New York Daily News

Training sights on cheats

MTA requesting info on modern gates to deter fare evaders

- BY BILL SANDERSON

New York is stepping up its effort to replace century-old subway turnstile technology with modern gates that deter turnstile jumpers and other fare evaders.

Fare evasion has reached “crisis levels,” the MTA said Tuesday as it announced a request for informatio­n from companies interested in helping replace the subways’ turnstiles, emergency exit doors and other barriers with modern fare gates.

The subways lost $285 million to turnstile jumpers and other fare evaders in 2022 — and stanching the problem is a “critical challenge,” the MTA said in its request for ideas about new subway gates.

Riders in Queens can already see the type of gates the MTA is considerin­g at the Sutphin Blvd.-Archer Ave. station in Jamaica.

The chest-high metal and glass gates are nearly impossible to jump over or crawl under. They swing open when riders slide MetroCards or tap OMNY-enabled phones to access the platforms.

When you leave the system, the gates swing open automatica­lly — and swing shut quickly enough that no fare cheater coming into the station will be able to get past.

Gates like those the MTA anticipate­s installing on the subways have been used on the Paris Metro for years. Boston’s “T” first installed fare gates at subway stations in 2006, and has started installing them at commuter rail stations.

The request for informatio­n the MTA published Tuesday will not lead directly to a contract to install the gates, the agency said. But it does provide technical specificat­ions for what the MTA seeks.

The gates will have to allow 25 passengers a minute to enter the subway system, and allow 50 people a minute to depart.

They’ll have to be vandal-resistant, free of “sharp edges or corners,” and made of materials “designed to withstand NYCT’s [New York City Transit’s] harsh operating environmen­t.”

The gates must meet requiremen­ts of the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act, and provide access to people with “disability or any other need, such as pushing a stroller or transporti­ng luggage or packages.”

The MTA has been inching toward the installati­on of fare gates over the last couple of years. It displayed fare gates built by several companies at Grand Central Terminal in May. It displayed another idea for a fare gate at Brooklyn’s Jay St.-MetroTech station in 2021.

Installing new gates is among the recommenda­tions released in May by an MTA panel that studied the agency’s fare evasion problems.

Besides the $285 million lost to subway fare evaders in 2022, the MTA lost $315 million to bus fare evaders, $46 million to bridge and tunnel toll evaders and $44 million to commuter train fare evaders.

The MTA has made some mechanical changes to the existing turnstile system meant to deter fare evasion — but it believes gates are a better long-term solution.

“Everyone should pay their fair share to ride mass transit,” NYC Transit President Richard Davey said. “Modernized fare gates are the natural starting point for subways to address this problem”

 ?? RAY RAIMUNDI/MTA ?? Chest-high metal and glass gates at the Sutphin Blvd.-Archer Ave. station in Queens offer a glimpse into what those intent on fare-beating may be facing in future.
RAY RAIMUNDI/MTA Chest-high metal and glass gates at the Sutphin Blvd.-Archer Ave. station in Queens offer a glimpse into what those intent on fare-beating may be facing in future.

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