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Medicine The Almighty Buck

SF Businesses Decline Cash, Fearing it Could Spread the Virus (sfchronicle.com) 171

When customers step in for a cup of coffee at Ritual Coffee Roasters on Valencia Street, a sign informs them that cash is no longer welcome. The coffee shop wants customers to use contactless forms of payments to pick up their cups of joe, in an effort to curb the spread of the new coronavirus. More and more businesses are turning away from cash, fearing that the virus could be sitting on banknotes and coins, as it exchanges hands from person to person in everyday transactions. From a report: "Looking at the situation with COVID-19 getting worse, we decided to switch," said Eileen Rinaldo, owner of Ritual Coffee. "Cash is notoriously covered with germs and it's a matter of eliminating that point of contact." The reluctance to take cash is emerging even though San Francisco ordered most businesses to accept cash last year, out of a concern that the trend to cashless payments was shutting out those without access to smartphones and credit cards. The city said it's still enforcing the rule and does not plan to lift it temporarily. "We're not currently engaged in any discussions about a freeze on this important equity policy," said Gloria Chan, spokeswoman for the Office of Economic and Workforce Development. "As a city, we still need to ensure everyone can purchase goods, whether or not they have access to credit or noncash forms of payment." Still, fears of cash abound. Other companies, like food delivery service DoorDash, are providing cashless options for payments. And on Saturday, cash toll collection on all seven Bay Area bridges was temporarily suspended under Gov. Gavin Newsom's orders, to curb the spread of the virus.
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SF Businesses Decline Cash, Fearing it Could Spread the Virus

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  • It's disgusting (Score:5, Informative)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:20PM (#59868346)

    "Also found on bills: fecal matter. A 2002 report in the Southern Medical Journal showed found pathogens — including staphylococcus — on 94% of dollar bills tested. Paper money can reportedly carry more germs than a household toilet. And bills are a hospitable environment for gross microbes: viruses and bacteria can live on most surfaces for about 48 hours, but paper money can reportedly transport a live flu virus for up to 17 days. It's enough to make you switch to credit."
    http://content.time.com/time/s... [time.com]

    • Re:It's disgusting (Score:5, Informative)

      by paralumina01 ( 6276944 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @08:08PM (#59868492)
      Oh no! You don't mean staphylococcus, the same bacterium that naturally lives on my skin!
    • Re:It's disgusting (Score:5, Informative)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @08:29PM (#59868550)

      more germs than a household toilet.

      Comparisons to toilet seats are often made for dramatic effect, but toilet seats are generally fairly clean.

      Kitchen counters, especially if they are wiped with a rag or sponge, are more likely to have pathogens than a toilet seat.

      Other surfaces worse than toilet seats: phones, doorknobs, keyboards. Even on a toilet, the handle is worse than the seat.

      • Re:It's disgusting (Score:5, Interesting)

        by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @01:53AM (#59869188) Homepage

        Also cotton/linen textiles (like US cash) are generally inhospitable to viruses, and poor vectors for transmission. Plastic credit cards and/or the keypads to enter your PIN, on the other hand....

      • Other surfaces worse than toilet seats: phones, doorknobs, keyboards. Even on a toilet, the handle is worse than the seat.

        And I was just reading an article today about how cardboard is a pretty poor way to transmit viruses (because it's porous). I'm pretty sure bills would be in the same territory. Coins, on the other hand, might carry virus particles around reasonably well. But let's not confuse ourselves with facts or reasoning...

        Regardless, I suspect the outlets we're talking about were already eager to stop taking cash (to avoid liability, labor costs, trips to the bank, theft) and this was just the final straw. Or a good

        • by rho ( 6063 )

          Coins, on the other hand, might carry virus particles around reasonably well.

          Not if we went back to real metals like copper and silver. I'm not as sure about silver, but copper is terribly toxic to tiny critters.

          Oh my God, the coronavirus is a conspiracy to get us back on the gold standard!

      • by chihowa ( 366380 )

        The one that always grosses me out the most is bathroom faucet knobs: after you (or anybody else in a shared restroom) shits, it's the last thing you touch before you wash your hands and the first thing you touch after you wash them.

        It always drives me crazy to see automated soap and paper towel dispensers coupled with manual faucet controls, "to prevent the spread of germs".

    • Now measure what's on credit cards and smart phones!

    • HANDBAGS were #1. Try banning those! Asia solved the money problem by an acrylic box to put the money over a dropbox, no handling at all - like on Singapore bus. Singapore is also cleaner - and you will be arrested for not flushing the toilet or washing your hands - properly. More USA'ians need a good flogging /the Rattan.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by DethLok ( 2932569 )

      a) Why are you still using paper for money? Are your notes not plastic yet, with transparent and/or holographic parts to counter counterfeiting?
      b) Credit cards? USA doesn't do debit cards, linked to real money in a bank account?
      c) Please, USA, join the 21st century!

      Links:
      a) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      a2) https://www.harper-adams.ac.uk... [harper-adams.ac.uk]
      b) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      c) note that the link for 'a', Australia first issued plastic currency in 1988...

