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Protest the fare hikes: be a Swipe Back girl (or boy)

Which side are you on? via Flickr user Susan NYC
Which side are you on? via Flickr user Susan NYC

Today is the last day of February, marking the unofficial end of winter! Hooray! Then again, while March should bring higher temperatures and less bulky jackets, it’s also going to be bringing higher subway fares, with the MTA fare hike kicking in on Sunday. Uh, less hooray. Instead of just grousing about those clowns in Albany, No Fare Hikes, a group organized against endless fare hikes, has a better idea: swipe people in with your unlimited card while you’re walking out of the station. The protest is known as Swipe Back, and we talked to one of the organizers behind it.

Ingrid Burrington, a Brooklyn resident and freelancer is one of the main organizers behind the rolling protest. Swipe Back works simply: if you’ve got an unlimited MetroCard and you’re walking out a subway station, swipe someone else through who’s on their way in. In that way, you can help them boycott paying, while still allowing them to get where they’re going. Don’t ask for money for your swipe, though. First of all, it defeats the purpose of the protest. Second, and most importantly, once you bring money into it, swiping someone in becomes illegal. Do it for free though, and you’re well within your rights. You’re also a mensch.

Barrington told us that “this has been done before, but we’re trying to formalize it.”

No Fare Hikes doesn’t have a plan to hang around in subway stations explaining the tactic, but to spread the word, they’re giving out these buttons:

CAM00074

that will mark you as someone who’s involved with the protest.  Unlike the previous fare hike protests, this isn’t going to happen for just a day or a couple of days.

Barrington also said No Fare Hikes “is in it for the long haul,” especially since there are fare hikes planned for every other year up until the end of time.

No Fare Hikes is realistic about police or station agents finding this suspicious, so if you do find yourself in trouble, contact the National Lawyers Guild at (212) 679-9718, who was No Fare Hike’s back on this one. And if you see this going down somewhere, let us know.

7 Comments

  1. Chris

    To stop fare hikes you want to take money away from the MTA? That’s makes absolutely no sense at all. They raise fares because people are already doing that, I see it every morning. If everyone paid we wouldn’t get fare hikes.

  2. alinatsui

    I’m all in favor of swipeback. It makes total sense. I mean, if you paid for an unlimited card, you’re entitled to use it however you want (within reason). Plus, it’s another way to “stick it” to the man. And, don’t forget the MTA execs paid themselves six figures anyways. Plus, there’s another fare hike in 2015.

  3. cheapnewyorker

    Great idea. I have not often had an unlimited metrocard since the last fare hike, but when I do have one, I try to swipe in roommates and friends as much as possible in protest of the exorbitant fares. Glad to see others are formalizing this idea as well. So how do we join and get one of those buttons?

  4. Kiddingme

    I’m sorry if this sounds harsh, but here goes: clearly you have no understanding of how budgeting or government works if you think that helping somebody evade paying a fare is some form of protest.

    Also, call me selfish, but why should I work hard and pay the full fare so that a loafer who stands around asking to be let in gets a free ride? Nonsense all around.

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