Boston Herald

NY subway to fine maskless $50

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NEW YORK — The young man slouched against the inside of the subway doors as the No. 3 train headed south along Broadway. Across the aisle, another young man lay asleep, sprawled across three seats.

In ordinary times, it would be the snoozing seat hog who got angry glares. But in the age of COVID-19, it was the other guy who drew silent notice because he, unlike the oblivious napper, wore no face covering.

The agency that runs New York City’s subway and bus systems implemente­d a $50 fine this week for the scofflaws who, even in a region with more than 25,000 coronaviru­s dead, refuse to follow rules requiring masks to be worn at all times on public transit.

Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority officials have promised to enforce the rule with a light touch — certainly far lighter than the city’s famously zero-tolerance approach to parking violations. And they have dismissed criticisms that the fines are aimed at easing what officials have called an existentia­l budget crisis brought on by the pandemic.

When recalcitra­nt riders are identified, MTA employees and New York City police have been instructed to provide a mask first and issue a ticket only as a last resort. Through Thursday, none had been issued, but MTA police reported about 1,700 instances of riders being given a mask, or of people being cautioned that they were wearing their mask improperly.

Still, even some riders who are irritated by masklessne­ss on buses and trains were unsure about the idea of getting compliance through fines.

Kathryn Lois, who rides the subway on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, decried the fine even as she noted three maskless people entering the station at 96th Street and Broadway within a span of about 5 minutes.

“We can’t afford it, not with everything else that’s been going on,” Lois said, referring to the economic downturn brought on by the pandemic. “It’s not fair.”

Tim Kelly, a Queens resident working a constructi­on job in Manhattan, was more blunt, calling it bull excrement.

 ?? Ap ?? WEAR IT WARNING: A subway worker replaces posters in a car in Brooklyn reminding riders to wear face masks.
Ap WEAR IT WARNING: A subway worker replaces posters in a car in Brooklyn reminding riders to wear face masks.

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