Auckland Transport's HOP card took years to design and put into operation. It was away back in 2009, before the creation of the Super City, when the city's transport officials gave an $87 million contract to the French conglomerate Thales to develop a transferable card for Auckland's buses, trains
NZ Herald editorial: AT HOP cards should not expire
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What sort of "smart card" is this? Photo / Jason Oxenham
The 60-day limit has been set so that the system does not get overloaded with cards waiting to have their balance updated. If the tagging machines on trains and buses had to search a larger database each time a card was presented, the tagging system would slow down, AT explains. It sounds very primitive by today's standards.
Do modern metropolitan transport cards overseas suffer this sort of limitation? As one frustrated HOP card holder told us yesterday, "I have transport cards for London, Sydney, Melbourne and Singapore and I can use these cards when I am in the country with no feat it won't work, even months or years later."
Database technology seems boundless today, and fast. Auckland ratepayers have staked a lot on the transfer card that is supposed to be the linchpin of an integrated public transport system. It is the key to the whole plan for people to catch buses to railways stations or ferry wharves and be prepared to change vehicles at least once in the course of their journey.
When possible users hear the card effectively has a 60-day expiry they are less likely to carry one, and the credibility of Auckland's public transport takes another blow. AT needs to tell its card supplier to do better.