Oaktree
Super Member
Maybe. Before I got an Ezpass, on the occasions I had to drive toll roads I'd get a bill in the mail a couple months later with 30 days to pay. No nasty notice of evasion, I paid the bills promptly so no idea what the next step would be if I didn't pay. N.Y. Thruway, Maine Turnpike and Spaulding Turnpike in N.H.Without transponder a notice of evasion is sent generated by license plate read with so many days to pay.
Had friends from other states return home to find invoices that by date are past due…
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Maybe it’s a California thing and curious if other states still have the option of toll collectors?
Must vary by state, I believe it's $30 they keep in reserve here in N.H. It's not a huge imposition. Probably cheaper for the state to administer than to have to process a zillion $1 transactions.And it gets worse, they take $75 out of your account to hold, then deduct when you go through until you hit $10. But all the while htey're holding YOUR money. They do that for everyone, and i bet it adds up to millions of unearned dollars.
Got the Ezpass a couple years ago to make it easier when we do a road trip. It's valid throughout the northeast, and as far west as Illinois.
In N.H. we have 2 toll roads...the Everett Turnpike which runs between Nashua & Concord, and the Spaulding Turnpike from Portsmouth to Dover. There are still a couple of cash lanes at the Hooksett tolls, though they're only open limited hours. Not sure on the Spaulding.They can have their fast pay lanes. But I think they should be required to have at least 1 or 2 lanes that take cash or credit, whether it is an automated machine, or a maned toll booth.
I would imagine being a tollbooth attendant would be a sucky job, stuck in a cramped hot-in-summer-freezing-in-winter booth having to breathe exhaust fumes 8 hr/day.
I believe it is on the interstate system. Any toll roads that are part of that system were already in place, and those roads were incorporated into it.I think it should be unlawful for states or local governments to put tolls on US highways, especially the Interstate highway system.