      • a) Tradition
        b) We do both, but our consumer fraud laws are not all that robust. You can reverse charges on a credit card if you're scammed or if there's fraud. If someone does fraud on your debit card, you have to belong to a good bank or you're SOL. My credit union will restore the funds linked to a debit card until their investigation is complete. Lots of banks won't, so you're out of your money until they wrap up their process. Plus most places tie sweet benefits to credit card usage, since people can't

      • by dwpro ( 520418 )
        A. Anonymous B. Offline C. Tangible
  • by Looce ( 1062620 ) * on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:28PM (#59868376) Journal

    Relatedly, China had been sanitizing cash to try to control the outbreak [indiatimes.com], even though a lot of payments in China are done over WeChat.

  • by darth_borehd ( 644166 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:29PM (#59868380)

    Is that it stop poor people from shopping at their store and scaring away their other customers. This just so happens to be something San Francisco businesses have wanted for a while.

  • Only the businesses where you pay first and get goods and services later can do this.

    If you have already been served, and they bill you for goods and services already consumed can not decline cash payments. Cash is the legal tender for all debts private or public.

  • by spitzak ( 4019 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:40PM (#59868412) Homepage

    They need to figure out contact-less coffee cups if this is really the reason to not accept cash.

    • I'm not sure about you but generally I don't hand a coffee cup to the barista, and they don't hand it to the next customer.

      The USA is behind in this. Most shops here stopped taking cash 2 weeks ago. Also our local banks have increased the contactless limit to 100EUR so we can pay for nearly all transactions without even touching the pin terminal.

  • by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:43PM (#59868418) Homepage

    My local pharmacy is not even taking credit cards in the drive thru.
    They have you hold it up to the window and they key in the number.

  • Silly (Score:3, Insightful)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:44PM (#59868422)

    >fearing that the virus could be sitting on banknotes and coins"

    There is no special danger from cash any more than anything else you have to give or take from someone. Yes, people touch cash. They also touched that package of toilet paper or whatever else you bought, the door handle to the store, the cup used to hold the coffee, the food bags they just delivered to you, your receipt, your basket, etc, etc, etc.

    USE COMMON SENSE. When out and around, DO NOT TOUCH YOUR FACE unless your hands are washed. Wash your hands [properly] regularly and between places and events. Done.

    • There is no special danger from cash any more than anything else you have to give or take from someone. There is no special danger from cash any more than anything else you have to give or take from someone. ...

      SURE there is - to them, and their NEXT customers.

      The risk of virus on the goods and change are only to the customer making the purchase.

      =====

      If I have to go buy anything during this hooraw, at one of the places that does a "drive up to pick up" virus-mitigation scheme, I plan to line the back of th

    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      Cash is a huge vector for diseases, and COVID stick around on paper for days. and contact many hands.
      But please, keep spreading your dumb ass bullshit.

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      There is no special danger from cash any more than anything else you have to give or take from someone.

      There is. Cash often has to be counted multiple times through its way in the store. It has to be counted when you receive it from the customer, counted again when the cashier changes shift, counted again at the end of the day, counted again at the beginning of a day, counted again when packing up to send to the bank or when handed to another customer as change.

      Goods came from manufacturer/wholesaler to the store, then from store to customer, that's it. Taking stock generally do not require touching the g

    • by barakn ( 641218 )

      Yes, because after I spend the day touching my face, I then lick my face clean. What a terrible habit.

      Oh wait, you thought the virus bored through your face skin?

    • DO NOT TOUCH YOUR FACE unless your hands are washed.

      If you ever figure out how to do that, let everyone know. I guarantee you do it multiple times an hour even when trying hard not to.

      • >"If you ever figure out how to do that, let everyone know. I guarantee you do it multiple times an hour even when trying hard not to."

        It is extremely difficult, especially when you have lots of allergies. This is why a mask can be very useful (although very annoying, too).

      • Yep. I saw a nice explanation of it from a physiological standpoint. We actually touch our face to self-soothe. It's so hardwired that fetuses do it in utero. It's an unconscious bodily mechanism like scratching an itch or yawning. Sure, if you really, really pay attention to not doing that, to exclusion of everything else, you can avoid it. But as soon as your attention wanders, your body takes back over and does it.

  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:44PM (#59868424)
    You shouldn't have to pay through a private money lender.
    • by boudie2 ( 1134233 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @08:05PM (#59868484)
      I got the feeling we're all gonna wake up in a few months and go what happened to all our rights and all our money? From a flu? Kinda like 9/11 v.2.0. Screwed again. Darn!
    • by bsolar ( 1176767 )
      Well, technically you already do, as most of the money in circulation is created through private loans [wikipedia.org]. Loans are already integral in how money supply works in most modern countries.
    • You shouldn't have to pay through a private money lender.

      I'm confused why you Americans always equate cashless to a private money lender. Do you not have debit cards?

      • We do, it's just that two forms of plastic payment is apparently too hard for most here to comprehend.
  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @07:59PM (#59868464) Homepage

    Virtually every text sign on the Illinois Tollway system announces "DO NOT STOP AT TOLLBOOTH! I-PASS OR PAY ONLINE ONLY!"

