This Makes Perfect Cents . . .
. . . to the MTA at least in a case of man versus machine:
Posted: September 27th, 2007 | Filed under: Consumer Issues, That's An Outrage!, You're Kidding, Right?The MTA can’t nickel-and-dime straphangers — but it has no problem taking their quarters.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority acknowledged yesterday that one BIG reason it wants a 25-cent bus and subway hike is because its vending machines can dispense only dollar coins and quarters.
MTA spokesman Jeremy Soffin defended the increase as fair and said upping it by a nickel or dime wouldn’t be enough.
“The limitations of technology would make a $2.10 fare extremely costly to implement and would provide a much poorer quality of service,” Soffin said.
. . .
Riders weren’t buying it.
“It’s an outrage,” said Anthony Thompson, a Queens engineer. “Our money is being spent because of a hardware defect?”
Recruiter Jisele Lazo, 22, of Queens, said: “It stinks. Why don’t they just leave it at $2? Why are they making it easier for the machines? There are far more commuters than machines.”
. . .
Soffin said smaller change would mean longer lines and riders being saddled with pockets full of silver.
He said the size of the fare hike was not unreasonable because the $2 base fair had remained steady since 2003.
A 25-cent jump would amount to a “cost-of-living” increase for the system, Soffin said.
A rider buying a single-ride ticket priced at $2.10 with a $5 bill would be carting away 11 quarters and three nickels, or 58 nickels, he pointed out.
The machines also would likely run out of change more quickly, have to be filled more often and likely need more frequent maintenance, he said.
Out-of-service machines would result in longer lines at token booths, he said, estimating the added costs to be millions of dollars.