Potential benefits U-Pass programs offer students a way to lower their transportation costs while at school and also benefit the local community and the environment. U-Pass programs can provide the following benefits: • Save students money — a U-Pass costs less than the amount students would otherwise pay for regular monthly passes or tickets over the course of a term • Reduce demand for parking on campus (thus less resources spent on constructing parking facilities and more valuable land available for university development) — the more incentive there is for students to take public transportation, the less students there will be who drive to school in their own vehicles. • Improve the transit system that the university's students and employees rely upon — U-Pass programs often allow for more
bus routes and/or better transit service to the institution • Reduce traffic congestion around the campus and local community — the more people willing to take the bus to university, the less traffic there will be in and around the area • Contribute to fewer emissions and a reduction to
greenhouse gas emissions (consistent with the
American College and University President's Climate Commitment) • Stimulate public transportation ridership, particularly during off-peak, non-commuting hours, thereby filling excess capacity • Provide a regular and reliable revenue source for transit authorities that may otherwise be low on funding • Create a sense of
brand loyalty and transit travel patterns among students who will be prospective customers in their post-college years • Reduce the cost burden for local taxpayers to fund public transportation
Potential costs U-Pass programs that require a 100%
adoption rate by universities may
subsidize the U-Pass at the expense of students who drive, walk, or bike to school and who do not use transit to get to other locations. Some U-Pass programs offer exemptions for students with mobility restrictions and students who live out of the program range, such as exemptions for students who live in
Quebec but commute to school in
Ottawa, Ontario. • Being charged while taking a term off (e.g. vacation, study abroad, work out of town), courses not offered on campus (e.g. distant learning, graduate thesis, research projects), or being an exchange student ==Canada==