Riders Alliance Transit Safety Plan
Riders Alliance Transit Safety Plan
Riders Alliance Transit Safety Plan
RIDERS
PLAN
FOR
PUBLIC
SAFETY
A ROOT CAUSE APPROACH
A RIDERS PLAN FOR
PUBLIC SAFETY
NEW YORK’S ICONIC SUBWAY, which over three million people ride every
day, is a flashpoint in the national debate over crime. After an uptick during the
pandemic, ten percent of NYPD officers now patrol the subway against less than
two percent of the city’s reported crime. With 3,500 officers ostensibly in transit
to stop violence, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said he doesn’t want to see
photos of bored officers on their phones and has embraced an ‘order maintenance’
policy that includes arresting turnstile jumpers and food vendors. ‘Broken windows’
policing, in a subway visibly suffering nearly a century of deferred maintenance, is
a stark reminder that, two years after George Floyd’s murder, the backlash to calls
to ‘defund the police’ is surging.
Beyond simply trying to stop violence, politicians and media outlets exploit instances
of crime underground to distract from scandal and difficult-to-tackle policy matters
and to justify harsher law enforcement from bail reform rollback to fare evasion
arrests. In this environment, it’s little wonder that even with more police officers
in the subway, the appetite for yet more patrols keeps growing. But over several
decades leading up to 2020, subway crime dropped sharply as ridership grew,
even while the number of officers in the system declined.
This riders plan for public safety embodies the work of Riders Alliance members,
leaders and allies to address what’s needed to move subway service safely forward
for all. Our plan also has broader implications for the country’s trajectory. More
than ever, grandstanding and fear mongering threaten not only individual lives,
families and communities, but the future of our political system. The plan proposes
transportation, housing, healthcare and policing solutions to make a subway where
everyone feels safe, welcome, and included—against a backdrop of a nation torn
apart, too often in the name of law and order beneath New York City streets.
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BACKGROUND
For most riders, on most days, the subway is not the crime-ridden hellscape of tabloid
fantasy but underfunded public infrastructure, less reliable, frequent, affordable,
accessible, and resilient than it must be to meet our needs. The political spin is often
out of touch with what millions of people who depend on our transit system need.
Watching some channels and listening to some politicians, it’s as if all would be right
with the world if the subway were on lockdown. But we can’t arrest, convict, and jail
our way out of poverty, mental illness, lack of housing, public disinvestment, reckless
driving and other crises playing out in public transit.
“We hear a lot of huffing and puffing from various decision makers
about fare evasion and safety in the subway. As a daily subway rider,
somebody jumping the turnstile doesn’t slow down my commute and it
doesn’t make me feel any less safe. You know what does? The guy who
is clearly having a mental health crisis who tries to repeatedly kick the
subway doors until they break. I don’t want to see cops standing at the
station entrance issuing violations to teenagers for going through the
gate, I want to see mental health workers getting people who are having
a crisis the help that they need, before things escalate.”
New York’s subway stations and cars serve as shelters of last resort for thousands of
the most visible unhoused Americans. The mental health and addiction crises erupting
elsewhere in public space feel especially urgent here. Asking police officers to solve
decades of budget cuts from housing and healthcare programs is asking far too much
of them. Meanwhile, with traffic crashes spiking above ground, New Yorkers are at
greater risk of physical harm walking to the subway than riding it. To foster actual
safety, we need to look at the real threats and invest in community resources, protect
the most vulnerable, and bring more activity to the city.
For the subway and city to succeed, riders’ needs must come first. No longer should
trouble in transit be an opportunity to distract or deflect blame. Instead, the governor,
mayor, and MTA officials must address the root causes of the problems in the transit
system to deliver the service New Yorkers deserve.
As New York City Transit President Richard Davey put it, the subway is a public square,
a core public space at the heart of the city. While many of the intersecting crises in
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the transit system are not manifestations of transit policy itself, some are the result of
decades of infrastructure divestment. Here, we outline what the governor, legislature
and MTA can do to improve transit service in ways directly tied to public safety for
millions of riders.
Run Trains and Buses at Least Every Six Minutes, Seven Days a Week
More frequent service would make public transit much safer by (a) shortening lonely
waits on platforms and at bus stops, which MTA data show riders fear more than
riding trains, (b) reducing frustration that contributes to disputes between riders and
assaults on transit workers, and (c) speeding door-to-door trips, attracting more riders
and creating safety in numbers throughout the day and week. RPA data show New
Yorkers rank better, more frequent service, tied with fare discounts or free fares, as the
best way to win riders back to public transit.
“Reductions in subway and bus service have left New Yorkers standing
alone on the streets and in subway stations for long periods of time,
especially in the middle of the night. This is an entirely inexcusable
recipe for danger. New York must increase the frequency of buses and
subways to ensure that New Yorkers reach their destinations safely
(and on time).”
