Does anyone know what this actually means - or will mean - in practice?
Does it mean that by 2020 there will be no paper tickets, or that paper tickets will start to 'be phased out' from that date?
What will replace paper tickets? What, if anything, will a passenger receive to show they have paid for travel?
Will you still be able to buy a 'ticket' (whatever form that takes, whether printed card or phone app or whatever) at point of travel - or will you have to purchase it in advance?
Will there be any provision for people without some 'mobile device' to travel (eg kids taking the train to school)?
Will there be 'tickets' in the form of eg SMS, email etc, or will there be a smart card system like the
Oyster▸ card?
If a smart card, will it be a national scheme valid for all services and all
TOCs▸ , or will different franchises have their own cards?
Is this perhaps not a scheme to 'make efficiencies' by moving to an online or machine only system, making ticket window staff redundant?
Can an announcement about a long-term scheme made so close to a general election be considered to have any validity a t all?
Does even the
DfT» know any of these things yet?
And is there any connection with eg this:
http://www.railtechnologymagazine.com/Fares-rail-policy-and-DfT-news/dft-invests-in-smart-ticketing-in-the-west-midlandsSeparately, the minister also announced that the government will be working with the UK▸ Cards Association ^ the body representing the card payments industry ^ to bring contactless payment to public transport country-wide.
The association will lead a project to coordinate actions among card payment processors, card issuers as well as UK transport operators.
...which would suggest it's about payment methods, rather than tickets per se?
Intrigued!