A day after shooting attack, New York's subway thrums with riders
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[April 14, 2022]
By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - On busy subway
platforms across the city, New Yorkers checked their phones, read books
and glanced impatiently at the countdown clocks as they waited for
trains on Wednesday, a day after a man fired a handgun at passengers on
a subway car.
In interviews, riders said they were upset by the highly unusual attack
in which the man began shooting after setting off smoke canisters in a
subway car, leaving 10 people with non-life-threatening wounds.
But even after several other outbursts of violence in stations this
year, riders said they had workplaces, classes or homes to get to, and
the city's subway, one of the largest in the world, remained the most
efficient way for them to travel.
"I was a little cautious but, hey, we're back to normal," said Matthew
Mosk on an N train that had just passed through Brooklyn's 36th Street
station a day after one of its platforms had been smeared with the blood
of wounded riders. "NYC strong. Just like it never happened."
Older New Yorkers said the subway was far less menacing than when they
were young and crime was rife on trains covered in graffiti. Newer
arrivals to the city said it could stand to feel safer.
Most liked the idea of more police officers, though some wondered how
much difference they could make.
Mayor Eric Adams, a former police captain who took office in January,
had already increased the number of police in the Transit Bureau to
3,500, exceeding the 3,250 officers sent to the system last summer in a
surge by his predecessor. On Tuesday, Adams said he would temporarily
double that number.
There were none to be seen inside Brooklyn's DeKalb Avenue station on
Wednesday afternoon.
Lyric Archibald, 17, a Brooklyn resident waiting to travel to a
Manhattan school where she teaches students how to play Double Dutch
with jump ropes, said most police officers she saw were upstairs from
the platforms, waiting to catch turnstile jumpers.
"Cops to me are supposed to protect us but sometimes it doesn't seem
like they do," she said before her shiny, graffiti-free Q train screamed
into the station.
Officials at the state-controlled Metropolitan Transportation Authority
(MTA), which runs the subway, say serious crimes remain relatively rare
on the system, but riders report feeling less safe when stations and
trains are emptier, particularly after reports of high-profile crimes.
Mass shootings on the subway like Tuesday's are virtually unheard of,
with New Yorkers reaching back to the 1980s for a comparable episode. As
for other criminal activity, New York Police Department crime data shows
a mixed picture since due to the pandemic, ridership is now about 60% of
what it was two years ago.
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People walk at a subway platform a day after a Brooklyn subway
station shooting incident, in Manhattan, New York City, New York,
U.S., April 13, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
In the first two months of 2022,
major felonies on the subway were down to 383, from 524 in the first
two months of 2020. Robberies were down to 110, compared to 151 in
the same period in 2020; felony assaults were up to 87 from 76 in
early 2020.
Before the pandemic, about 5.5 million subway trips were taken each
weekday, but ridership plummeted in the first half of 2020 as
COVID-19 surged. Many New Yorkers began working from home, as did
suburban commuters. Tourists all but vanished.
The MTA, which has relied on train and bus fares and road tolls for
about 40% of its revenue, has worked with Adams and his predecessor
to encourage riders to return. Weekday ridership crossed back above
3 million trips last September, and there were an average 3.3
million rides each weekday last week.
On the DeKalb Avenue platform, Josie Chu, a 19-year-old economics
student, checked notes on her laptop. She moved from Los Angeles two
years ago, and had only regularly ridden the subway during its
pandemic era.
"It's just not safe, especially for Asians," she said, noting the
murder of Michelle Go, an Asian-American woman, by a man who pushed
her onto the tracks at Times Square in January.
A few seats away, Michael Galindez, a 49-year-old electrician, was
waiting to take his teenage daughter to art class. He grew up in
East New York, Brooklyn's poorest edge, and said he had been riding
the subway by himself since he was 10.
"Our whole society was different then, unruly," he said. "Now things
are a bit calmer."
Still, he thought there were fewer officers riding the train than in
his youth and he was irritated by an uptick in rule-breaking: he has
chastised at least one person for smoking on the train. And there
seemed to be more people with mental health issues, he said.
"A lot of people have a lot of issues and there's no one here to
govern that," he said. "I don't want to be, you know, stabbed for
telling someone to stop smoking."
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Additional reporting by
Aleksandra Michalska in New York; editing by Paul Thomasch and David
Gregorio)
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