The Sentinel-Record

‘Keeping London moving’

City’s subway system battles to stay on track

- JILL LAWLESS

Editor’s Note: Plagues, fires, war — London has survived them all. But it has never had a year like this. The coronaviru­s has killed more than 15,000 Londoners and shaken the foundation­s of one of the world’s great cities. As a fast-moving mass vaccinatio­n campaign holds the promise of opening, The Associated Press looks at the pandemic’s impact on London’s people and institutio­ns and asks what the future might hold.

LONDON — When London came to a stop as a nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown was imposed a year ago, the Undergroun­d kept running as an essential service.

But it was a strange and unnerving experience for its workers. Joseph Cocks, a driver on the subway’s Circle Line that loops around the city center, said he could “count the number of people who got on the train on one hand.”

“To see it on a Monday morning peak, to see hardly anyone about, was shocking and surprising,” he said of the system that opened in 1863 and is known colloquial­ly as the Tube.

Its continued operation was a sign that even in a pandemic, London’s heart was still beating.

In a city where almost half of households don’t own a car, public transit keeps economic and social life moving. Before the nationwide lockdown on March 23, 2020, about 5 million journeys a day were taken on the Tube. Its iconic map, reminiscen­t of a multicolor­ed circuit board, is both an emblem of the city and an essential tool for residents and visitors alike.

In the early weeks, when most Britons were told to stay at home and fear outpaced facts about the virus, Undergroun­d employees kept going to work, but worried about getting sick.

“We didn’t know exactly how bad it was,” Cocks said. “There were worries about how dangerous this job was, and you’d hear stories of people on the Undergroun­d catching coronaviru­s. So we didn’t know how fast it spread and how safe we were.”

Covid-19 has taken a heavy toll on Transport for London, which runs the city’s subway, suburban rail and bus network. At least 89 staff have died from the coronaviru­s, most of them bus drivers, whose death rate has been three times the national average, according to a study by University College London.

The virus has hit people in public-facing jobs hardest, and the death toll has been higher among ethnic minorities than their white compatriot­s. The reasons are thought to include jobs, underlying health conditions and economic inequality.

About a third of the Transport for London workforce belongs to an ethnic minority, in part a legacy of the thousands of people from Britain’s former colonies who came to the U.K. after World War II to bolster a depleted workforce.

Brian Woodhead, the Undergroun­d’s director of customer services, says the network acted quickly to protect staff and passengers. Masks are mandatory, hand sanitizer is plentiful, escalator handrails are blasted with virus-killing ultraviole­t light and one-way systems reduce logjams in station corridors. On buses, drivers sit in sealed-off cabs.

“As much as anyone can in the circumstan­ces that we now find ourselves in, I think that the Tube is a safe environmen­t,” Woodhead said.

He cites a recent study by Imperial College London, which tested for the virus on surfaces and in the air on the Undergroun­d and found none. That’s due in part to people like Ivelina Dimitrova, who supervises 20 cleaners at stations including the busy King’s Cross. She and her crew — mostly immigrants from Eastern Europe, Africa and south Asia — regularly spray surfaces with hospital-grade disinfecta­nt.

“We had to change our work routine and everything, and (had) to do it fast” when the virus arrived, she said, adding they felt constant stress about getting infected.

Now, she said, “we have strong morale, because we feel that we have to do what we can do just to keep ourselves safe, our families safe, other people around us safe.”

Passengers who previously took little notice of the cleaning staff now sometimes stop to thank them, she said.

The pandemic has left the world’s oldest subway system facing an uncertain future. The Tube, which relies heavily on ticket revenue, faces a cash crisis. Ridership plunged to just 4% of pre-pandemic numbers early in the outbreak and now carries about a fourth of the passengers it did before the outbreak.

During one recent rush hour, a trickle of passengers hustled through the ticket gates at the usually teeming Victoria and King’s Cross stations, past posters reminding travelers to wear face coverings and “Be Kind” to one another.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has set the country on a slow path out of lockdown, with hairdresse­rs and shops scheduled to open April 12. But people are still advised to work from home if they can and to take the Tube only if needed.

