Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Turnpike to go cashless at Ohio border, Rt. 66 bypass in October

- By Ed Blazina

The Pennsylvan­ia Turnpike’s Gateway station entering from Ohio and the Turnpike Route 66 bypass in Westmorela­nd County will become the turnpike’s next cashless toll points.

Beginning Oct. 27, motorists using those roads will not be able to pay tolls by cash. Tollbooths will be replaced by overhead gantries that will record payments from a prepaid E- ZPass transponde­r — which about 85% of motorists have — or take a photo of the license plate from an overhead gantry and send the motorist a bill in the mail.

“Cashless tolling has been adopted by dozens of agencies across the United States because of the improved safety and mobility it provides,” turnpike CEO Mark Compton said in a statement. “Everyone pays electronic­ally, so there’s no need to stop; all motorists benefit from the convenienc­e of uninterrup­ted travel.

“Plus, interchang­e safety is improved since cash- paying and EZPass customers no longer need to dart across tollbooth traffic to get in the correct lane.”

Currently, the toll at Gateway, which is eastbound only, is $ 5.50 for E- ZPass and $ 7.90 for Toll By Plate. For the mainline on Toll 66, the cost is $ 1.90 for E- ZPass and $ 2.80 for Toll By Plate. Both could increase when the Turnpike Commission makes its yearly rate adjustment, which could happen later this month.

The turnpike already has cashless tolling at four other locations: Beaver Valley Expressway and the Findlay Connector in Western Pennsylvan­ia and part of the Northeaste­rn Extension and the Delaware River Bridge in Eastern Pennsylvan­ia.

The turnpike’s goal is to have all cashless tolling by the end of 2022. So far, toll collectors have been relocated to other cash sites or switched to other jobs.

The turnpike says more than 30 agencies in 14 states already have switched to all cashless tolling.

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