    They've been working to remove cash tollbooths for years. All new or rebuilt interchanges are cashless.

    • by mishehu ( 712452 )
      It took a long time for them to figure out that it's harder for the workers to steal the money if there was no cash being used. Illinois, the land of the waving palm. And I don't mean the tree...
    • Every tollway wants cash gone. The cost both in management and in traffic on the tollway for handling cash is incredible. Many countries have gotten rid of cash tolls entirely and without any government tracking conspiracy or virus prevention involved.

  • Ban the RENT a car daily toll admin fees for ETC

  • SF should do whatever its demographic can to reduce vectors and its poorest have to be addressed by previously underfunded social services. If what was in the federal legislative "package" and imminent "bill" were given so much of a pie chart for public scrutiny, proportionate response would be better informed. What SF does in an emergency is hardly augury for national adoption.

    Innocence? Read some Blake. His musings cut both ways in terms of power and powerlessness.
    https://poets.org/poem/augurie... [poets.org]

    uoa
  • Maybe I'm waaaay off base, but doesn't every single person stick their credit card, which they handle, into a the exact same chip reader/swipe slot? This seems infinitely worse than cash because literally every person is touching their card then sticking it into the exact same spot as every other person. At least cash only 1 or two other people handled it recently. Am I taking crazy pills?
    • With the credit card, all the risk is on the customer. The employees don' t have to touch the credit card.
    • You guys don't have contact-less readers yet? I live in a tiny town in Canada and all stores have had this for more than half a decade now.

      • Wishing I had mod points, but I've commented multiple times on exactly the same point - but here in 'Straya it's been about a decade or so that we've had contactless, I think? A number of shops, like my closest burger joint (20m from the office building I work in) is EFTPOS only, no cash.

        And credit cards? Who pays with a credit card unless they're gaming the system (as you should if you can) and getting all those bonus points as their entire pay goes into it (I have a mortgage so can't game it well). I use

  • Heat cant help bacteria and viruses. Iron the stuff.. that should clean it up, right?
  • ... while I whip this out.

    [Reaches for check book]

  • by SilverJets ( 131916 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @09:57PM (#59868808) Homepage

    It's practically laughable. So you were handling money yesterday but have decided not to handle money today?

    All those years of handling money exposed you to everything from influenza to e coli to cocaine.

    • Wow...

      No, I'll stop spamming, I've said enough.

    • That cracks me up. They spend 40 cents to mail me a bill for a $1 toll for one of the bridges. By the time its all said and done with the time and people involved how can they make a profit?

  • Is it weird that a coffee shop is even open? A cup of joe and a bran muffin qualifies as 'essential business'? Hard times here people. Do what grandpa did and get a mug of Sanka.

  • well (Score:5, Insightful)

    by renegade600 ( 204461 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2020 @11:21PM (#59868978)

    well, since the employees are handling the cups and other needed condiments, the customers need to quit buying from those businesses since the virus can also be transfer that way.

    • An employee handling a cup is quite different from you passing that cup to the employee, the employee handling it, stacking it with cups that had been touched by hundreds of other people and then passing it on to the next random customer.

      Please think beyond what is immediately in front of you.

      Sidenote: Where I live they stopped accepting cash almost everywhere several weeks ago and all the banks have raise the contactless payment limits to cover 99% of transactions so that people don't even need to touch th

  • you know it stays longer on plastic - up to 3 days!?
    • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

      And four hours on copper, which is why the usually helpful brass fittings found everywhere on cruise ships did fuckall on the Diamond Princess.

  • Money has always been dirty and if you didn't know that before then you weren't paying attention. This is just more panicking. If you handle cash all day long and rub your face/eyes/nose without washing first you're asking for germs regardless of whether there's a pandemic or not. Hordes of people passing in front of you all day long is more likely to get you infected than the money they're passing you.
  • by Vandil X ( 636030 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @07:53AM (#59869570)
    PUBLIC AND PRIVATE.

    I seldom carry cash myself, but Legal Tender is Legal Tender. Anything else requires the authorization of some authority that can reject, block, ban, your use of payment method.

    We all need a baseline method the universally accepted. Cash is that method.
  • Would the US love of "paper" money lessen if they found out that it was invented in China?

    The developed world has been using contactless payments for a while now. More and more businesses have been going "plastic only", long before Covid-19 was a global problem. Does anyone actually genuinely believe that cash only transactions are not known to their government if it chooses? The best description of that is gullible!

    I can think of no cases where I would have to pay cash to avoid government scrutiny. The

  • Some S.F. stores have been trying to ban cash for a while now, so much so that S.F. actually passed a law to prevent exactly that; https://www.ktvu.com/news/san-franciscos-cashless-ban-now-in-effect-stores-that-dont-comply-could-get-slapped-with-fine [ktvu.com]

    Now the stores are trying paint cash with the covid-19 brush. I suppose if it wasn't covid-19 it would be child pornography, or terrorists, or sex trafficking -- whatever's hot to hate these days.

    Cash is a disease vector, so launder your money.

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