You are reading

Signal Problems Caused Subway Delays Most Mornings in 2019: Report

Crowding on the Queensboro Plaza platform (File Photo)

Jan. 14, 2020 By Kristen Torres

Signal problems affected nearly four out of every five weekday morning commutes on city subways last year, according to a new report.

The Riders Alliance released its findings on Monday, revealing 78 percent of morning commutes in 2019 were delayed due to signal issues. That number is down from 2018, when 92 percent of morning commutes were affected.

“Four out of five mornings with signal problems is still pretty bad,” said Riders Alliance Policy & Communications Director Danny Pearlstein. “The governor needs tell us when we can expect meaningful improvements.”

The group looked into signal malfunctions—which determine when a train can move down the tracks—between 6 a.m. and 10 a.m. during 253 non-holiday workdays in 2019. It found that 198 morning rush hour commutes were delayed due to signal malfunctions, keeping riders from work and other appointments, the report said.

The Riders Alliance blamed the nearly century-old transit system for the delays.

“With congestion pricing coming and the MTA Capital Program approved, New Yorkers need to know when signal upgrades will happen on subway lines across the city,” Pearlstein said.

The MTA’s 2020-2040 Capital Plan—which was approved Jan. 1—includes $7.1 billion in signal modernization, which will serve more than 50 percent of passengers across 11 train lines, according to the MTA.

But transit advocates are demanding Governor Andrew Cuomo and MTA officials release a timetable for signal upgrades promised under the plan.

“Governor Cuomo and the MTA have broadly described how they plan to fix the subway, but they need to fill in the details with a timetable for signal improvements and other critical upgrades riders are depending on,” said Colin Wright, a senior associate at TransitCenter, a transit advocacy group.

And although MTA officials have yet to release a timetable for signal improvements, the agency recently announced a $245.8 million contract to upgrade signals on the A, C and E lines along 8th Avenue in Manhattan.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

2 Comments

Click for Comments 
Commonsense solutions

3 ways to fix the MTA
– Hold governor Cuomo accountable.
– Crack down on the corrupt senior MTA executives receiving kickbacks.
– Crack down on the MTA union workers wasting our tax dollar on unnecessary overtime and no show jobs.

Reply
Lifelong New Yorker

What a joke. The new signals on the 7 are a flop. If anyone else performed as dismally at work as the MTA does, they’d be fired. Yet we keep feeding these scam artists our hard earned tax dollars and we get terrible service in return.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

FDNY prevents disaster in East Elmhurst by seizing 68 illegally stored propane tanks

For the second time in four months, FDNY fire inspectors averted a potential catastrophe in East Elmhurst after finding stockpiles of illegally stored propane tanks in the residential neighborhood.

Fire inspectors from the Special Investigation Unit received a complaint of illegal occupancy at a home just south of LaGuardia Airport at 23-57 89th St. They discovered 68 propane cylinders, which they seized along with five food trucks and a box truck parked on the property last week. The inspectors also found illegal single-room-occupancy in the home’s cellar.

Crunching the Queens crime numbers: grand larcenies down across borough, rapes halved in the north, robberies decrease in the south

Apr. 17, 2024 By Ethan Marshall

The number of grand larcenies across Queens was down during the 28-day period from March 18 to April 14, compared to the same period of time last year, according to the latest crime stats released by the NYPD Monday. At the same time, rapes and robberies decreased significantly in northern and southern Queens, respectively.