Iowa State Fair vendors face change
Starting next year, those pork chops on a stick can be bought with a card.
The Iowa State Fair has confirmed that it will require all food and drink vendors to accept credit and debit card payments beginning in 2020.
Cash has long been the dominant method of payment for the fried cheese curds, corn dogs, and scores of other foods bought by fairgoers, many of whom visit to see the famous Butter Cow sculpture. Roughly 30 ATM machines are located throughout the fairgrounds.
But the fair recently informed concessions vendors that they will be required to use Clover cash registers starting next year that accept credit and debit payments. They will have the option to use the small machines at this year’s fair, which begins Aug. 8.
Any changes to traditions at the fair can be controversial. In 2014, fair officials quickly abandoned a plan to require customers to purchase tickets in order to pay for their concessions after a backlash.
In a letter to vendors, concessions director Mike Nye noted that he has been encouraging them for several years to consider accepting credit cards and that some of them have successfully tested out different systems. He said that research shows people spend 15 per cent more per transaction when using credit cards and that customers overwhelmingly prefer cashless payment options.