London Underground Route Validator - Travelling to Zone 2 for the Price of Zones 6 to 1 Ticket

Pink London Underground Card Validator
After at the beginning of the year 2011 (as well as 2010 and 2009) the prices on London Undergroud shot up once again thanks to the policy employed by the new London major Boris Johnson. It became even more difficult to people on low income to get to Central London from Loughton. The price of the single peak hour ticket went up to £4.50; off-peak ticket now costs £2.70. So it now costs nine pounds just to get to work and back if you work in Central London, and travel to work on the tube from Loughton or Debden underground stations. If you don’t live in Loughton and have to travel to one of the stations on the car, I don’t envy you because you probably also have to pay for your car’s parking, which is very expensive as well.
If one doesn’t work in Central London but works in North London, then the best route to take would be to Stratford on Central Line and then on the newly named London Overground (former North London Line) to wherever then a person needs to go. The line goes through London’s zone 2, so one would suppose that the ticket price would be £2.50… but not everything is so easy these days because Transport for London have introduced so-called Oyster validators, which everyone travelling through London with the Oyster card has to use on certain routes to get the expected fare even though these routes are default ones and it’s bluntly obvious that to travel, people would choose them over the other longer routes. Oyster Validator is a pink card reader, which needs to be touched to tell London Underground that a person takes THIS route as opposed to THAT route.
Thus instead of trusting people and allowing them to choose the best route for the best price, Transport for London now penalises people for not knowing that they need to use the pink validator to validate their oyster cards on a particular route.

