A recent report from the New York
City Comptroller found that New Yorkers work the longest weeks and have the longest average commutes in the
U.S. What makes the report so disturbing is that the two top cities with the
longest commute times: New York and San Francisco, are cities that have some of
the most extensive public transportation infrastructures.
And not only do New Yorkers have long commute times for the
many millions who live outside the five boroughs and commute in every day, New
York City residents who live and work in the city have long commute times.
I am one of those New York City residents that have a long commute. I live 12 miles
from where I work. Google Maps tells me it takes 24 minutes to drive that
distance without traffic. It takes me over an hour to get to my office each day
even when things are running properly (which is rarely).
New Yorkers tolerate these long commutes (which are getting
worse and more expensive at the same time) not because we are suckers for
punishment but because New York is worth it.
We expect a certain level of excellence in New York. Things
that are acceptable or even considered excellent in other parts of the country
just don’t make the cut here. That’s not being snobby or cruel, it’s just the
cold hard truth. New York excels at smashing people in the face with cold hard
truth at every opportunity.
I definitely notice that borderline New York snobbery
creeping up on me in certain circumstances, especially at restaurants when I’m
traveling. I’ve been to enough good restaurants in New York that when I go
outside the city and stuff just isn’t right I notice right away. I know I
wouldn’t have noticed if I had been living elsewhere.
The reputation for New Yorkers as being rude is tired
and not entirely true. There are plenty of rude people in the city, absolutely,
but what many people take for rudeness is actually just a brusque sense of not
having time to waste. As the numbers show, New Yorkers are in a hurry and have
less time to dawdle. That’s a testament to people being at the top of their
game and playing for keeps.
There are reasons the city is teeming with people, many of
whom were born elsewhere. It’s because New York is a symbol of the very top of
everything: music, art, culture, dining, literature, you name it. If you can
make it here, you can make it anywhere—the adage holds as true today as it ever
did. Our homeless are even better than other
cities if for no other reason than they have to be smart enough to survive the
cold weather and that weeds out the extremely feeble-minded.
And, while it certainly is not justified, city residents
almost always feel a twinge of schadenfreude
when a friend or acquaintance leaves the five boroughs. Just the act of staying
and surviving in the city gives you a feeling of accomplishment all on its own,
no matter how dreary the circumstances of your life might be. That can be a
destructive attitude as well – staying in one place at all costs just to prove
a point can be just as harmful as habitually moving all the time. No other city
carries that same emotional baggage with it. No one pats themselves on the back
for eking out a living in Jacksonville, Florida.
Which is why the public transit system is going to have to
change. It has never run well and it has run with minimal competence for
decades. This latest report by the New York City Comptroller illustrates in raw
numbers the fact that New York’s transit system is operating far below New York
standards.
The latest data is proof that New Yorkers are getting the
shaft (again) from our own transit system. The silver lining is that New York
is too good a city to let this slight go unchanged.
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