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Contactless payments key to increasing public transit ridership, Interac survey reveals

A new survey reveals contactless payments could be the missing boost needed to increase public transit ridership in Canada.

Conducted by Interac, the survey found more than two-thirds of Canadians (68 percent) believe this method of payment would make it easier and quicker to pay for transit. 37 percent of respondents also said a dedicated transit card or app is inconvenient.

In order to entice people to use public transit, consumer experience needs to improve, Andrew Yablonovsky, associate vice-president of product strategy and growth at Interac, said. This is especially important post-pandemic.

“Right now, transit is seeing a slow post-pandemic recovery with daily ridership having dropped by approximately 44 percent since the COVID-19 pandemic. This can have consequences for our economy since it stands to benefit from greater transit ridership.”

Yablonovsky says contactless payments reduce “fare friction” by eliminating obstacles that come with transit passes, such as continually reloading them with funds.

The study found more than 83 percent of Canadians bring their bank cards whenever they leave home. Furthermore, 67 percent of transit users say they would like to pay for transit through these cards.

This is possible for some using the various transit services in the GTA, including GO Transit. Back in August, Metrolinx made it possible for users to pay fares by taping their credit cards, 

2,343 Canadians were panelled for the survey Interac commissioned in August 2022.

Image credit: Metrolinx

Source: Interac

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Mobile Syrup

Interac says services are ‘fully available’ now that Rogers is back online

Interac says its services are “fully available” now that Rogers has restored connectivity.

In a statement shared via the Interac Twitter account, the company apologized for the inconvenience caused by the Rogers outage and directed people with questions about specific e-Transfer or Interac Debit transactions to contact their financial institution.

Interac also said it would add a supplier “to strengthen our existing network redundancy so Canadians can continue to rely on Interac daily.”

It’s not clear which supplier Interac plans to add, but any expansion of redundancy would be beneficial. Frankly, it’s shocking Interac didn’t already have a redundancy system in place to specifically avoid something like this. Telecom networks aren’t perfect and go down all the time — although this Rogers outage was admittedly more extreme than the typical telecom outage.

Interac was far from the only company impacted by the day-long outage. Several government services were impacted, and the outage disrupted concerts and other entertainment too.

Header image: Shutterstock