New York Post

Few fines for straphange­rs

- David Meyer

The NYPD on Monday claimed to have issued “very few” fines to subway and bus riders who won’t wear masks, but refused to provide an exact number.

Speaking to MTA board members on Monday, NYPD Transit Bureau Chief Kathleen O’Reilly insisted that the NYPD’s enforcemen­t is focused on getting riders to mask up as opposed to issuing $50 tickets in accordance with state law.

“I can assure you that we’ve issued very few of those,” O’Reilly said after board reps repeatedly pressed her for the number of mask-noncomplia­nce summonses issued.

“What I’ve told my cops to do is to make sure you carry masks with you, make sure you wear your mask — and if you encounter somebody on the train, offer them a mask,” she said. “Ninety-nine percent of the people that we encounter that are not wearing a mask will take a mask, and they will put that mask on when the officer requires them to do so.

“I can get you a breakdown at a later date,” O’Reilly said before teeing off the number of summonses for fare evasion, smoking, littering and public urination.

Federal law requires masks on public transporta­tion in order to slow the spread of COVID-19 and protect vulnerable riders. But the most recent MTA survey from November found just 80 percent of bus riders and 77 percent of straphange­rs wore masks correctly. More than one in 10 subway riders were unmasked, the survey found.

“Mask compliance is good,” board rep Randy Glucksman told O’Reilly on Monday. “But it really needs to be better.”

The MTA’s in-house police force has issued 76 mask summonses since former Gov. Andrew Cuomo instituted the noncomplia­nce fine in September 2020, according to figures shared with The Post.

MTA police primarily patrol the commuter railroads, while buses and subways are the jurisdicti­on of the NYPD.

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