Why is Metro-North shooting itself in the foot? While adding more trains and encouraging (no, praying!) that commuters will come back to the rails, the railroad is still refusing to make those passengers feel safe by enforcing the Federal and State mask rules. Sure, they’ve been passing out masks on trains, but what good are they if they’re not worn?
I hate to keep harping on this issue, but we’re talking
about a serious public health threat.
Unmasked passengers, even if they’re vaccinated, can be asymptomatic and
spread the COVID virus to hundreds of fellow riders in a matter of minutes, let
alone the hour-plus ride to NYC in a sealed tube.
Appeals to Metro-North, the MTA, to Governor Lamont and
even our federal officials have resulted in no change. The MTA seems determined to not enforce the
mask rules, endangering existing riders and discouraging others from returning.
Weekday
ridership is still only 46% of pre-COVID levels and doesn’t seem to
be increasing as fast as hoped, what with the delta variant keeping many
offices closed and those who are commuting only doing so a couple of days a
week. Heavy traffic on I-95 and the
Merritt Parkway hint that many still prefer to drive to the city rather than
take the train, if they have to commute at all.
Nick, an IT professional who
used to commute from Stamford, posted on Twitter:
“I got a new job
which is 100% remote so between train pass, station parking and gas I just
pocketed $5000. Commuting is so 1990’s”
But many don’t have a work-from-home option, like oncology
nurse Casey (who asked me to hide her identity). She rides daily from Norwalk to Manhattan
and, working in healthcare, is frightened by what she sees.
“I
have been riding the train through the first wave of the pandemic when I first
noticed cars were being closed to group passengers together rather than allow
them to spread out. Despite multiple tweets, online complaints, and calls
to Metro North my concerns were never addressed.” she told me.
Her complaints to conductors
and to the railroad directly have brought lip-service. One recent incident left her upset:
“A passenger
refused to wear his mask after being asked to put it on by me and another
rider. He stated that he had been eating and that it was outrageous to
even ask him to wear a mask while eating. The conductor agreed with him
stating that he could put on his mask after he was finished eating. Mind
you, at no point did I see the passenger eating and he made no effort put on
his mask when arguing with me and the other passenger. What really
disturbed me was the announcement the conductor made following this
encounter. The conductor announced over the loud speaker that “masks are
to be worn except when eating and drinking because there is no rule that states
you can’t”. I found the conductor’s announcement unnerving.”
A New Haven attorney finds
better mask compliance on some trains more than others:
“I tend to
observe more mask compliance on the Hartford Line compared to the New Haven
Line. It is frustrating that passengers refuse to comply with the rules, which
are implemented for our safety. When passengers refuse to wear a mask, I manage
to distance myself such that I feel safe despite the maskless passenger. If the
mandate were not in place, I'm sure even fewer passengers would wear masks and
it would be more difficult to distance from them.”
But as trains become more
crowded, social distancing may become a real problem. And Metro-North says it
plans no more changes in its schedule until 2022.
As the MTA reminds us, if we
“see something” we should “say something”.
That’s what commuters worried about their safety have been doing. It’s a shame that nothing seems to be done in
response.
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