I was looking up some information on Unpaid Fares Notices earlier today over a problem I had when purchasing a ticket on board a train a week or so ago. (Totally seperate incident now resolved)
I've looked into the use of
PERTIS▸ Machines and whether or not that are a practical solution to deterring Fare Evasion.
An example of this from the
FGW▸ Penalty Fares Booklet explains that a permit to travel is valid for 2 hours, which
IMHO▸ is fine. However I looked further into this and use an extract from the GreaterAnglia guide which details the
advice conditions of which they should used, which includes from my point of view, this rather worrying extract:
Just like a passenger must pay on boarding a bus, you are responsible for ensuring that you are carrying sufficient funds to purchase a Permit to Travel or ticket before travelling, otherwise you may have to pay a Penalty Fare.Now I may be completely missing the point here. But I think that is out of order to even suggest this.
I can think of a few reasons as to why you may not have any 'change' to pay the fare in this situation:
1) You have a fear for your personal safety carrying cash because you're either vunerable or have been the victim of a mugging. < Sorry to be dramatic, but it happens
2) You have available funds, but only in the form of notes (^5, ^10, ^20 etc). Well the Bus argument is perfectly plausible comparison, but in Frome (My current home town) if you wanted to take the Bus to Bath you'd be looking at at least ^6.40 which is MORE than a notes worth. So in Frome, that argument is shot down as it is a very common site to see passengers paying with ^5 or ^10 notes... You'll even get away with a ^20 but you *might* have to ask for a change ticket. (They won't offer them, that's another rant though)
3) You've taken a Taxi to the station and the fare was ^4, You find you have ^4.50 in your wallet, so rather than give the Driver the ^20 you've just taken out of the
ATM‡ because it wasn't giving out ^10 notes (Happens all too often) you hand over the ^4 coinage. Leaving you with 50p or a ^20. I'll explain shortly how that could be a problem.
4) You don't have any cash; neither notes nor coinage, but have a plastic with more than enough available funds for the journey you wish to make.
5) Going along slightly with BNM's story here in the thread, you start your journey at a station such as Bruton for example (Doesn't have a PERTIS but for this example, it does) heading for Plymouth. You insert ^5 for the journey and you don't get ticket checked onboard between Bruton and Castle Cary. On arrival at Castle Cary the Ticket Office is closed. You also wished to Travel First Class from Castle Cary to Plymouth. However on the
HST▸ the guards
Avantix▸ is broken... OK i'm going a bit silly there but as an aside to that example:
Who is going to have anywhere near enough Coinage for a First Anytime Return from Bruton to Plymouth?
Assuming you did get to
PLY» , your PERTIS would be long expired...
I've heard you could in theory insert 10 pence into a PERTIS to gain a Permit to Travel. But it may be considered as avoiding paying the fare. I'd love to see any
TOC▸ try and uphold that in the situation of option 5.
Also the Bus Analogy doesn't work for me personally i'm afraid... I have a Bus Pass.
My final point then comes down to "Contactless Payments" - If the banks have given us this technology to essentially not require "hard cash" < (I say that as in coin and note media). Then doesn't that make the whole PERTIS use redundant? I don't know if anyone here has used Contactless, but it's a brilliant system and saves a huge amount of hassle and being slowed down at the POS (Point of Sale)
I'll leave it there, but does anyone have any views on this and do you think that the wording in
GA▸ 's policy should be taken with a pinch of salt?
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Sources for quotes:
https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CE8QFjAA&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ircas.co.uk%2Fdocs%2FGA_Penalty_Fares_Leaflet.pdf&ei=TdYvUIGbLKiu0QXFwoDoDA&usg=AFQjCNFolDcdI5MWdKhkhYxBkgZUVuRGCg&cad=rjahttp://www.firstgreatwestern.co.uk/Train-times-and-tickets/Ticket-types//~/media/PDF/Tickets%20and%20train%20times/Season%20tickets/Buy%20Before%20You%20Board%20WEST%20%20March%202007%2032934700.pdf