Eliminating cash fares
Erica has an excellent overview of Metro's latest report on the possibility:
In a recent report on the future of Metro's fare system, the agency outlined its plans for smoothing the transition to eliminating cash fares, which-according to Metro-will make boarding faster, ease conflicts between riders and drivers, and eliminate the need to periodically repair Metro's 1,509 on-board fareboxes, which are a decades-old model that is no longer being produced. Replacing fareboxes with new ones that accommodate cash payments would cost around $29 million, Metro estimates-a substantial cost for a system that is still recovering from the pandemic. Cash riders also have to pay a second fare to transfer to Sound Transit trains and buses, a problem that will only become more acute as Metro terminates more routes at light rail stations.
The flip side is access: many people simply don't have ORCA cards. It would be impossible to even contemplate until next-gen ORCA is more widespread. Getting ORCA cards into more pockets is always a good thing, and if this facilitates wider distribution of ORCA LIFT and other similar low-income programs, all the better.