It’s not safe to ride the subways in New York City.
Not that the subways aren’t
operated safely, it’s just that the people riding them are victimizing each
other as well as MTA personnel. Hardly a
day passes without another report of incidents like these:
· A man
is slashed with a box cutter by an assailant spewing anti-LGBTQ remarks, who
then runs off.
· In
another incident a 64 year old postal worker is kicked down off the platform, falling
onto the tracks. He was rescued by
bystanders before the subway train entered the station. NYPD has surveillance video but they are
still looking for the assailant.
· An MTA
conductor, leaning out of his cab, is slashed in his head and neck requiring 34
stitches. Again, no arrest.
In January subway crime was up 45%. The NYPD then sent an additional 1000 cops into the subway. Last week NY Governor Hochul called out a thousand members of the National Guard and instituted random bag checks of passengers entering the system, looking for weapons. Will that result in weapons arrests or just send the bad guys to another station not staffed with cops? What’s next… metal detectors?
This is unsustainable and very
expensive, especially at a time when the MTA estimates they lost a half-billion
dollars due to fare evasion last year, with 12% of all riders skipping the
turnstiles.
Clearly, there are too many guns
and knives being carried by people in NYC.
Though undoubtedly discriminatory, I wonder if a return to former Mayor
Bloomberg’s old policy of “stop and frisk” might not reduce this arms race.
Mind you, these aren’t just
one-off crimes. Thirty-eight people who
were arrested in the subways for assault last year were responsible for 1100
additional crimes in the city, according
to Mayor Adams.
The homeless woman who was seen
on video attacking a cello player with a metal bottle was arrested in
mid-February and set free without bail.
Days later she was arrested again, this time for shoplifting a $235
baseball cap. This time her bail was
$500 (though prosecutors had sought $10,000), but that was enough to keep her
in jail… for now.
So the issue is more than just
attacks: it’s about our judicial system
which spits people back onto the streets without bail, even when they commit
violence.
This lawlessness in New York
City is out of control and literal armies of cops and camo-dressed Guardsmen aren’t
much of a deterrent. Even without guns
or knives, the crazy (sorry… “mentally unstable”) people roaming the streets
and subways are making everyone feel nervous.
What does this mean for
Connecticut commuters? They’re probably
safe on Metro-North but when they get to Grand Central they’re understandably
reluctant to take the subway to their office.
It’s just another reason for commuters
to persuade their bosses they’re better off working from home, further reducing
fare revenue for the cash-strapped Metro-North division of the MTA.
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