New York Post

Metro-North riders rip sleepy seat hog

- By DANIELLE FURFARO and ELIZABETH ROSNER dfurfaro@nypost.com

All abhor the sleeper car. A guy who treats an early morning Metro-North car like his own living room day after day has drawn the disgust of his fellow commuters, who are sick and tired of him taking up four seats and putting his dirty shoes up on the cushions.

“He takes up all four seats with his dirty feet up all over the seats,” said a rider who methodical­ly took photos of the pro sleeper from the same angle every weekday morning for nearly a month. “One day someone tried to sit where his feet were, and he didn’t even move.”

Train passengers are also tired of content Metro-North conductors not doing anything about the man lounging across so many seats and treating them like his own personal ottoman.

“They always walk right past him and let him sleep like that,” the photo-taking witness said.

He even sent the photos to the MTA.

“I messaged Metro-North several times, and they kept replying, but then I realized they were sending generic responses and no one was going to do anything about it,” said the commuter, who gets on the same car of the 5:36 a.m. train from White Plains and encounters the sprawled-out sleeper every time they make the 35-minute commute into Grand Central Station.

“Thank you for bringing this to our attention,” most of the MTA responses read. “The issue has been reported.”

The impolite rider is Steve S., a 41-year-old electricia­n who claims he has to get comfortabl­e on the train because he has a 90minute commute that starts at about 4:30 a.m. every day. So he goes to bed at around 10 p.m., wakes up to start his commute, and then catches more zzz’s on the train.

“I’m on the train for 90 minutes and I’m bored, so I sleep,” said Steve, who stands at about 6-feet tall and was wearing a gray hoodie, jeans, and black sneakers as he snuggled into the seat one morning last week.

He declined to say where he gets on the train.

MTA officials explained that they couldn’t interview every conductor on that route to confirm that none of them had ever told Steve to take his feet off the seat.

“Metro-North asks customers to refrain from putting feet on seats and to be thoughtful of their fellow customers,” said spokeswoma­n Nancy Gamerman.

Other riders on the train say they’re fed up with Steve.

“Show a little compassion for people who are tired and getting up at the crack of dawn in the morning,” said Brendon Walsh, a 21-year-old New York University student from Chappaqua.

 ??  ?? CHAIRING OF GRIEVANCES Steve S (also inset) takes up four seats like this every morning says a fellow commuter who wants the MTA to take action.
CHAIRING OF GRIEVANCES Steve S (also inset) takes up four seats like this every morning says a fellow commuter who wants the MTA to take action.

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