Forum Discussion
- aviatorExplorerOnly the real card is accepted. Photos and plastic sided photos are not allowed at Corps of Engineers. Maybe you let your neighbor use our real card??? Most activities require a photo ID as stated on the back of the card for use.
- ModeratorModeratorThe Iphone photos are of the back and front of the cards. At Sam's the phone photo is accepted to pick up meds at the pharmacy, the code on the back of the card (which has the barcode) works at both the pharmacy and at the self checkout. I don't even carry the Sam's card and the cards for some other stores. My billfold is much thinner. My wife does the same thing. The Costco we went to Sat. we used the same procedure, but she also had to show her driver's license as they prefer the real card.
- jmckelvyExplorer
Moderator wrote:
We have our Senior Passes on our phones as we do our Kroger card, Publix, etc, but some parks/attractions require the actual card; therefore we carry it with us.
How about some more details? Is this just a photo of the cards or what? - ModeratorModeratorWe have our Senior Passes on our phones as we do our Kroger card, Publix, etc, but some parks/attractions require the actual card; therefore we carry it with us.
- beemerphile1Explorer
bukhrn wrote:
beemerphile1 wrote:
This is the part I don't understand, If you lose your card, you must pay $80 for a new one, however, if your card is destroyed, as usually happens with most plastic cards in my wallet, you can get a new card for free, If you have a part of the old card, either way they have your info entered into the system, why can't you get a free replacement either way?
Before the increase we bought two additional passes. They are good for life but only if you don't lose the card. Now we have spares.
They don't keep records on this, otherwise how could I buy two without triggering an alert? - 2gypsies1Explorer III
bukhrn wrote:
beemerphile1 wrote:
This is the part I don't understand, If you lose your card, you must pay $80 for a new one, however, if your card is destroyed, as usually happens with most plastic cards in my wallet, you can get a new card for free, If you have a part of the old card, either way they have your info entered into the system, why can't you get a free replacement either way?
Before the increase we bought two additional passes. They are good for life but only if you don't lose the card. Now we have spares.
I don't believe your information is in any 'system'. When we volunteered in a national park and issued the cards, only handwritten information was entered in a log book. Now with computers I'm sure it's different but I don't know about all the info in a computer base. - bukhrnExplorer III
beemerphile1 wrote:
This is the part I don't understand, If you lose your card, you must pay $80 for a new one, however, if your card is destroyed, as usually happens with most plastic cards in my wallet, you can get a new card for free, If you have a part of the old card, either way they have your info entered into the system, why can't you get a free replacement either way?
Before the increase we bought two additional passes. They are good for life but only if you don't lose the card. Now we have spares. - BarabooBobExplorer IIII turned 62 four days before the price changed. So being the cheap person that I am, I sent my application in and paid the $10 handling fee for mail order. So, I paid $20 for the pass. My wife and I stop at every NP we get close to and we use our pass. We also drop $10 or $20 into the voluntary donation box at every park. We are not rich but we like to help maintain the parks. I am disappointed that people want to use the parks but don't want to help maintain them. Maybe that is why we have so few people show up at our local state parks on clean up days.
- 2gypsies1Explorer III
azdryheat wrote:
Sad that we Americans have to pay to get into national parks that 'we-the-people' taxpayers already own. There's enuf foreigner visitors that can pick up the whole tab.
That's an awful way of thinking. If visitors want to experience the national parks and expect things to be there this is a very small payment and it doesn't begin to cover the cost to keep a park open for all those visitors. Repairs and maintenance are so far backlogged they'll never catch up. Millions of visitors really impact the parks. Would it be better that they be closed down and only walk-ins allowed? Back to wilderness? Having volunteered in national parks was a real eye-opener of behind-the-scenes. - beemerphile1ExplorerBefore the increase we bought two additional passes. They are good for life but only if you don't lose the card. Now we have spares.
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