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Old June 19th 08, 11:31 AM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit
MIG MIG is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jun 2004
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Default How much was a ticket for the underground in the 60s?

On 19 Jun, 11:55, "Dik T. Winter" wrote:
In article Steve Fitzgerald writes:

* In message , Neil Williams
* writes
* On another note, though, I would like to see the abolition of the 1p
* and 2p coins as the Dutch have done with the 1 and 2 euro-cent coins.
* There is hardly a need for them these days.
*
* Are they allowed to do that when they are valid elsewhere in the EU?

The 1 and 2 cent coins are accepted but that is just about all. *Moreover,
when paying in cash the total amount to pay is rounded to the nearest
multiple of 5 cent (which is allowed *), so you will never receive 1 and
2 cent coins.
--
* And the rounding occurs even when you want to pay the correct amount using
1 and 2 cent coins.


When I was working at Sainsburys in 1984ish, ½(half)p coins stopped
being legal tender. Deli and meat scales were still calculating to
the ½p, but staff were told to just ignore them and round down.

But here's the odd part ...

Staff were told that we could still accept ½p coins from customers,
but only in pairs. This was strongly emphasised and always struck me
as bizarre.

Presumably Sainsburys had an arrangement whereby it could cash in all
its ½p coins by some deadline, but even if staff accepted them not in
pairs, the entire Sainsburys chain could only ever have been stuck
with one odd ½p if they ended up with an odd number overall.