs today?

Including getting from your home to this city and then back home again?

2

SatansPrGuy t1_iuxnvee wrote

Oh I see, well for three months of travel it's probably cheaper than what I spent on my gas for 3 months but yeah definitely not affordable for a lower middle-class person.

6

MrmmphMrmmph t1_iuxprnb wrote

At 8 Euro for the summer that was a toddler suggestion. Packed and tons of cancellations, not the German trains I was used to. I should have rented a car when I visited. Maybe this rate will ease that congestion enough.

−3

IceColdPorkSoda t1_iuxqrkn wrote

Very affordable vs gas, maintenance, and carrying insurance. Never any big surprises like, “My transmission needs to be repaired and it’ll cost 3000 euros. If you can live life using only public transport and don’t have to own a car at all that is huge cost savings.

6

ScubaClimb49 t1_iuxqsoe wrote

A valid point but the counter is that nearly free transportation encourages people to travel in circumstances that they otherwise wouldn't. So it's not as simple as "well they're encouraging people to take public transit instead of drive."

I don't want to drive to Las Vegas this weekend but if you give me a free plane ticket I'm on it.

−2

Hiko0 t1_iuxrzjf wrote

I‘m talking about public transportation, for example within Berlin when you are visiting from Hamburg. With a monthly ticket from Hamburg, right now you would have to buy tickets in Berlin as a tourist. The „Deutschlandticket“ covers that.

10

bwanabass t1_iuxuz6b wrote

Wow, what a concept! A government that actually makes life better for its citizens!

4

Ko-jo-te t1_iuxvq1u wrote

That's a short-term problem pressing for a solution. If it hapoens, the government will soebd the dough for better infrastructure, because it makes sense in many ways. It's much easier to come up with the money when trains are overcrowded, even though it would've been smarter to make the services better and more attractive to attract more users naturally. Humans are weird like that.

Also, I love that it happens. Public transport almost never vreaks even directly, money-wise. The profit lies in better connectivity for many people. Good for the economy and society. A long term strategy.

2

badguy84 t1_iuxxuln wrote

There is... or used to be something similar in the Netherlands, you could travel nationally on trains/busses/trams/subways. "Back in my day" it was actually a "free" student perk.

Any way this type of stuff is great, it really does feel different when you can just board a bus, then a train, then a tram without needing different/separate tickets/stamps/payment.

1

dc456 t1_iuxy52n wrote

> Well buddy, how much do you think it costs today?

Well it depends on how local, doesn’t it? Like a trip from Bad Nauheim to Frankfurt followed by six short singles over the weekend is around €28.

That’s my point about what ‘medium’ means - if you can travel a few hours to a city for €49, then it makes more sense.

1

dc456 t1_iuy0awo wrote

Yeah, it looks to be a good deal, but I think it’s not an immediate saving on every local or regional weekend away. In some cases it’ll need more than one trip a month to make financial sense.

1

Acc87 t1_iuy1r7z wrote

Don't forget that we have something called Verbandsklage since the early '00s that makes every single infrastructure project a huge extensively long process as they all will go before court, often multiple times. Can't just build new railroads, bridges or anything really. Look at the state of the Fehmarn Belt crossing as an example.

2

U-broat t1_iuy5bhw wrote

I don't know when you last visited but things have gotten worse even in the 4 years I've lived here. The 9 euro ticket was pure chaos on any of the intercity regional lines.

1

Reddit-runner t1_iuy6qnx wrote

Try going from Öhringen to Stuttgart. About 70km. That's 12.80€ one way. And then you still have to buy your day ticket for Stuttgart. That's an other 6-13€ a day depending on how many zones you plan to travel in.

How do you determine the number of zones? Well, good luck trying to find that out.

And if you don't live in walking distance from Öhringen train station? That's up to an other 7€ per trip.

So for a 3 day trip to Stuttgart you are already looking at well over 50€ even if you stay within the more inner zones of Stuttgart.

But maybe you could combine some of those tickets so it gets cheaper? Well, again good luck finding out how. Report back please.

As you see even ignoring your other monthly costs within the area of Öhringen the 49€ is well justified.

Not only is it likely to be cheaper than a weekend trip currently, it also completely eliminates the ticket confusion. It just makes travelling easier. More attractive.

1

MrmmphMrmmph t1_iuy8i4c wrote

It was in August, that was an aberration. Once I got into the Netherlands, Belgium and France, that resembled the German transit I had been used to. I think that low price point overloaded the system for the summer.

5

ProfDumm t1_iuy9g35 wrote

Yes. Short and medium distance is a bit misleading. It means that you can take any public transportation up to regional trains. You can get trough the whole nation with it (it just takes longer than long-distance trains).

2

graymatterqueen t1_iuyaly3 wrote

For anyone living in a major city in Germany the ticket is a no-brainer. A 30-day-ticket for my (500k) major city e.g. costs 82€(!!!) and only covers the city itself. Not even going to the neighboring town. Betcha I'm going to order the 49€ across Germany one. And many others will too.

1

nibbler666 t1_iuydill wrote

This is not in any way related to inflation. It was 9 Euros from June to August in summer because it was meant as a one off. But the ticket was so popular that it was decided to have the ticket long-term. For financing the ticket for years you simply need a more realistic price.

12

MrmmphMrmmph t1_iuygfv8 wrote

That’s right. I still think the normal system is miles ahead of the Northeast US commuter trains I’m accustomed to. And the DB information people on platforms puts our single central kiosks to shame.

2

FightOnForUsc t1_iuyoysl wrote

The unfortunate problem is, even when you get there we have shitty public transportation on the other end. A lot of that is because the cities aren’t designed well for public transportation

2

IceColdPorkSoda t1_iuzqt35 wrote

I’m with you there bud. It’s sad to see how quickly things can get built in other places and how good public transportation can be. Come back to California and nothing gets done because it all gets litigated to death.

2

Esava t1_iv0csem wrote

I like it here in Hamburg and surrounding area. The by far largest issue with it were the prices (several hundreds euro per month for some of the tickets). That point has been solved. 49€ is cheaper than the cheapest available monthly ticket just for the city of Hamburg so far.

1