Toll Collector

Toll Collector

TollBoothGuy

5 Years Experience

Brooklyn, NY

Male, 33

I spent just short of five years as a toll collector on the western end of New York State. Ask me anything, but please don't pay me in pennies.

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Last Answer on September 11, 2020

Best Rated

I am considering starting as a part time toll booth collector but I am currently in college. Would I be able to study during my shifts if it is a slow station?

Asked by Brock1 about 10 years ago

I always found toll collecting and reading/studying to be a dreadful combination.  As soon as you pick up your book and read a line, voila- a car appears!  Put the book down, handle the customer, pick the book back up, read the same line over again, put the book down for another customer, rinse, repeat. 

At slow times, this may not be the scenario, but slow times are generally early mornings, late evenings, and overnight hours.  Not optimal times for consuming content that will need to be retained. 

Everyone is different, of course, and you may be able to study in this environment but I had a difficult time of it. 

I'm in training right now and I'm scheduled for full time availability during the week and weekends. There's an option to work weekends only. In your facility, did you have the option of switching over to working weekends only if you wanted?

Asked by Jeff about 10 years ago

Part-timers like myself had the ability to set our own availabilities.  Outside of holidays, we could make ourselves as available for as few or as many days as we wanted.  I guess the only caveat to that is that the days that we made ourselves available didn't automatically translate into shifts.   So you could make yourself available for weekends only, but there would be a high likelihood that you wouldn't work all weekend days. 

I was actually going to apply to be a Floater because there is a plaza right near by my house, and I was wondering if being a toll taker is a good job? What are the ups and downsides of the job?

Asked by RichardK over 10 years ago

As far as jobs go, you could certainly do worse.  I did not particularly enjoy the work, so that will color my list of upsides and downsides.  Ulitmately, I stayed as long as I did because for the area, the pay was right, and it afforded me enough flexibility to attend school full-time. 

Upsides

- Pay is typically higher than minimum wage

- Opportunity to meet all kinds of people. (I consider this both an upside and a downside)

Downsides:

- Tangible face of state/authority that is taking money directly out of drivers' pockets.

- Noisy and exhaust-filled work environment.

- Toll roads don't close.  They are staffed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  Some holidays are typically required.  You will likely work difficult hours.  You may have to report during and work through difficult weather conditions.

- Money is disgusting.  When you get your first handful of dust-covered, greasy, motor oil-covered pennies, you'll understand just how dirty I'm talking. 

- You will answer the same set of questions hundreds of times every day.

- Congratulations, in addition to being a toll collector, you have also become a tour guide. 

- People in cars are IMPATIENT! 

- A lot of people travel without cash

- A lot of people like to argue the merits of toll roads with collectors as cars pile up behind them.

Some people I worked with were very good at taking all of this in stride.  Some people walk out after the first day.  I was somewhere in the middle.  Good luck!

How much do they get an hour for a toll collector 1 in baltimore md

Asked by Scola over 11 years ago

I have no idea.  A google search yielded the following:  

https://jobs.mdot.state.md.us/JobClassDetails.aspx?Postings=733

 

 

Why would a toll booth collector come out of the booth and then write down my license plates number?

Asked by Toni over 11 years ago

There are a few situations that require collectors to exit the booth and take down license plate numbers.   We are required to take down license plate numbers for cars that paid with 50 and 100 dollar bills.  We are also required to take down license plate numbers of vehicles that do not have, or have lost their entry tickets.  Finally, when customers with no cash pull in, we are required to take down the information on their drivers license along with the plate number of the vehicle they are in. 

As an operator, what are the rules for taking off work? like going on vacation and stuff like that.

Asked by sm over 10 years ago

Simple enough.  Full-timers have a set number of paid days that they can take off each year.  I'm sure exact numbers vary based on seniority.  Part-timers in my system submit availabilty well ahead of time, and can make themselves unavailable as many days as they wish, excluding holidays.  Part-timers do not receive any kind of vacation time.  Part-timers frequently slide in to cover full-timers during vacations.     

I just got finished my interview with maryland toll collector and I was told that it will take 4 to 8 weeks to hear something from hr department do this mean I didn't get the job or that it take some time for hr to do hiring and they was short on ppl

Asked by Dakid about 11 years ago

No way for me to say. I'd give them the benefit of the doubt in regards to the 4-8 week estimate.  Government agencies tend to move slower than private entities, particularly when it comes to hiring.  Good luck!