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NYC Politician Wants To Ban Cashless Restaurants (eater.com)

If New York City Council Member Ritchie J. Torres has his way, the growing trend of cashless restaurants -- establishments that accept payment only in plastic and digital forms -- will be snuffed out. From a report: Torres plans to introduce legislation before his fellow city council members that, if passed, would levy fines on any local businesses that refused to accept paper currency. "I started coming across coffee shops and cafes that were exclusively cashless and I thought: But what if I was a low-income New Yorker who has no access to a card?" he says in a Q&A with Grub Street. "I thought about it more and realized that even if a policy seems neutral in theory, it can be racially exclusionary in practice. Therein lies the problem with card-only policies. I see it as a way to gentrify the marketplace."

Torres believes the cashless business model is inherently classist and racist, as it excludes anyone who might not be able to afford smartphones loaded with digital currency such as Apple Pay or qualify for credit cards, let alone the roughly 22 million Americans who do not have bank accounts. "If you're intent on a cashless business model, it will have the effect of excluding lower-income communities of color from what should be an open and free market," he tells Grub Street. In 2009 Wall Street Journal story, Tony Zazula, co-owner of now-shuttered Commerce in New York City, explained, pretty much, yes, that's right.

4 of 636 comments (clear)

  1. Public or private by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    when I look at a dollar bill, it says "this note is legal tender for all debts, public or private".

    So I'd think that if you offer to pay your coffee-shop bill with dollar bills, that's legal tender for the debt you owe then for the service. "A creditor is obligated to accept legal tender toward repayment of a debt."

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    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  2. How about Tourists ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Last trip to NY from Canada, I bought only cash with me because of the cut that my credit card get with each transactions in foreign currency.

    If most of the restaurants where cashless, I don't know what I would have eaten.

  3. Re:How is cashless legal? by Arkham · · Score: 3, Informative

    Anyone know how operating a cashless business is legal by refusing Legal Tender?

    Isn't the entire point to have a common / ubiquitous currency that is available to ALL citizens?

    Can I use cash to buy from Amazon?

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    - Vincit qui patitur.
  4. Odd thing which happened at my store last night... by magusxxx · · Score: 5, Informative

    A customer came in who bought one of those pre-paid credit cards. He wanted to put more money on it. Thing is, we have no way of doing it. He said he doesn't have online access. And he needed money on the card because the hotel he went to required a card. Even though he had cash to pay a deposit. The only thing we could do is sell him another one which cost him a $4.95 surcharge.

    Imagine if you were homeless and had to pay $5 every time you needed to get a new card. In my area that's enough to get a container of instant coffee/tea, a loaf of bread, and two cans of vegetables.

    --
    Care killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back.