RailForum.com
TrainWeb.com

RAILforum Post A Reply
my profile | directory login | register | search | faq | forum home

» RAILforum » Passenger Trains » Amtrak » Don't Ask, But You Can Tell » Post A Reply

Post A Reply
Login Name:
Password:
Message Icon: Icon 1     Icon 2     Icon 3     Icon 4     Icon 5     Icon 6     Icon 7    
Icon 8     Icon 9     Icon 10     Icon 11     Icon 12     Icon 13     Icon 14    
Message:

HTML is not enabled.
UBB Code™ is enabled.

 

Instant Graemlins Instant UBB Code™
Smile   Frown   Embarrassed   Big Grin   Wink   Razz  
Cool   Roll Eyes   Mad   Eek!   Confused    
Insert URL Hyperlink - UBB Code™   Insert Email Address - UBB Code™
Bold - UBB Code™   Italics - UBB Code™
Quote - UBB Code™   Code Tag - UBB Code™
List Start - UBB Code™   List Item - UBB Code™
List End - UBB Code™   Image - UBB Code™

What is UBB Code™?
Options


Disable Graemlins in this post.


 


T O P I C     R E V I E W
Kiernan
Member # 3828
 - posted
I just got back from a trip to California and I discovered that the conductors can no longer ask if you're a senior citizen when you buy a ticket on the train. The conversation when I bought my ticket from Surf to Santa Barbara on the train went something like this:

CONDUCTOR: Could I see your ID please?
ME: Sure
I hand her my driver's license.
CONDUCTOR: I can't see your birthdate. The year.
I think for a moment.
ME: I still have a couple of years to go before I'm a senior.
CONDUCTOR: Oh. OK. We're not allowed to ask.

I suppose it could be difficult, not to say dangerous, if you asked some people about their senior citizen status. I remember that the ticket agent at Hanford had the right idea. He never asked anyone if they were a senior citizen, he'd put it in monetary terms.

"If you want to be a senior citizen today I can knock ten percent off the ticket price." And he'd usually throw in a "darlin'" for the women. We can all get behind a voluntary ten percent price reduction.

Just a reminder that you have to tell, they can't ask.
 
Gilbert B Norman
Member # 1541
 - posted
I have never been challenged when riding Amtrak on a Senior Citizen rate. Guess my face does it all.

However, to purchase a half fare Senior Citizen ticket on METRA, they want to see either an RTA (Chicago's mass transit oversight agency) issued ID or a Medicare card and other photo ID. This applies for both the purchase and lift.

However, two weeks ago, the Metro North agent at Stamford "just took my word" for a half off Senior ticket, nor was any ID asked for on train.

I guess METRA is more "stickier" than other agencies.
 
Henry Kisor
Member # 4776
 - posted
I've just spent a week and a half in Canada, whose discounts for seniors are VERY good -- far better than those in the U.S. Wasn't asked to prove I was 65 or over -- they just take our word for it.

Guess those Canadians do a lot more on the honor system than we do. In the couple of days we were in Vancouver, we rode all over -- the SkyTrain, AquaBus, etc. -- using a $8 day pass. We did not have to show the passes or run them through a slot anywhere. Of course, if the transit cops ask you to show a ticket but you don't have one, the fine is $175. That seems low to me. In Chicago, where I live, the penalties for cheating a honor system would have to be much greater in order to give sufficient incentive to stay honest -- at least $500 and maybe $1,000 and the threat of a jail stay for serial abusers.
 
Mr. Toy
Member # 311
 - posted
When I managed movie theaters we didn't ask either. People can and do take great offense if you offer a senior discount when they look eligible but they really aren't. One manager I worked with had a woman shoot back "I'll have you know I'm fifty-five!" (The discount was for 60+)It wasn't a matter of company policy, it was more a matter of personal safety!
 
4021North
Member # 4081
 - posted
The need to be polite notwithstanding, I think it's all rather silly, because age (or nationality, etc.)is nothing to be ashamed of.
 
George Harris
Member # 2077
 - posted
quote:
Originally posted by Mr. Toy:
When I managed movie theaters we didn't ask either. People can and do take great offense if you offer a senior discount when they look eligible but they really aren't. One manager I worked with had a woman shoot back "I'll have you know I'm fifty-five!" (The discount was for 60+)It wasn't a matter of company policy, it was more a matter of personal safety!

This sort of super thin-skinned-ness is hard to fathom. Cutting off your nose to spite your face comes to mind. I guess that if people will spend megabucks on cosmetic surgery to keep looking young, paying extra to avoid revealing your age also makes sense. Like my now departed mother-in-law used to say: "There is only one way to avoid old age. Die young."
 
Railroad Bill
Member # 5097
 - posted
My experience has been: the younger the clerk, the older I become [Smile] If the agent is under 30, I must look like I am over 60. But if the agent is 40+ or so, I usually am questioned if I get a senior discount. Since I am only 55 I usually tell them " I am getting closer everyday [Smile]
Age doesnt really matter, its how old you think you are.
[Razz]
 
rresor
Member # 128
 - posted
As somebody who is 55, but was described in a radio transmission by an Amtrak employee as an "elderly" passenger (I was at that time leaning on a cane, due to a slow-healing foot injury), I sometimes get touchy. But when the clerk at Wendy's or the clerk at the Reading Terminal produce market gives me the "senior discount", I don't argue.
 



Contact Us | Home Page

Powered by Infopop Corporation
UBB.classic™ 6.7.2




Copyright © 2007-2016 TrainWeb, Inc. Top of Page|TrainWeb|About Us|Advertise With Us|Contact Us