ORCA card

For other uses of ORCA, see Orca (disambiguation).
ORCA
Location Puget Sound region, United States
Launched April 20, 2009[1]
Technology
Operator Vix Technology
Manager Central Puget Sound Regional Fare Coordination System
Currency US Dollar ($5 minimum load, $300 maximum load)
Stored-value E-purse
Credit expiry None
Auto recharge Autoload
Validity
Retailed
  • Online
  • Mail
  • Vending machines (located at transit centers, Sounder stations and Link stations)
  • ORCA Customer Service locations
  • Telephone 1-888-988-ORCA
Variants
  • Reduced Regional Fare Permit (RRFP) ORCA
  • ORCA LIFT (low-income)
  • ORCA youth
Website orcacard.com

The ORCA ("One Regional Card for All") card is a contactless, stored value smart card used for payment of public transport fares in the Puget Sound region of Washington state, United States. ORCA was introduced on a limited basis on April 20, 2009, with a full public launch in June 2009. As of March 2016, an adult ORCA card costs $5, one of the highest prices for a public transportation smart card in the United States.

History

Central Puget Sound transit agencies have collaborated in a region-wide fare system since 1991 with the introduction of U-PASS and later FlexPass. In 1996, voters approved Sound Move, which called for an integrated regional fare policy for a "one-ticket ride".[3] That goal led to the creation of the PugetPass in 1999, which allowed transit riders to use a single pass for five transit agencies.[4]

On April 29, 2003, an agreement to implement a smart card system between the seven agencies in the Central Puget Sound Regional Fare Coordination Project (Sound Transit, King County Metro, Community Transit, Everett Transit, Pierce Transit, Kitsap Transit, and Washington State Ferries) was signed along with a US$43 million contract[1] awarded to ERG Transit Systems (now Vix Technology) as the vendor and system integrator of the project. The ORCA card was originally anticipated to be operational in 2006.[5]

Introductory phase

On Friday, April 17, 2009, ORCA announced a limited rollout of the regional smart card beginning April 20, 2009. The limited rollout allowed remaining technical issues in the system to be resolved. An extensive rollout and public outreach campaign followed in June 2009. Blank cards were available at no charge during the introductory period, but as of March 1, 2010, the card cost $5 ($3 for reduced fare permit holders). Users of PugetPasses, FlexPasses, and other passes were to be gradually transitioned to ORCA.[1]

Launch timeline

The ORCA launch press kit gave a launch timeline as follows:[6]

Public beta test

Between November 9 and December 22, 2006, as many as 6,000 transit riders were asked to participate in a live test of the smart card system. The test was conducted on selected routes of the seven participating agencies.[4] The University of Washington conducted a separate test for integrating ORCA with the Husky Card and U-PASS during the same period.[9]

Technology

The card uses the ISO/IEC 14443 RFID standard.[10] Specifically, the MIFARE DESFire EV1 which, "implements all 4 levels of ISO / IEC 14443A and uses optional ISO / IEC 7816-4 commands.".[11]

Agencies

ORCA is managed by the Central Puget Sound �Regional Fare Coordination System, a joint board of directors with representatives of all member transit agencies. Day-to-day management is provided by the staff of Sound Transit and King County Metro.[12] The system is centrally operated by Vix Technology.[12]

Current

Products

E-purse

Orca Card Fare Vending Machine

An ORCA card can be used as a stored-value card through a function called the electronic purse (E-purse). The E-purse holds value that can be used like cash to pay fare. The minimum value that can be added to an E-purse is $5. The maximum value that can be stored in an E-purse is $300.[13]

PugetPass

PugetPass is a regional monthly pass that lets passengers travel on nearly every transit service in the region for a calendar month. A PugetPass is valid for payment of trip fares up to the value of the pass. Trip fares above the value of the pass may be paid with E-purse value. (Example: a passenger who has a $2.50 PugetPass and rides a service that costs $3.75 would have $2.50 covered by the PugetPass and $1.25 would be deducted from their E-Purse). Washington State Ferries does not accept the PugetPass. Pass values available range from 50¢ to $5.75.[14] Passes are priced at $9 per 25¢ of fare value.

Regional Day Pass

The Regional Day Pass costs $8 or $4.50 (senior and disability only) and cover up to $3.50 or $1.75 (senior and disability only) of fare value on any transit service that honors the PugetPass within one day.[15]

Agency specific products and pass

An agency pass covers rides on a specific transit agency's service.[13] Examples include Washington State Ferries' monthly passes, Metro ACCESS paratransit passes, and Metro vanpool passes.[14]

Business products

Employers may purchase one of two products for their employees:

ORCA Business Passport

The ORCA Business Passport is comprehensive, annual transportation pass program. Employers pay a flat annual cost per employee and each receives an ORCA card that covers almost all transit services in the Puget Sound, including Vanpool. Employers must cover all employees.

