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#1
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There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always
swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. -- Work like the ponies in coalmines. Dance like the teardrop explodes. Love like you're Frank in Blue Velvet. Sing as though your little throat would burst. |
#2
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"Alan OBrien" typed
There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. Yebbut if you get caught not touching in, you may end up with a £20 Penalty Fare. That might not be 'best'... -- Helen D. Vecht: Edgware. |
#3
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I think they've changed the propaganda to say "pay the *right* fare",
not quite so positive a message. |
#4
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Alan OBrien wrote:
There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. If you do neither, then you do not have a valid ticket and are deliberately trying to avoid the fare, rendering you liable for either a penalty fare or prosecution. If you deliberately don't touch in or out, then the same presumably applies. Additionally, if you only do one, then you incur an unresolved journey which may be charged at a high rate (e.g. exiting mainline gates at London rail terminals), may prevent you from using your card (thus losing your deposit if you don't top up) and will definitely prevent capping from working (thus resulting in more expense). The cheapest fare is the cheapest valid ticket for your journey. If you don't have a valid ticket at all and don't intend to obtain one, you are essentially a thief! You could equally accuse Tesco of false advertising for saying that their baked beans are cheaper than any other place's - Sainsbury's baked beans are "free" if you shoplift them. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#5
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Alan OBrien wrote:
There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. Remember "best" can also mean "morally best"/"rightest", as well as "most advantageous to yourself". -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#6
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Alan OBrien wrote:
There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. I guess "Oyster: it's more expensive than fare-dodging" isn't that great a slogan. |
#7
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Dave Arquati wrote:
Alan OBrien wrote: There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. If you do neither, then you do not have a valid ticket and are deliberately trying to avoid the fare, rendering you liable for either a penalty fare or prosecution. If you deliberately don't touch in or out, then the same presumably applies. With Oyster there is this new scenario that hasn't as far as I can see occured before in transport ticketing - to have a valid ticket fore the whole journey a passenger must perform the correct action at the end of that journey i.e. touching out. Obviously when a stations automatic gates are in operation enforcing this is easy, but otherwise it relies on the passenger doing the right thing. There are ways to encourage this to happen: having inspectors at the exit station checking that people have touched out; the daily cap only working if a user touches in and out for every journey: and the possibility of a financial penalty if a user doesn't touch in and out each time (so far only implemented on journeys through National Rail mainline stations). These are problems that will come to the fore when Oyster is implemented across National Rail in London, given that number of ungated stations. Additionally, if you only do one, then you incur an unresolved journey which may be charged at a high rate (e.g. exiting mainline gates at London rail terminals), may prevent you from using your card (thus losing your deposit if you don't top up) and will definitely prevent capping from working (thus resulting in more expense). I wonder if there are any plans to penalise those with unresolved journeys (other than in the case of NR terminals). It would make the system less open to abuse especially once it's been implemented across NR in London, though I'm sure it would cause a fuss as well. Dave - where you say above if you don't touch in/out this "may prevent you from using your card (thus losing your deposit if you don't top up)" what do you mean? From what I've seen unresolved journeys don't lock up someones card, not yet at least. The cheapest fare is the cheapest valid ticket for your journey. If you don't have a valid ticket at all and don't intend to obtain one, you are essentially a thief! You could equally accuse Tesco of false advertising for saying that their baked beans are cheaper than any other place's - Sainsbury's baked beans are "free" if you shoplift them. A strong point that essentially deals with the original question - though the original poster was welcome in pondering on the language used by LU and sharing his thoughts here. |
#8
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![]() "Helen Deborah Vecht" wrote in message Yebbut if you get caught not touching in, you may end up with a £20 Penalty Fare. That might not be 'best'... Do you have to touch in if you are using a travelcard, rather than PrePay ? I thought it was only PP users who had to touch all over the place ? Can't someone come up with a better verb than "touch" ? Richard [in SG19] -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#9
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Mizter T wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: Alan OBrien wrote: There are posters on the Underground which say that people should always swipe in and out so as to get the best fare. If by 'best' they mean cheapest they are wrong. Surely if you have the chance you should either not swipe in or swipe out, or both. If you do neither, then you do not have a valid ticket and are deliberately trying to avoid the fare, rendering you liable for either a penalty fare or prosecution. If you deliberately don't touch in or out, then the same presumably applies. With Oyster there is this new scenario that hasn't as far as I can see occured before in transport ticketing - to have a valid ticket fore the whole journey a passenger must perform the correct action at the end of that journey i.e. touching out. Obviously when a stations automatic gates are in operation enforcing this is easy, but otherwise it relies on the passenger doing the right thing. There are ways to encourage this to happen: having inspectors at the exit station checking that people have touched out; the daily cap only working if a user touches in and out for every journey: and the possibility of a financial penalty if a user doesn't touch in and out each time (so far only implemented on journeys through National Rail mainline stations). These are problems that will come to the fore when Oyster is implemented across National Rail in London, given that number of ungated stations. Indeed. I imagine the solution will be to make sure that touching in and out is always in the user's best interest, and this will probably be achieved by combining "refund-at-exit" as you mention (i.e. charging a higher fare at entry and refunding if necessary at exit) with the lock-ups of users' cards if too many unresolved journeys occur (as mentioned below). Additionally, if you only do one, then you incur an unresolved journey which may be charged at a high rate (e.g. exiting mainline gates at London rail terminals), may prevent you from using your card (thus losing your deposit if you don't top up) and will definitely prevent capping from working (thus resulting in more expense). I wonder if there are any plans to penalise those with unresolved journeys (other than in the case of NR terminals). It would make the system less open to abuse especially once it's been implemented across NR in London, though I'm sure it would cause a fuss as well. Fuss could probably be avoided if TfL improved the publicity and signage regarding when to touch in and out, and provided explicitly clear instructions and examples on how the damn system works! At the moment, most of the Oyster knowledge on the group is a combination of collected experience, inside knowledge and educated guesswork. As well as the easy-to-understand "guides to Oyster" at stations, there should be a detailed resource available. Dave - where you say above if you don't touch in/out this "may prevent you from using your card (thus losing your deposit if you don't top up)" what do you mean? From what I've seen unresolved journeys don't lock up someones card, not yet at least. This is just from hearsay, but I think *multiple* unresolved journeys prevent the card from working. The cheapest fare is the cheapest valid ticket for your journey. If you don't have a valid ticket at all and don't intend to obtain one, you are essentially a thief! You could equally accuse Tesco of false advertising for saying that their baked beans are cheaper than any other place's - Sainsbury's baked beans are "free" if you shoplift them. A strong point that essentially deals with the original question - though the original poster was welcome in pondering on the language used by LU and sharing his thoughts here. True, it was just that the original poster's language implied that fare-dodging was the desirable course of action, rather than merely a possible one ("you should not swipe in..." rather than "you *could* avoid swiping in"...). Probably just my over-reaction! -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#10
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Richard M Willis wrote:
"Helen Deborah Vecht" wrote in message Yebbut if you get caught not touching in, you may end up with a £20 Penalty Fare. That might not be 'best'... Do you have to touch in if you are using a travelcard, rather than PrePay ? I thought it was only PP users who had to touch all over the place ? Can't someone come up with a better verb than "touch" ? They'd better not! -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
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