By JIM TOSONE
Published in the Sunday New York Times on September 21,
1997
Instead,
any passenger who attempts to outflank the driver by showing a monthly pass
without taking a receipt runs into a verbal “Take your ticket, please” force
field. I once made the mistake of responding by showing my monthly pass again
and saying: “This is my ticket. That jaundiced strip hanging out of your
machine is a receipt, which I really don’t need or want.”
At
that point, the whole bus went silent, some passengers transfixed by my challenge
to the system. For an instant I imagined I was Ensign Pulver in the movie Mr. Roberts and the fare machine was the
captain’s beloved palm tree. Pulver-like, I would rip the machine out by its
roots and toss it overboard. Instead, having spoken my piece, I submissively
tore off the receipt and grabbed a seat in the back.
While idly twirling the receipt in my hands, I noticed a multi-lingual mini tome on the back. It began, “Por favor no ensucie este autobus,” which roughly translates to “Please do not litter on the bus.” Proof positive that the upgrade forefathers knew at the outset where the receipts would wind up.
I
had a chance to raise this issue at a recent Talk to N.J. Transit Day at the
bus terminal. This is a periodic event where middle managers with the word armchair
in their titles attempt to gather information on what it’s like to use public
transportation without having to actually ride a bus.
The
manager I spoke with told me that the reason N.J. Transit forced passengers to
take receipts against their will was to prevent “zone cheating,” a
reprehensible act whereby unscrupulous passengers purchase tickets for fewer zones
than their actual destination. The receipt enables the driver to apprehend such
scoundrels as they leave the bus, by inspecting their receipts and yelling,
“Gotcha.”
“Great idea,” I told him, “except that in the thousands of
trips I’ve made to and from
That’s because the receipts wind up either on the floor or in a matching yellow bag that the drivers, with uncharacteristic creativity and initiative, tape to the fare machine. The puzzled manager didn’t seem to know about the yellow bags. I explained that after you get the receipt, you immediately have the option of dropping it in the bag, thereby making it impossible for the driver to use it to nab zone cheaters. So why not, I asked, have the drivers keep the receipts to begin with? My guess is that there’s something in the drivers’ contract¾not to mention their D.N.A.¾that prevents this.)
All
the manager could say (in strictest confidence) was that I could inform any
driver who challenged me that I am not required to take a receipt and that I would
report him if he tried to force me.
But
the thought of having that conversation with a driver, who has control of the
gas and brake pedals while I make my way down the aisle to my seat, has been
enough to dissuade me from that course of action. Besides, playing Professor
Higgins to 100 bus drivers shouldn’t be my job. I already have a job with N.J.
Transit.