His government has given Transport for London about $5.6 billion in grants and loans to keep it running, although the money is due to run out May 18. Talks on funding have been clouded by acrimony between Johnson’s Conservati­ve government and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, a member of the Labour Party.

Woodhead expects ridership to increase, but “whether that’s 18 months or whether it’s 36 months” is hard to predict. And the pandemic may have changed travel patterns for good, with more walking and cycling and less rush-hour commuting.

In December, an independen­t report commission­ed by Transport for London and the mayor said a “credible” forecast was that there would be a 20% reduction in demand for public transit due to “travel changes and economic weakness” after the pandemic.

“People won’t, I doubt very much, commute five days a week,” Woodhead said. “Some people will. But there’ll be a lot of people now that do it in a hybrid way. That’s surely going to happen, which on one side will help from a congestion point of view, but the other side won’t help from a revenue point of view.”

Still, Woodhead is confident the Tube will be a key part of London’s recovery.

“It’s just interwoven into the whole infrastruc­ture and the way in which London works,” he said.

Meanwhile, drivers such as Cocks will keep doing a job that has become “a bit more secluded, a bit more isolated.”

“It’s nice to know that you’re keeping London moving,” he said. “You’re doing your bit to keep everything going from A to B.”

 ??  ?? Joseph Cocks, a tube train driver, walks from the front to the back of the train along the platform at Hammersmit­h Undergroun­d station before taking the train round the Circle Line in London.
Joseph Cocks, a tube train driver, walks from the front to the back of the train along the platform at Hammersmit­h Undergroun­d station before taking the train round the Circle Line in London.
 ??  ?? Passengers journey on a Circle Line train between Gloucester Road and Kensington High Street stations in London. (AP/Alastair Grant)
Passengers journey on a Circle Line train between Gloucester Road and Kensington High Street stations in London. (AP/Alastair Grant)
 ??  ?? A London Undergroun­d sign is seen at Westminste­r station with Queen Elizabeth Tower in the background holding the bell known as Big Ben in London.
A London Undergroun­d sign is seen at Westminste­r station with Queen Elizabeth Tower in the background holding the bell known as Big Ben in London.
 ??  ?? A man sits on a bench waiting for a tube train at Westminste­r Undergroun­d station.
A man sits on a bench waiting for a tube train at Westminste­r Undergroun­d station.
 ??  ?? A man runs down the platform at Edgware Road Undergroun­d station.
A man runs down the platform at Edgware Road Undergroun­d station.
 ?? (AP/Alastair Grant) ?? A tube driver walks through the carriages of his train at Edgware Road Undergroun­d station in London.
(AP/Alastair Grant) A tube driver walks through the carriages of his train at Edgware Road Undergroun­d station in London.
 ??  ?? A woman walks onto the platform at Barbican undergroun­d station.
A woman walks onto the platform at Barbican undergroun­d station.
 ??  ?? People talk as they stand outside King’s Cross St. Pancras Undergroun­d station.
People talk as they stand outside King’s Cross St. Pancras Undergroun­d station.
 ??  ?? A train pulls into Westminste­r Undergroun­d station.
A train pulls into Westminste­r Undergroun­d station.
 ??  ?? People stand on a platform at Victoria Undergroun­d station.
People stand on a platform at Victoria Undergroun­d station.
 ??  ?? Customers ride the escalators at King’s Cross Undergroun­d station with a coronaviru­s informatio­n advertisem­ent on a large screen over the escalators.
Customers ride the escalators at King’s Cross Undergroun­d station with a coronaviru­s informatio­n advertisem­ent on a large screen over the escalators.
 ??  ?? Informatio­n about an Art on the Tube project is displayed at Gloucester Road Undergroun­d station.
Informatio­n about an Art on the Tube project is displayed at Gloucester Road Undergroun­d station.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States