ORCA Business Choice

The ORCA Business Choice allows businesses to add funds to employee ORCA cards on a monthly basis in the form of an E-voucher. The E-voucher can be used to purchase a monthly PugetPass or E-purse value. Any unused E-voucher amount at the end of the month is removed from the employee ORCA cards and refunded to the business.[16]

Features

Transfers

ORCA cards allow a two-hour transfer from the time fare is paid. If an E-purse or regional pass was used to pay fare, transfers are allowed on any bus or rail system in the region. If an agency pass was used, transfers are allowed only on services within that agency. Transfers are stored on the card and automatically calculated for the user. Transfers are not given or accepted on Washington State Ferries.[17]

Fare preset

ORCA card users paying with an E-purse can set their zone preference for King County Metro and Sound Transit services where zone-based fares are used. For example, a person who regularly travels one zone on a two-zone bus can preset their zone to avoid having to tell the driver to change the zone preset on the reader.[18]

Card registration

Several features of the ORCA card are only available when it is registered.

Balance protection

Balance protection protects the user from losing any value on the card when it is lost or stolen. A replacement card is issued with its value restored for the cost of a new card if the card is registered.[19]

Autoload

An Autoload automatically adds transportation products to an ORCA card on a regular basis using a Visa or MasterCard. Examples of autoloads are adding value to an E-purse when its balance falls below a certain amount and recurring purchases of monthly passes.[20]

My ORCA account

A My ORCA account can be created on the ORCA website to monitor and manage ORCA cards. The account lets the user view transportation products stored on their card (E-purse balance, validity period of passes), transaction history, purchase additional ORCA cards for others, set up an Autoload, set fare presets, and report lost, stolen, or damaged cards.[19]

Low-income fare

The ORCA Lift program discounts fares to $1.50 per ride for users of the ORCA card earning less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level.[21]

Criticism

High cost

As of March 2016, an adult ORCA card costs $5, one of the highest prices for a public transportation smart card in the United States.

Delay in applying credit to an ORCA card E-purse

It takes between 24–48 hours for an online credit to apply to an E-purse, whether you do it directly via the web page or call customer service. The only way to get an immediate credit is to go to one of the transit stations that sell ORCA cards and reload the card via a Ticket Vending Machine.

Privacy concerns

The ORCA card, especially subsidized ones, may be used to track users.[22] Information regarding a card user's trips may be released to third parties including employers who subsidize the cards. Many other parties may also obtain detailed trip information.[23]

References

  1. 1 2 3 King County News Center, ORCA smart card limited rollout gets underway
  2. Intro to ORCA/Husky Card Presentation. UW SocTech, Spring 2007
  3. Sound Transit. "Sound Move—The 10-Year Regional Transit System Plan". 1996.
  4. 1 2 "Transit Agencies Gear Up to Test "Smart Card"" (PDF). Central Puget Sound Regional Fare Coordination Project. 2006-08-28. Archived from the original (pdf) on 2007-01-09. Retrieved 2009-02-14. (via Archive.org)
  5. "Smart Card - Signing of the Interlocal Cooperation Agreement and Vendor Contract". Central Puget Sound Regional Fare Coordination Project. 2003-04-29. Retrieved 2009-02-14.
  6. Seattle Transit Blog - ORCA Rollout Begins Monday
  7. Trip Planner Tips - Fare and transfer information
  8. University Transportation Committee Meeting Minutes, October 14, 2008 page 2
  9. UW Commuter Services: ORCA Smart Cards
  10. Raschke. "FareBot: reading ORCA cards on Android". Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  11. "MIFARE DESFire™ EV1". mifare.net. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  12. 1 2 "King County Job Listings: Functional Analyst III (ORCA Operations)". King County, Washington/King County. 2011-02-11. Archived from the original on 2011-02-11. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  13. 1 2 ORCA: Fare Products/Card Types
  14. 1 2 ORCA Products List
  15. "Regional Day Pass Approved". Seattle Transit Blog.
  16. ORCA Business - Products Available for Sale
  17. ORCA: Transfer Questions
  18. ORCA FAQ: Fare Questions
  19. 1 2 ORCA FAQ: Password and Account Questions
  20. ORCA FAQ: Revalue Questions
  21. Johnson, Kirk (February 28, 2015). "Targeting Inequality, This Time on Public Transit". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  22. Lindblom, Mike (17 Dec 2009). "Is Big Brother watching your ORCA card?". The Seattle Times.
  23. "RCW 42.56.330 Public utilities and transportation.". Washington State Legislature. 2007.

External links

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