By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Transit union workers plan to
hand out seemingly blood-spattered counterfeit subway passes to
New York City commuters on Thursday to draw attention to safety
proposals they say could reduce the number of people killed by
trains.
The campaign follows two widely reported cases in December
when commuters were pushed onto the tracks and killed by
oncoming trains.
Between 35 and 55 people have been killed by trains on the
city's subway tracks each year over the past decade, out of
annual ridership that totaled more than 1.6 billion in 2012,
according to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA).
The Transport Workers Union Local 100, the main union for
the city's subway workers, is calling for new speed limits to be
posted that would force trains to enter stations more slowly
than they currently do.
The MTA opposes limits that would add to delays. Most
stations in the system do not have speed limits, and drivers are
instead trained to use their own judgment.
"If you're coming in slower, you can stop faster," Jim
Gannon, a union spokesman, said in an interview. "It's just
physics."
The union also wants attendants on subway platforms at
crowded times, and access to emergency power shut-off systems to
stop trains from entering a station where someone has fallen on
the tracks.
Such measures would reduce deaths, injuries and the trauma
and mental health problems suffered by train drivers involved in
accidents, the union said.
"The motormen who actually run these people over and kill
them, you know, they have recurring issues of all kinds of
things: sleeplessness, they can't work, they don't want to go
back to the job," Gannon said.
The demands are being printed on mock Metrocards, the
distinctive credit-card-sized pass that New Yorkers swipe at
turnstiles to enter the subway system. The cards have been
designed to look like they've been splattered by blood, and
feature an image of the Grim Reaper bearing the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority's logo on his cloak.
The MTA, the state agency that runs the transit system, says
speed limits are a bad idea.
"The fact is that slowing down trains would create crowding
conditions on trains and platforms and would actually create a
more dangerous condition," Kevin Ortiz, an MTA spokesman, said
in an e-mail.
The MTA instead wanted to work with the union on public
education campaigns to encourage commuters to steer clear of the
platform edge, Ortiz said.
The MTA is also planning a pilot program in which barriers
with electric doors will be installed at the platform edge, but
has warned that extending such a program across the city would
be expensive and difficult.
On December 3, Ki-Suck Han was killed after being shoved
onto subway tracks in Manhattan as a train entered a station
near Times Square. A suspect, Naeem Davis, has been charged with
second-degree murder. On December 27, Sunando Sen was shoved to
his death at a station in Queens. Erika Menendez has been
charged with his murder. Police said she told investigators she
pushed Sen because she hates Muslims and Hindus.
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