– 5:00 p.m.Īny questions on SEPTA Senior ID cards, please reach out to MaryAnn Sandone at 61, ext. Call 21 – press #6 Call Center Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m.If you are in need of SAME DAY processing to immediately obtain your SEPTA Senior ID card, below is the information- Cards will be issued on the day of your appointment if you follow the process below: Your old card will be deactivated within a few days of when we process your renewal. Please allow up to 4 weeks for your new KEY card to arrive in the mail. Please bring a valid photo ID, other than your Senior KEY card. Please bring your OLD SEPTA Senior KEY card with you to your appointment. Important Information for Renewal of Senior SEPTA Photo ID cards: You must be 65 years of age or older on the day we process your ID card. Please allow up to 4 weeks for your card to arrive in the mail after we process your Senior KEY card. In order for DCTMA staff to process your new application for a Senior Key card, you must bring a valid photo ID. Important information on NEW SEPTA Senior Photo ID Cards: New applications for Senior ID cards, and renewal processing will be done by APPOINTMENT ONLY. We can come to organizations and do multiple Senior ID cards at one time, or you can schedule an appointment to come into our office in Media, PA. If you would like to have a representative from the DCTMA come to your organization in Delaware County to sign up seniors for their new SEPTA Key Photo ID card, or to process renewals, please contact MaryAnn Sandone at: or 61, ext. The DCTMA staff are currently scheduling appointments for processing renewals of SEPTA Senior ID cards To see how you can begin taking SEPTA today, visit SEPTA’s website to plan your route. One of the easiest ways we can move throughout the region, and also have a positive impact on air quality is to take public transportation. Shoutout to whoever got the $200 million payday for this bullshit, not like we needed it for anything.In Delaware County, we are fortunate to have multiple forms of public transportation serving our county. SEPTA Key is just another scam that the technologically inept leaders of our city have fallen for. In Philadelphia, I can’t double swipe my SEPTA Key to pay for my mom to get on the subway. In DC, the Green Line has cushioned seats. In New York, you can just scan your phone on the subway and use Apple Pay. Go to DC or New York and take the subway, you’ll see huge signs reading “2 minutes til next train.” Come to Philadelphia and simply pray the train is coming soon. Philadelphia’s public transit system is in the dark ages technologically. How many free rides take place every day because the SEPTA Key or their kiosks aren’t operating? Not even Jesus Christ himself could use SEPTA Key for Regional Rail correctly on the first try. SEPTA wants to blame lack of ridership on commuters, but won’t look inward at the idiotic infrastructure they’ve set up. Tokens were zero waste! Now every tourist who doesn’t feel like wasting $4.95 on SEPTA Key is throwing away paper tickets and creating litter. Tokens weren’t made out of hard plastic or designed to be thrown away. Also, it didn’t cost $4.95 to reprint tokens – nor do tokens expire eliminating my money. You know what worked? Tokens! I always knew how many tokens I had, because I could look at them and count. Why isn’t there a specific SEPTA Key app for commuters to check the balance on their SEPTA Key? SEPTA is always advertising the “perks” for the SEPTA Key, why is the hub for these perks buried in the depths of the unusable SEPTA App? Also I don’t want perks, I want to know when the bus is coming. Somehow with all this technology, public transit is less efficient. Meanwhile – the technology involved with SEPTA Key is expensive, dated and unreliable. The whole reason SEPTA told us we needed SEPTA Key was to modernize public transit. Who knew the goddamn things have an expiration date? Turns out I’m more responsible with my SEPTA Key than the City is with anything! Recently – after loading $25 onto my Septa Key, it expired, wasting the $25 I’d put onto it. In 2019, $4.4 million was spent on replacing all 400+ card readers in the city – yet the shit still doesn’t work. According to the Inquirer, these bullshit hotel room keys cost Philadelphia $200 million. Normally, this would mean I hopped a turnstile or ran through the emergency exit – however today I got a free ride for a much more serious reason, the Septa Key machine was broken. Today I road free on the Broad Street Line from Cecil B.
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