Integrated ticketing for Dublin transport due within weeks

MORE THAN nine years and €48 million after it was first proposed, public transport users in Dublin are expected to be able to…

MORE THAN nine years and €48 million after it was first proposed, public transport users in Dublin are expected to be able to buy integrated transport tickets “within weeks”.

The project, which has a total budget of €55 million, will eventually enable public transport users to make complex journeys utilising Dublin Bus, Dart, Iarnród Éireann, Luas and Bus Éireann services – but that is not expected to happen until mid-2012.

Launching the latest phase of testing yesterday the National Transport Authority said 500 commuters will be offered €20 in free travel to take part in a public trial of the integrated ticket, to be known as the “Leap card”.

The €20 free tickets will be available to the first 500 consumers who log on to the authority’s website integratedticketing.ie from this morning. The card will be valid for travel on Dublin Bus, Luas, Dart and Iarnród Éireann suburban services. Bus Éireann services are expected to be added by next summer.

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Leap cards will also allow discounts on the normal cash fare ticket prices on Luas and Iarnród Éireann, but not Dublin Bus. The authority said it was always planned to deploy the card in a phased basis.

Early next year it is hoped that users of season tickets and multiple journey cards will be able to use Leap cards and private bus operators are also expected to be ultimately involved.

Integrated ticketing was first put forward in 2002 by then minister for public enterprise Mary O’Rourke. She said she wanted to see the system in place as soon as possible but conceded it could take two years.

The Railway Procurement Agency established an integrated ticketing scheme in 2003 and former minister for transport, the late Séamus Brennan, launched the first “smart card” as part of the integrated ticketing project in March 2004.

Minister of State for Public and Commuter Transport Alan Kelly rejected suggestions the deployment was haphazard, remarking that it was always intended to be a “phased basis”.

Mr Kelly said: “It is great to see this scheme nearing completion and positive for commuters.”

- A danger that some 30 to 35 people will die on the Republic’s roads between now and Christmas was outlined by Road Safety Authority chief executive Noel Brett yesterday.

Announcing a series of services and commemorations to coincide with World Remembrance Day for road traffic victims this weekend, Mr Brett said 23,057 people – comparable to the population of Tralee – were killed on the State’s roads since records began in 1959.

Mr Brett said he was appealing to all drivers to spend a few moments thinking how life would change for their families if they were suddenly “taken out of the picture”. “Be selfish about it. Think how would your family manage without you.”

Tim O'Brien

Tim O'Brien

Tim O'Brien is an Irish Times journalist