Community Corner

Metro Wants to Dump Your SmarTrip—In About 4 Years

Doing away with a third-party system that converts dollars to Metro cash would "modernize" the transit system—and save money, The Washington Post reports.

SmarTrip cards will, eventually, become a thing of the past as Metro, at nearly 40 years old, steps into the 21st century, The Washington Post reported

Metro wants to do away with its current fare collection system that requires customers to convert dollars to SmarTrip money or paper farecards. The system isn't very modern in an age when some retailers are swiping credit cards from their smartphones. 

“If you look at how people are making payments these days with their phones or the cards they already have in their wallet, that’s the way of the future,” said Carol Kissal, Metro’s chief financial officer told The Post. “That’s what we want to adopt.”

Find out what's happening in Bethesda-Chevy Chasewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Plus, it's costly to run a separate fare system. 

The Post says Metro can spend up to $1 million when it changes fares around because it has to reprogram all of its station and bus software. 

Find out what's happening in Bethesda-Chevy Chasewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Metro wants a new system that allows customers to either scan their smartphone, swipe a credit card or pay with a key fob in the next four years, according to The Post. 


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