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After 61 Years, Port Authority To Stop Taking Toll Tickets


The Port Authority will soon stop accepting toll tickets nearly 61 years after first issuing them to speed the ride.

Toll Scrip and Universal tickets will no longer be good at the agency’s bridges and tunnels beginning July 1. The Port Authority will refund tickets at their original sales value.

The Port Authority first issued the tickets in 1951 to improve traffic flow and reduce congestion. Buyers received a 10 percent discount and the tickets were “good until used.”

Steve Coleman, spokesman for the Port Authority, said they’re not sure how many tickets are actually out in the public.

“We really have no idea how many are out there given the fact that we really haven’t sold them since 1997 which is 15 years ago,” he said. “But obviously there could be some that still exists out there.”

The agency stopped selling them after it started using E-ZPass.

For more information or for instructions on obtaining a refund, click here.

(Source: 1010WINS)



4 Responses

  1. I don’t see how they can do this legally. Surely it’s a contract, and they’re bound by it. At the very least, they should have to buy them back at the full current rate, not the original purchase price.

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