The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

How 4 students ended pay toilets in U.S.

- By Laura A. Bischoff Dayton Daily News via AP

DAYTON » The next time you step into a public restroom, say a quiet thank you to Dayton natives Michael and Ira Gessel, Steve Froikin and Natalie Precker.

After all, it was their efforts nearly 50 years ago that allowed Americans to pee for free.

The high school students founded the Committee to End Pay Toilets in America in late 1968 and launched what would be a tenacious, cheeky national campaign to get rid of the hated pay toilets.

“We were a bunch of high school — and later college — students who were angry at pay toilets and wanted to do something about it,” said Gessel, who is now vice president of federal programs for the Dayton Developmen­t Coalition. “Some students spend their time going to parties and drinking; we wrote model legislatio­n and drafted press releases. Everyone has to have a hobby.”

The Committee to End Pay Toilets in America received national media coverage during its campaign in the early 1970s.

For readers under the age of 50, thousands of public restrooms across the country had locking mechanisms on stall doors that required a dime or more to open. If you didn’t have any money — or the right change — you were out of luck or had to make a degrading crawl under the door.

The idea for changing the world came on a Gessel family road trip along the Pennsylvan­ia Turnpike in December 1968 when the brothers encountere­d pay toilets at a Howard Johnson Restaurant. They saw it as an affront to human dignity. Ending pay toilets became a number one priority.

Ira penned an article that urged people to ask Congress to support legislatio­n to ban pay toilets. Froikin printed the article in the Meadowdale High School student newspaper and the friends created the Committee to End Pay Toilets in America.

The logo was a fist clenching chains rising from a toilet bowl. “Ballad of the Pay Toilet” became the campaign anthem and “Ode to a Pay Toilet” — a poem — was read aloud at the first meeting, attended by 29 members at the downtown Dayton public library. Membership dues — 25-cents — streamed in from across the country.

The Committee to End Pay Toilets in America received membership dues from some 1,800 people across the country.

Flush with gutsy ideas, they published “The Free Toilet Paper” and produced how-to guides for anti-paypotty activists, wrote letters to newspapers editors, contacted elected officials and created the Thomas Crapper Memorial Award, named after the flush toilet inventor.

They started college campus chapters at University of Chicago, Kent State University, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard and elsewhere. That gave them a national footprint.

“We did what no one else before us had succeeded in doing, which was to move the debate from a pure joke to serious action,” Gessel said. “I think there was a window to do this. We were involved in the ‘70s, it was the beginning of the feminist movement, then called women’s liberation, and 10 years later you had Ronald Reagan and a curtain of conservati­sm that came down. I think people would not have been open to the humor of it.”

The feminist movement bolstered the campaign, since urinals were free but sit-down toilets were not.

The Committee to End Pay Toilets in America received national media coverage during its campaign in the early 1970s.

In February 1972, the committee made a big splash: an article on the Knight Newspapers wire that got picked up by multiple newspapers. A month later, the Dayton Daily News ran an editorial calling for removal of pay toilets at Cox Municipal Airport, where 34 pay toilets generated $11,400 in 1971.

In January 1973, they hit the mother lode of coverage: four newspapers, two TV stations, three wire services and several radio stations. Chicago moved to get rid of pay-to-go toilets.

“Everybody could relate to our cause and that’s why we were so successful,” Gessel said.

In May 1976, Ohio Gov. James Rhodes signed the toilet bill into law. It put a lid on the problem by requiring an equal number of free toilets for every pay one. A $1,000 penalty was tacked on for non-compliance.

With state after state enacting bans, and roughly half of the pay toilets decommissi­oned in the country, the committee declared victory and the Daytonians went on with their lives.

Ira Gessel is now a retired mathematic­s professor in Boston; Steve Froikin lives in Chicago and writes online training courses; Natalie Precker lives in Los Angeles; before his current gig with the developmen­t coalition, Michael Gessel worked for former U.S. Reps. Charles Whalen and Tony Hall.

Gessel said he doesn’t know of a public restroom or even a single stall named in honor of the committee or its founding members. The group’s exploits are mostly forgotten.

“This all happened in the days before the internet and a news story died when you took the newspapers out with the trash,” he said. “There aren’t many pay toilets left and I suspect many people today have never seen one. You don’t get much mileage talking about your campaign to eliminate pay toilets if people don’t know what you’re talking about.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States