Contact: Joe King , NIU
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January 7, 2005
NIU survey says support for I-PASS structure is weak
DeKalb, Ill. — I-PASS transponders were a popular stocking stuffer
this past holiday season, but that doesn't necessarily mean that
people like the new toll collection program, say researchers
at Northern Illinois University.
The devices, marketed by the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority,
allow users to pay tolls without stopping at tollbooths. As of
the first of the year, drivers with the devices save 50 percent
on the cost of a toll, which now stands at 80 cents (at most
tollbooths) for passenger cars that don't have the devices.
That two-tiered system didn't sit well with a majority of the
1,300 Illinois residents surveyed in November and December 2004
for NIU's annual Illinois Public Policy Survey.
Amongst all respondents, only 28 percent said that they supported
the plan to charge higher tolls for those who do not use I-PASS
(65 percent opposed the plan and six percent were unsure). In
fact, no matter how the data was cross-tabulated and narrowed,
there was no group that supported the program at more than a
50 percent level, says NIU Professor of Public Administration
Michael Peddle.
“Considering that 34 percent of respondents said that they owned
I-PASS we sort of expected support for the program to be at least
that high, but that was not the case. Even among that sub-group
of I-PASS users, only 44 percent favored the new system, so even
the winners in this scenario are not overwhelmingly in favor
of this change,” Peddle says.
Support for higher tolls for non-I-PASS users did increase somewhat
based upon the frequency with which the respondent used the tollways,
but only reached a level of 39 percent among the most frequent
tollway users, those who said they drive the roads several times
a week.
Geography also influenced enthusiasm for the new program. Support
was highest in Chicago proper, where 32 percent of respondents
supported the program, and just a bit lower in the collar counties
and northern portions of the state where support ran about 29
percent. That slipped to 18 percent in central Illinois and 21
percent in the southern portion of the state.
The tripling of tolls for trucks, which also took effect on
Jan. 1, was much more warmly received, but still failed to gain
favor with the majority of respondents. Forty-four percent supported
that change, while 50 percent opposed and 5 percent were undecided.
While the survey didn't ask respondents why they didn't like
the new two-tiered toll system for cars, Peddle has some ideas.
“I think maybe some people just perceived it as unfair to those
who may not be able to afford the initial outlay for the devices,” says
Peddle. Much of the current backlash as the new rules take effect,
he believes, may have been due to poor communication about the
program.
Peddle himself initially resisted buying an I-PASS, but since
signing up for the program in 2003 has become a fan. He expects
others to undergo a similar conversion.
“I think a lot of the resistance right now is just people feeling
inconvenienced by the process of purchasing the device and upset
at the initial cost. I suspect, however, that if we were to ask
the same question in six months or a year we would see support
go up as people discover the convenience of I-PASS and see the
benefits of open road tolling,” Peddle says.
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