Business & Tech
Pa. Turnpike to Eliminate Toll Plazas and Cash Payments
Plans are in the works to make the Pennsylvania Turnpike all electronic and get rid of toll plazas

Officials are planning a dramatic conversion of the Pennsylvania Turnpike to all electronic tolling with no more toll plazas or cash payments in about five years.
Turnpike Commission officials told state lawmakers that the project is the most ambitious of its kind in the nation.
Find out what's happening in Bethlehemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Instead of driving through toll plazas, vehicles will pass beneath sensors that will automatically deduct tolls from E-Z Pass accounts or photograph license plates so a bill can be sent to the owner.
In July, the commission hired a contractor -- HNTB Corp., a Missouri company with five offices including one in Harrisburg -- to move forward with the plans to convert to an all-electronic tolling system that would eliminate the use of cash along the 545-mile route, according to a Pennlive.com report.
Find out what's happening in Bethlehemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
It costs more than $67 million a year to staff toll plazas and that cost is projected to rise to $77 million by 2014.
Meanwhile, turnpike tolls will increase in January.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.