Attempts at planning, coordinating, operating and integrating regional public transit in the Greater Montreal area have been made since 1970, with the mandates from different levels of governent, including: Bureau de transport métropolitain (BTM), accountable to the Montreal Urban Community; Bureau d'aménagement du réseau express métropolitain (BAREM, unrelated to the current REM); Conseil des transports de la région de Montréal (COTREM), manated by the Quebec Ministry of Transportation (MTQ), the Conseil métropolitain de transport en commun (CMTC), created by an Act of the National Assembly and; Divisions of the MTQ itself.[5][6] Following the publishing of the Pichette Report on governance of Greater Montreal, the Quebec government takes steps to create a single agency for governing transit, reporting directly to the minister (and not the ministry) of transport.[5]
In December 1995, the National Assembly enacts a law creating the Agence métropolitain de transport (AMT), giving it the mission "to support, develop, coordinate and promote shared transportation, including special transportation services for the handicapped, to improve suburban train services and ensure their development, to foster the integration of the services provided by various modes of transportation and to increase the efficiency of traffic corridors." It supplants the CMTC and inherits the commuter rail operations from the STCUM.[7] The AMT went on to oversee the Montreal area's transit strategy, and operated commuter rail lines, express bus lines and park and ride lots.
In May 2014, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard announced in his inaugural speech his intention to review the AMT's mandate. In April 2015, Radio-Canada reported that the provincial government intended to replace the AMT with two organizations: one to plan; and one to operate trains, suburban buses and oversee the other transit operators.[8]
On June 1, 2017, Bill 76 was implemented: the AMT was officially dissolved and replaced by two newly created organizations: the ARTM and the Réseau de transport métropolitain (RTM). The AMT's planning mandate went to the ARTM, while the operation of the various commuter rail lines across the Greater Montreal became the responsibility of the RTM (later rebranded Exo).[9]
Role and relationship in Montreal public transit
The ARTM plays a role of "organizing authority" in the governance model for public transit put in place by the Government of Quebec in the Montreal area:[10]
The Quebec government sets the transit strategic direction
The Montreal Metropolitan Community directs and sets transit policies
The ARTM plans, finances, organizes, develops and promotes an integrated transit network
The ARTM is responsible for setting public transit fares in the Greater Montreal area,[12] including fare collection technology and the Opus transit card system.[13] It began work to simplify the fare structure in 2021, with the aim of reducing the number of fare zones and retiring the majority of the 700 different fare types available on the territory.[14]
Bus fares are valid on buses anywhere in the territory (zones A, B and C, including between zones. Out-of-territory bus tickets are valid on Exo bus services that operate between zones C and D.
All Modes fares are zone-specific (A, AB, ABC or ABCD) but are valid on any mode of transit provided in those zones (bus, commuter train, REM, river shuttle or métro).
1, 2 or 10 trips. Trips may involve an unlimited number of transfers on valid modes and zones, for up to 90 or 120 minutes.[16]
Unlimited trips for an evening, weekend, 24 hours, 3 days or a month.
Reduced fares are available for children, students over 18, and people aged 65 and over. Children aged 11 and under ride for free.[17]
The fare schedule includes more specific and less flexible fares for individual public transit operators and Exo bus sectors.[15] Paratransit has its own fare schedule for registered users.[18]
Fare zones
The ARTM is progressively implementing a fare system with four zones across its territory, named from A to D.[14]
Fare zone A - Agglomeration of Montréal
Fare zone B - Laval and Agglomeration of Longueuil
Fare zone C - Southern and Northern suburbs
Fare zone D - Areas served by exo but outside of ARTM jurisdiction
Prior to July 1, 2021, the ARTM operated 8 zones for train and monthly passes, numbered 1 to 8. Progressively since 2021, fares have been introduced for all modes of transit using combinations of A, AB, ABC and ABCD, and for buses within ABC as well as between C and D.[14]
As of the fare schedule of July 1, 2024, only train-specific and certain municipalities use the old zones.[15] Public transit authorities operating in the ARTM territory new fares in the transit agencies operating within the ARTM territory.
Fare payment
This section is missing information about Opus cards, including reloading with the Chrono app. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(December 2024)
Exo proivdes passengers a Opus+ subscription which automatically debits the passenger's bank account or credit card and adds the pass to the passenger's Opus card.[19]
In 2018, the ARTM gave the Société de transport de Montréal the mandate to develop standards for a harmonized metropolitan signage for public transit agencies to use, based on their recent revision to signage of the Montreal Metro.[20] In July 2023, the ARTM unveiled its updated metropolitan transit network map, in time for the inauguration of the first branch of the REM.[21]
The ARTM also is responsible for all Park and ride lots in the Greater Montreal region. It runs 61 park-and-ride lots,[22] many that are connected to either metropolitan bus terminuses, STM Metro stations, or Exo commuter rail stations.
In addition, the agency also organizes carpooling, offering unloading spaces near public transit services in several of its park-and-ride lots, which allow for transfers to the bus, Metro or commuter train.[23]
Future projects
The ARTM is undertaking several major projects:
Metro extensions: Extending the Blue Line by five stations to Anjou. The extension is slated to open in 2031[24]
Study a major transit solution for the Grand Sud-Ouest area in Montreal. The project could possibly consist of a new light rail line or an extension of the Green Line into LaSalle, Lachine and Dorval.[26]
Study a major transit solution to replace the cancelled REM de l'Est project, named PSE. In January 2023, it was revealed that the ARTM was planning on proposing a 21-kilometre light rail line consisting of 22 stations, at a cost of $10.4 billion.[27]
References
^"L'heure des choix : Budget 2024" [Time to decide: 2024 Budget] (PDF) (in French). Autorité régionale de transport métropolitain. Retrieved August 12, 2024.