The lives of New York City residents are filled with transit
fatigue and the endless negotiation of a failing subway system. Our city
subways are in such a sorry state that real lives get interrupted and
sidetracked. People miss their college graduations, arrive late for job
interviews, or don’t get to say a final good-bye to loved ones.
With the resignation of MTA chief Andy Byford in a dispute with Governor Andrew Cuomo, there
is a sense that the situation will get much worse before it gets better.
Queens is poorly served by the New York City subway system
and does not have the more comprehensive service that you find in Manhattan,
Brooklyn and the Bronx. The subways are so Manhattan-centric that Queens lacks
a basic north-south subway route. If you want to get from Ozone Park to the Queens
Center Mall it can take you as little as 25 minutes by bus. It would require at
least three different subways to get there and it’s only four and a half miles.
Where I live is more than a mile to the nearest subway,
which would add 25 minutes to my commute were it not for buses. More recently
I’ve learned to take the express bus, which is more expensive but is much
better—more comfortable seats and direct service to midtown Manhattan.
The express buses are not a panacea though. Just this past
week, as I stood directly next to a bus stop sign on 6th Ave. and 42nd
Street, a QM20 bus drove right by as if I wasn’t there, even though I was trying to wave down the
driver. So even the express bus system, which is the best experience the MTA
has to offer, is still rife with problems.
But not content to serve up sub-par subway service on a good
day, the MTA has proposed a plan to slash bus service throughout New York City’s largest borough,
Queens. Neighborhood after neighborhood in the borough are organizing to try to
stop service cuts that will do things such as: consolidate bus stops, denying
service to some areas of the city already lacking for subway access; and stop
service earlier in the evening, leaving people stranded in Manhattan if they go
to a play or concert.
We need more bus service in the city, not less. Especially
at a time when the subways are running so poorly.
Here is a goal for any and all mass transit systems. No one
should ever have to wait more than 15 minutes for any bus or train at any time
of day or night at any bus stop or train station.
Is that not realistic? Under our current system, yes, that’s
a pipe dream, but why should we expect anything less than the best in our city.
This is New York. Were it not for our transit system, we would not have experienced
the tremendous growth over the last century.
Mass transit will pay for itself in a stronger economy and
more productive workforce. Think about all the things you don’t do or places
you don’t visit because the travel would be too difficult. Seriously, things
only a few miles away are considered out of reach right now because our transit
system is so underperforming and unreliable. I know I avoid going to cultural
events because getting there and back in a reasonable amount of time is not
possible under our current system.
A reliable transit system will have people going more places
and doing more things, spending money that keeps our economy going.
Take the MTA out of the hands of political appointees and
officeholders who have the power to raid its coffers. Our taxes should support
an independent entity governed by a board of directors selected from a
population of accomplished people who are transit users.
New York City transit is still way too far away from where
it needs to be. There’s no quick fix. Creating a fully functioning transit
system is going to take years of political struggle. Let’s start now.
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