NEW YORK, May 7 — For the first time since 1904, New York’s famed subway has halted its all-night service as the coronavirus outbreak brings “the city that never sleeps” to its knees.
The closures from 1:00am to 5:00am are aimed at eliminating traces of the potentially fatal virus from the subway’s 6,500 wagons — using every cleaning technique from basic sanitizer to ultra-violet lamps.
Authorities say conditions in New York — the epicentre of the pandemic, with more than 19,000 confirmed or probable deaths — are slowly improving, but that it’s too soon to relax confinement measures.
For Gary Dennis, a New York tour guide in love with his city, its 424 subway stations and their gray carriages — clunky and loud but as iconic as the Statue of Liberty or the bright yellow taxis — the state of the transit system is a thermometer for the health of the metropolis.
Dennis, a 59-year-old who lives on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, said the city’s decision to shutter service overnight left him “upset.”
“This is a 24-hour town,” he told AFP. “It’s not designed to be empty, it’s designed to be crowded.”
“Without the subway, this town would die.”
Mayor Bill de Blasio also describes the complex train system that snakes through the city as a “lifeline” that keeps New York’s 8.6 million residents chugging along.
Since the pandemic hit the city, ridership has plummeted by more than 90 per cent, according to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority that manages the network, to less than 500,000 passengers a day.
Normally some 5.5 million people take the subway every day.
With many white-collar workers logging into the office from home, most riders are now “essential” workers — some 800,000 employees of hospitals, supermarkets, repair personnel and delivery workers, many of them black or Latino, some undocumented migrants.
And controversy has grown over homeless people seeking overnight shelter in train cars. The city hopes closure will encourage them to find alternative shelter, but many advocacy groups have warned it will worsen the homeless crisis.
‘Giant vectors of this virus’
Witnessing the deserted subway stations leaves Will Ramos, a plumber and handyman, mourning the loss of “culture within the stations.”
“You meet a lot of talent down here,” the 33-year-old said at the Union Square station, one of the network’s largest.
But the pandemic has transformed the underground into “giant vectors of this virus,” in the words of conductor Sujatha Gidla, who contracted the COVID-19 illness.
In a scathing open letter published this week in The New York Times, Gidla denounced precautions taken to protect MTA workers as too little too late, saying “essential” staff were treated as “expendable.”
According to the MTA’s president Patrick Foye, 109 of 50,000 workers have died after contracting the virus.
The subway system — much of it devastated by Superstorm Sandy in 2012 — was already undergoing costly renovations, a project deemed urgent after years of negligence.
Now experts estimate the transit authority could lose US$4-8 billion due to the pandemic.
Both the city and state of New York have seen tax revenues in free fall as the economy stalls and unemployment soars — and few expect Donald Trump’s White House to take pity on the transportation system of his home city.
“The funding challenge will be huge,” said Bruce Schaller, the former deputy commissioner for traffic and planning at city’s transportation department.
“It is very daunting.”
But the public transit consultant doesn’t doubt the subway will weather the storm.
In the 1970s the transportation network was in dire condition, wracked with crime. But Schaller says the city is far from that situation, when the city “as a whole was badly ailing.”
Today, the question is “not about the longer-term vitality” for the subway, but about getting through the pandemic, he said.
And emerging is vital, according to Schaller: “The fundamental assumption in New York is that you have mass transit.” — AFP