New York State Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic, and Asian Legislative
Caucus Impact-Based Ten-Point Plan For Public Safety (March 26, 2022)
NYU Wagner Rudin Center The Pink Tax on Mobility: Opportunities for
Innovation (February 10, 2022)
New York City Transit ambassadors and wayfinders in station booths and on platforms
and mezzanines can provide a range of important services for riders, from facilitating
fare payment to giving directions to deterring harassment on the basis of gender, race
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or ethnicity. The state should invest to exceed pre-pandemic station staffing levels to
ease tensions and fears and make sure workers themselves are present in significant
enough numbers to keep one another safe.
Transit workers performed heroically in responding to the Sunset Park shooting and
leading riders to safety. Agency procedures need to accommodate all riders, including
people in wheelchairs. Updated protocols should be widely disseminated and regular
training offered.
Walking to transit is much more dangerous than riding it and it’s getting worse, with
traffic deaths up 44% this year. Fully funding and implementing the NYC Streets Plan
will make the perilous walk to transit safer by protecting pedestrians from reckless and
distracted drivers. Meanwhile, faster, more reliable bus service will provide a better
complement and alternative to subway service for the millions of riders who depend
on it.
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“The piecemeal way we plan our streets has made no sense for far too
long, and New Yorkers have paid the price every day stuck on slow
buses or as pedestrians or cyclists on dangerous streets. We need
faster buses, safe streets infrastructure for pedestrians and cyclists,
and more pedestrian space. We need to do everything we can to
encourage sustainable modes of transportation, especially with the
realities of climate change growing more dire every day. This plan will
get us there, and by doing so it will make New York City a much more
livable and enjoyable place to call home.”
Former New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson (October 30, 2019)
Fair Fares is by far the nation’s largest low-income transit fare discount program. Scaling
it up would transform many more lives and protect riders from a desperate choice that
can lead to conflict with law enforcement. Extending half-price fare discounts to riders
earning up to 200% of the federal poverty line would cover several hundred thousand
working people (a member of a family of four earning $50,000 could qualify).
“The City Council should expand Fair Fares to all low-income New
Yorkers, specifically by increasing the eligibility threshold from 100
to 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, and significantly improve
Fair Fares outreach, including to eligible NYCHA residents and CUNY
students, among others.”
With more investment, riders below the federal poverty line could ride public transit
for free, eliminating all transportation expenses from the most precarious household
budgets. Deepening the affordability and expanding the availability of Fair Fares
will alleviate the cost burden of public transit, cutting interactions over fare payment
between riders and police officers that can involve use of force and stiff collateral
consequences of ticketing, arrest and/or conviction.
The remnants of Hurricane Ida swamped the subway system last September, shutting
down every line. To keep subways running while climate change delivers increasingly
extreme weather, City and MTA leaders need to work together to unclog drains, turn
street space into spongy green infrastructure, and raise station entrances to minimize
the extent to which the subway doubles as another sewer system.
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“As the window of opportunity to adapt to climate change narrows, all
city agencies, especially DOT and DEP, must immediately align with
each other—and with the MTA—in order to complete projects more
rapidly to mitigate the impacts of rain-induced flooding. New York City
can achieve this in part by promoting greater inter-agency coordination
and implementing a comprehensive planning framework, where budget
and capital programs would be aligned with current and future needs.
While those recent subway station flooding videos are shocking to
watch, we know these events may soon become commonplace unless
we invest, coordinate, and act now.”
Making the subway safe, welcoming, and inclusive for all requires better public services
beyond the transit system and city streets. Too many New Yorkers have fallen through
a tattered and torn social safety net and into the subway. Unhoused riders are some of
the most vulnerable people in the entire city. They need permanent supportive housing
and, where appropriate, healthcare solutions to move out of the transit system. If
simply moving people along or locking them up were sound housing policy, no one
would be living in the subway today.
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Broadly supported legislation in Albany would limit major rent hikes and protect tenants
who have paid their rent and have been good neighbors.
Much of the discussion about subway safety hinges on the idea that fear of transit
is keeping white-collar workers home. Making it easier to convert hotel and office
properties into housing will ease New York’s housing crisis while also calming anxieties
about the future of our business districts, especially the nation’s largest in midtown
Manhattan. Expediting state regulatory changes to promote hotel conversions and
eliminating the state-imposed floor area ratio cap will breathe new life into midtown,
including its dozens of subway stations.
The subway system is no place to live but serves as a last resort for some of the most
vulnerable New Yorkers, many of whom have found conditions in congregate shelters
intolerable. To provide an alternative, the City should open at least 3,000 new Safe
Haven and stabilization beds in private, single-occupancy rooms and offer them to all
unsheltered homeless individuals.
