Chattanooga Times Free Press

Officials abandon subway trash bin ban experiment

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NEW YORK

NEW YORK — Faced with too much trash in one of the world’s biggest — and arguably dirtiest — subway systems, New York transit officials tried an unusual social experiment. They removed garbage bins from 39 of the more than 400 stations, figuring that would deter people from bringing trash into the system.

That was a no-go in a go-go city where eating and drinking are often done on the run.

People who toss their soda bottles and potato chip bags onto platforms and tracks kept doing it, causing fires. And hungry rats kept scurrying through stations, drawn by garbage.

The Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority run by New York state decided to put the bins back.

“It took the MTA five years, but we are gratified that it recognized the need to end this controvers­ial experiment that showed little to no improvemen­ts in riders’ experience,” said New York State Comptrolle­r Thomas DiNapoli, who had released audits saying fires started by trash thrown on the tracks systemwide didn’t decrease as a result of the program.

A transit spokeswoma­n, Beth DeFalco, said in a statement the pilot was worth trying and did lead to some improvemen­ts, including fewer track fires without the sometimes overflowin­g bins. But in the end, it “wasn’t the most efficient way to clean the stations.”

The MTA said the decision was made in September, and state officials now are making their final evaluation­s.

The reason for canceling the experiment may have something to do with the pace of New York City life, its disposable culture and the premium that residents put on convenienc­e.

In New York, pedestrian­s are rarely more than a few steps from a trash bin. And because they mostly aren’t driving, they carry everything they need in their hands or on their shoulders, or simply buy it on the go.

Passengers who rely on the subways to get around dealt with the lack of bins, but many didn’t like it.

“Without them, it’s a bunch of trash, and more trash, everywhere,” said Desiree Bard, an artist, as she boarded a train Thursday at a station on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. When she encountere­d a station without a bin, and needed to throw something out, “I would just hold on to it until I found a trash can, above ground, and I found that kind of difficult; I don’t want to have trash in my bag.”

Jade Griffin, another Manhattan subway rider, said she also had been willing to temporaril­y stash trash occasional­ly in her purse, “but not everyone carries a purse.”

“I think you should have trash cans everywhere,” she said. “If not, that creates other problems like littering, or putting the trash where it’s not supposed to go.”

Initially, the MTA had been encouraged by results in the two stations that launched the program in 2011. But when they expanded the number of participat­ing stations to 39 of the total 472, rider evaluation­s were less rosy. There were also complaints from some businesses and private residences located near station entrances about their trash bins being used by passengers unable to toss their trash somewhere in the subway.

In any case, the MTA has moved on to a more traditiona­l solution for dealing with the 40 tons of daily garbage in the subways: an intense cleanup campaign.

Last summer, the MTA launched its “Operation Track Sweep” program. Workers are cleaning about 90 stations every two weeks, three times as many as previously. Portable track vacuums are being tested and the agency is purchasing more vacuum trains and cars that pick up the contents of 3,500 station receptacle­s more frequently.

The agency said the cleaning effort has resulted in the number of track fires dropping by 41 percent.

“... we are gratified that it recognized the need to end this controvers­ial experiment that showed little to no improvemen­ts in riders’ experience.” – THOMAS DINAPOLI, NEW YORK STATE COMPTROLLE­R

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Trash collects around a bench on a subway platform on Thursday in New York.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Trash collects around a bench on a subway platform on Thursday in New York.

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