National Post

NEXT stop, grand central CHAOS

TRANSIT BOSS LEAVES TORONTO FOR UNENVIABLE TASK OF FIXING NEW YORK CITY SYSTEM

- Henry Goldman

• Andy Byford, who takes over as president of New York City’s transit system this month, has the unenviable job of modernizin­g a century- old system of undergroun­d subway tunnels beset with track fires, power outages, signal malfunctio­ns and delays.

The repairs needed are so extensive that, in the case of the L train that carries passengers under the East River from Brooklyn to Manhattan, the tunnel will close for 15 months in April 2019.

Already, Byford has joined an urgent debate among transit advocates, policymake­rs and politician­s about how best to avert an economic crisis that would ensue if hundreds of thousands of pedestrian­s and motorists choked movement above the L train path on 14th Street, one of Manhattan’s busiest thoroughfa­res.

New York’s Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority decided to close the L line entirely to work on it full time, instead of a one- track- at- a- time closing that would take three years. The decision was a departure from the piecemeal way of making repairs that has become routine amid a lack of funding. Advocates say the shutdown presents an opportunit­y to fundamenta­lly change how people move around the most populous U.S. city.

“Tinkering won’t cut it; we’ve got to take radical action,” Byford said during a Dec. 20 telephone interview. “I’m coming in with an open mind and a new agenda, to rapidly, relentless­ly improve public transit in the city, and that means nothing’s off the table.”

British- born Byford, 52, comes to New York from Toronto, where he ran that city’s transit commission for five years. That system has 1.8 million daily bus and rail riders, while New York subways alone have 5.7 million.

Under Byford’s leadership in Toronto, customer satisfacti­on rose to 80 per cent from 72 per cent. Sentiment is nowhere near that rosy in New York, where delays from signal malfunctio­ns slow train speeds to a crawl and test commuters’ patience daily.

In 2014, an MTA survey touted 78 per cent customer satisfacti­on among subway riders. Last July, in a survey by city Comptrolle­r Scott Stringer, 74 per cent reported that subway delays had made them late for work, with 13 per cent losing pay and 2 per cent fired. His office estimated such delays cost the city economy US$ 389 million a year.

Some 400,000 people ride the L train daily, with 225,000 using the Canarsie tunnel to cross the river between Brooklyn and Manhattan. During Hurricane Sandy in 2012, the tube was flooded with saltwater, causing power and track equipment damage that requires a complete overhaul.

Last month, the state MTA and city Transporta­tion Department released a joint preliminar­y plan that would ban cars from the Williamsbu­rg Bridge and part of 14th Street during undefined “peak hours,” turning it into a boulevard of express buses and pedestrian walkways.

Cars with a minimum of three passengers would be allowed on the bridge at certain times of day. Express bike lanes would be installed along 13th Street and more changes would be made to encourage foot and bike traffic around Union Square.

Paul Steely White, executive director of Transporta­tion Alternativ­es, an advocacy group for bikers, walkers and mass transit, said the agencies have been overly optimistic in assuming that up to 80 per cent of the displaced riders could migrate to other subway lines, which are already overcrowde­d. He called for more street space dedicated for express buses, bikes and pedestrian­s.

“This is a classic opportunit­y to use this crisis to show how we could create car-less streets to move people more efficientl­y,” White said. “We are going to have to shut down other subway lines to modernize and repair the system and we have to develop alternate strategies to move people quickly on the surface when those lines shut down.”

Kate Slevin, vice- president for state programs and advocacy for the Regional Plan Associatio­n, said her organizati­on has called upon city and state transit officials to adopt policies to reduce car traffic as much as possible, restrictin­g motorists from some streets, charging tolls and making parking more scarce and expensive.

“The closing of the L train presents the opportunit­y to show New Yorkers how quickly you can move large numbers of people with buses, bicycles and walkways,” she said. “Private automobile­s are the least ef- ficient way to move around.”

Byford in November tried a similar program on a limited scale in Toronto, a oneyear experiment­al restrictio­n on drivers using King Street in an effort to speed travel times for 65,000 riders of streetcars that got backed up waiting for motorists to make left turns. While streetcar travel times decreased, neighbourh­ood merchants have complained that less car and foot traffic has hurt business.

Early in December, a group of elected New York city officials questioned whether Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo were up to the task of dealing with the disruption to be caused by the L train shutdown. The two have been engaged in power struggles for years.

“I can just see the May 2019 headline, ‘L Train Catastroph­e; City Blames State,’ ” said Coun. Stephen Levin. “The next day: ‘L Train Calamity; State Blames City.’”

CREATE CARLESS STREETS TO MOVE PEOPLE MORE EFFICIENTL­Y.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? One of Andy Byford’s biggest challenges as president of New York City’s transit will be to oversee repairs of a century- old system.
GETTY IMAGES One of Andy Byford’s biggest challenges as president of New York City’s transit will be to oversee repairs of a century- old system.
 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE / BLOOMBERG ?? The L train subway station at 14th Street and Union Square in New York City. New York’s Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority is closing the L line for extensive repairs.
VICTOR J. BLUE / BLOOMBERG The L train subway station at 14th Street and Union Square in New York City. New York’s Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority is closing the L line for extensive repairs.
 ??  ?? Andy Byford
Andy Byford

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