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“For me, a big part of making the subway feel safer is getting people
access to the services they need. As a rider, I sometimes see people
who clearly need help—maybe they are hungry and need food, or they
are homeless and need a place to live, or they have a mental illness and
need some form of therapy or treatment. I don’t think it’s appropriate
to call 911 in those situations because none of those things are a crime
and they often aren’t emergencies either. I would feel more comfortable
as a rider if there was a number I could call, other than 911, when I see
someone in need of help on the bus or subway.”
A
longside its safety benefits, PSH is a cost-effective financial
investment. In the long-run, governments recoup a large share of the
upfront costs through reduced healthcare, short-term shelter, and
criminalization expenses. In New York, reduced service use yielded
annualized savings of $16,282 per housing unit, equal to 95% of
the supportive housing costs. In Portland, savings were even more
extreme, with the government actually saving $15,000 per unit after
deducting both the cost of housing and services provided.”
Half of hate crimes are committed by people with mental illness, and that’s just the
folks who have diagnoses already. Racial and gender harassment are worse because
of gaps in mental healthcare for those who need it.
The City and state should collaborate to establish and support community-based
response units for mental health emergencies, with training and resources dedicated
to public transit. Crisis Stabilization centers which are open 24/7, and provide rapid
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support services to anyone who walks through their doors, should operate within or
immediately adjacent to major subway hubs.
“The police that are currently in the subway don’t do much to deter
actual crime, instead focusing on fare evasion, vending, and other
non-violent offenses. In February 2020, I was harassed and threatened
with homophobic violence on a subway platform. There were police in
the station, but they were too busy looking out for turnstile jumpers to
patrol the platform and intervene in my situation. When I approached
them for help, they didn’t seem interested or concerned. Why are police
focusing on fining people who didn’t have $2.75 to pay for a subway
ride instead of ensuring a safe commute for riders?”
As long as armed officers continue to patrol the subway, there’s a fierce debate about
how to police a subway system with millions of riders, thousands of workers, and
hundreds of stations. Popular outcry against social media footage of officers joking
around with one another or staring down at their phones, using force against turnstile
jumpers, and arresting immigrant food vendors and confiscating goods or destroying
food suggests that the right answer has proven elusive. But as the sole actors
underground authorized to apply force, what is clear is that armed officers should limit
use of force to stopping imminent threats of violence to riders and workers.
• N
ew Yorkers’ subway commutes are some of the longest in the nation and
riders appreciate being able to buy snacks from vendors who also serve as
eyes and ears on our transit system, actually making the subway safer for all
• Licenses and permits to sell food are mired in bureaucratic red tape and
kept artificially scarce
• P
olice crackdowns on food vendors, often immigrant women of color,
undermine the relationship between officers and civilians that could help
stop serious crime
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• Use the threat of force and arrest to enforce payment of the subway fare
• U
se of force and collateral consequences are grossly disproportionate to
nonpayment of a $2.75 transit fare
• T
he MTA itself has acknowledged that officers belong on platforms and
trains and is pursuing educational approaches to fare collection with its new
panel
• C
ity Hall’s return to the idea that fare evasion is a signal of disorder and a
way to apprehend violent criminals is an outdated, needle-in-a-haystack
approach to finding illegal guns and stopping serious crime
• Evict unhoused New Yorkers from the subway or issue tickets for
being homeless
• A
lready this year, massive subway and encampment sweeps have cost
millions of dollars and upended thousands of lives without solving any
housing problems
• U
nhoused people are among the most vulnerable riders in the transit
system; targeting them for exclusion is cruel and counterproductive to
addressing their basic needs
• A
s detailed above, the solution to transit homelessness is to tackle the
citywide crisis and properly fund proven humane measures to rehouse
people in need
What police officers should do, in the subway as in any public space, is respectfully
interact with the riders and transit workers whom they are there to serve and protect.
To the extent that riders want police in the subway, it’s to stop serious crime. To stop
crime, officers need to remain alert to their surroundings and converse in a relaxed
manner with riders and workers ready and willing to talk with them.
ACCOUNTABILITY
Riders need evidence of what actually makes transit safer. Without it, all we get are
periodic furors over fare evasion and repeat surges of police into the subway. Instead,
officials should regularly and transparently evaluate prior measures taken to advance
subway safety, broadly understood. Given the large expense to riders and taxpayers
of additional policing and other support services, it’s essential to frequently report back
on progress toward articulated goals.
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CONCLUSION
Focusing on crime and punishment in transit, too often to the exclusion of all other
problems and solutions, distracts and deflects from the need to improve transit
service and provide for the most vulnerable New Yorkers. Seeing the subway as a
political symbol rather than a transportation network contributes to threats against
its viability by obscuring riders’ needs.
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