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Pope Francis, Municipal Transportation Advocate

The pope is a great supporter of public transportation, and in a spring encyclical he urged cities to prioritize public transportation to help the environment and to alleviate "undignified conditions" endured by riders.

By Tina Susman

 

When Pope Francis visits New York, he is not likely to take the subway, but Gene Russianoff wishes he would.

Specifically, Russianoff would like the pontiff to take a ride on the Lexington Avenue line, whose 4, 5 and 6 trains are frequently delayed as riders stuff themselves into the crowded cars that are the only ones serving Manhattan's east side.

"It's unbearable," said Russianoff, executive director of New York's Straphangers Campaign, a watchdog group that since 1979 has badgered the nation's largest public transportation system to improve. "You've just got to steel yourself."

Pope Francis is a great advocate of public transportation, and in a spring encyclical he urged cities to prioritize public transportation to help the environment and to alleviate "undignified conditions" endured by riders.

The pontiff speaks from experience. When he was a cardinal in Buenos Aires, he regularly rode the subways and buses.

Russianoff speaks from experience too. A native New Yorker and a Harvard-educated lawyer, he has never owned a car. The subway stations closest to where he lived and worked over the years became as familiar as a home driveway is to most Californians.

Subway riders know where on the platform to stand if they want to get into the best car for launching them on a quick exit at their destination. They know which metro card machines work well and which ones spit out their credit or debit cards. They know how late the news stands, bodegas and shoe repair shops inside their stations stay open. They get familiar with their station's regular characters, from the homeless people to the religious zealots handing out leaflets.

When the subways work well, they are a rider's best friend, in sync like a perfect dance partner. But any hiccup, whether caused by kittens on the tracks, a sick passenger or a looming hurricane or blizzard, can throw off the entire city.

That is where the Straphangers Campaign, part of the nonprofit New York Public Interest Research Group, comes in.

"We show tough love," Russianoff said of the Straphangers, named for the leather loops that used to hang inside subway cars, offering standing riders something to hang onto as they rumbled beneath the city.

The group obsessively monitors the lines linking the five boroughs, noting which are most crowded, dirtiest, slowest or plagued by sound systems whose announcements sound more like anguished squawks than helpful messages.

In its annual subway report card, released last week, the campaign also notes the best subway lines. This year, the 7 train, which runs from Manhattan's west side into Queens, won top honors. The 5 train and the B, which goes from Brooklyn up Manhattan's west side, tied for last place.

The campaign regularly battles fare increases and fights for communities, most of them in poor and underserved areas, facing service shortfalls. It has advocated for modern features like digital clocks advising riders how long they have to wait for the next train, and cards to replace the tokens that were phased out in 2003.

The high-profile fights have brought Russianoff, 62, a measure of fame. Once he was recognized while riding on the much-maligned C train. The only other person in his car was an "extremely large gentleman," Russianoff said during an interview in his Brooklyn home.

"He got up and started to walk _ I would say stagger _ toward me," Russianoff said. "I thought, 'This is it. I'm gonna buy it on the C train.' He came over to me and says, 'Are you the subway guy?'"

Instead of mugging him, the fellow rider praised his activism, something Russianoff says happens two or three times a week.

For all his criticism of the subways, Russianoff calls it a "great system" that is far better than in the 1980s, when a friend used to joke that he had a strict ridership rule: Never board a car with the chalk outline of a body on the floor.

Back then, subway muggings were rife. Stations were dimly lit with 37-watt bulbs, whose eerie glows added to the subway's menacing feel. Cars were splattered with graffiti, and air conditioning was not the norm. Cars broke down every few thousand miles; today's cars go more than 150,000 miles between breakdowns.

"Things were bad. Now they're better," Russianoff said, praising the system for offering New Yorkers 24-hour subway service seven days a week. You won't find that in London, Paris, Moscow, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston or Washington.

The subways also offer one flat fare _ $2.75, with various discounts available _ keeping transportation costs relatively low for New Yorkers who travel long distances to work. There are free subway-to-bus transfers, a development in 1996 that Russianoff joked was akin to the fall of the Berlin Wall.

"Nobody ever believed it would happen," he said.

But Russianoff says things have slipped in recent years, mainly because of rising ridership and delays in major extensions.

The system averages 5.6 million rides per day. An extension of the 7 line just opened, nearly two years after it had been envisioned for completion. The first phase of a new line on Manhattan's east side, initially proposed in 1919, won't open until the end of 2016. The entire line is not expected to be finished until 2029.

"You gotta hope. It's desperately needed," said Russianoff, who admits being skeptical.

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times

 

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