My
favorite time of the year is not Autumn or Springtime or holiday
season. No, it's the time of year when I venture forth to get my new
yearly student bus pass. This adventure is always fraught with
uncertainty, danger, & mental anguish. Egged has the unique
talent of turning even the simplest task into a distressing ordeal.
They could make a walk to the corner store for milk into a perilous
undertaking, fraught with dragons and falling meteorites.
All I
want to do is take a bus. Is that so much to ask for? I'm a simple
girl, with simple needs. One of those being the ability to get home
at night.
This
year Egged decided to set up stations in various places around the
city during various times where you could drop your card in an
envelope in the morning and they'd return it fully loaded by 16:00.
All you had to do was go to their website, fill out the online form,
and give them your credit card information. Then you could leave them
your card and return later to pick it up.
I
decided to take care of this on Monday, as my card was due to expire
on Wednesday. Sunday night I got home from work at about midnight.
Even though I was about to collapse on my keyboard from sheer
exhaustion, I WAS GOING TO FILL OUT THE FORM. They had most of my
information from the previous year, so all I had to do was choose my
area, click the option for yearly as opposed to per semester, and
type in my credit card information. Unfortunately my credit card was
DENIED. Perhaps I'd gone over my limit, so I changed the payment
option from 2 monthly payments to 3. I clicked on send and got a
loading page for a few minutes. I tried to click on send again but
was no more successful the second time. I went back and refreshed the
page, but this time I didn't have the option for the Jerusalem area,
leading me to believe that I had already been signed up for it
(according to their FAQs you can't sign up twice for the same area,
so if your area doesn't appear, you're already signed up).
I didn't
know what else I could do but hope the payment went through and bring
my card into the bar that had been appropriated by Egged the next
day. I went about my daily business, picked up the card at 17:00
before work, and went my very merry way. I had no confirmation of any
kind whether it had worked or not since nothing had been removed from
or added to the envelope, and there were no notes written anywhere.
But I was hopeful.
I rode
around the city in a blissful state of freedom for the next few days,
enjoying the ease with which I could get on the buses and trains,
congratulating Egged on the simplicity of the whole affair. And it
only took them 4 years to get to this relative state of efficiency!
Until
Tuesday night. I got on the train, no problem but when I swiped my
card on the bus, the red light came up. I tried again with the same
result.
“It's
empty,” said the apathetic bus driver without even glancing at me.
“But I
have a yearly pass! I JUST got it on Monday.”
The bus
driver just shrugged and motioned me past. I looked at my watch and
realized it was 12:05 am of the day my bus pass had been supposed to
expire. It seemed that the payment had not in fact gone through and
no one had cared to let me know that they'd returned my card without
actually doing anything to it. I spent the next 20 minutes of my ride
home, cursing and invoking upon them and all their family plague and
pestilence.
Egged
was going to be returning to the pub on Sunday and Monday of the next
week with their stack of empty envelopes. It was the same deal- leave
your rav-kav in an envelope between the hours of 8:00 and 10:00, and
pick it up between 16:00 and 18:00. This time I paid with my mother's
credit card and got confirmation of payment. I left the house at 9:00
in the morning, waited for a bus that didn't come, just missed a
train, and ran through the door of the bar at 9:57. I did the entire
process again and prayed for the best. I had been asked to
come in to work at 16:00 but had warned my boss that I would need to
pick up my rav-kav first so I'd be about 15 minutes late. He said
fine, no problem, so I arrived back at the bar at 15:45. So I waited
until 16:00. And then I waited some more. 16:30 came and went and the
Egged staff member in charge of bringing the envelopes back was
apparently still sitting in traffic a few blocks away. Of all the
people in the entire country, you would think that an Egged worker
would have planned for traffic. Apparently he'd forgotten that
Jerusalem is a large, and very diverse parking lot.
He
finally showed up at 16:40. I had my envelope in hand 5 minutes later
(after the very Israeli initial mass convergence on the box of
envelopes). It had a halfway illegible note written on the outside
saying that my card had been put on the black list and that I'd have
to go get a new one.
The girl
in charge of this whole rav-kav-bar project wasn't exactly sure what
having one's card blacklisted meant and the Egged guy had disappeared
about 8 seconds after he'd arrived. She just looked at my face and
said, “I am so sorry.”
I felt
even worse than the guy who hadn't realized that he was supposed to
leave his rav-kav in the envelope. By the time I got to work,
my eye was twitching and people kept backing away from me in alarm.
I was
not excited to go to the Egged office at the central bus station. In
fact, I was the opposite of excited, whatever that may be. There was
a line of students about 12 meters long (I'm not even exaggerating)
waiting to get their yearly student bus pass. They seemed to be
working out of 2 offices- one just for students, and one for the
regular rav-kav issues. Every once in a while someone would be
“chosen” from the student line to be admitted (ahead of
the line) to the regular office. There did not seem to be any pattern
to the choosing, but I was pulled out of the student line (after I'd
finally gotten to the front) to be admitted to the regular office
where I waited longer than if I'd just stayed in the other line.
Figures. However, I finally got the answer to the burning question:
why had my card been blacklisted? As far as I knew, it had no
communist ties and was not even a member of any political party, let
alone a far-left party.
The
answer was... a post-it note. Apparently, the post-it note I'd stuck
on it with a list of bus times had caused irreparable damage to the
card and it was limping along on its last leg. This should have
struck me as more absurd than it did, but the truth is, the entire
process had been so unbelievably ridiculous that I just accepted this
as another fact of life along with sunrise and winter snowfall.
I'm in
the process now of writing a very angry letter to Egged and sending
it to them with all the bus and train tickets I was forced to buy
during the period I had already paid for bus pass privileges,
requesting my money back. I am not overly optimistic about the
chances of a refund, but I must stand up for my rights as a citizen
of the free world!