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Transportation and Mobility

LA Metro now enforcing TAP-to-Exit in Santa Monica

The interior of an underground public transit station. Two men in green and orange high-visibility vests and long pants are standing around the silver metal turnstile gates. The man on the left is working on a laptop computer at the same time. The station is largely empty and well-lit, except for one woman walking in the background.
L.A. Metro staff at the North Hollywood B Line Station.
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Courtesy L.A. Metro
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Topline:

L.A. Metro is expanding its TAP-to-Exit pilot program to all 10 end-of-line stations, starting in Santa Monica.

Remind me what the program does: Riders are supposed to tap their cards to enter the Metro system, but the pilot program requires riders to tap to exit — if riders didn't pay a fare to board, they'll have to pay their fare at the end.

Expanding: Enforcement officially began Wednesday for the E-Line’s Downtown Santa Monica station after a week-long grace period, and people could be cited if they try to avoid paying the fare.

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Why it matters: L.A. Metro said in a statement that up to 94% of people arrested on the transit system for violent crime don’t have a valid fare or TAP card. The hope is that the program will make sure it’s only being used by customers for legitimate travel. Since TAP-to-Exit launched in North Hollywood, the agency wrote in its blog that it’s seen a notable increase in people paying their fare, as well as a drop in crime.

What's next: The pilot will continue to expand to other end-of-line stations, but the exact dates are still being worked out.

Go deeper: Read more about the pilot program.

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