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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums41 Transit Workers Dead: Crisis Takes Staggering Toll on Subways (NYT)
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/08/nyregion/coronavirus-nyc-mta-subway.html41 Transit Workers Dead: Crisis Takes Staggering Toll on Subways
The M.T.A. has been criticized for its response to the outbreak. Now a staffing shortage has made it difficult to keep even a diminished system running.
By Christina Goldbaum
April 8, 2020
At least 41 transit workers have died, and more than 6,000 more have fallen sick or self-quarantined. Crew shortages have caused over 800 subway delays and forced 40 percent of train trips to be canceled in a single day. The average wait for some trains, usually four minutes, has ballooned to 40 minutes.
Since the coronavirus pandemic engulfed New York City, it has taken a staggering toll on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the agency that runs the subway, buses and commuter rails and is charged with shuttling workers like doctors, nurses and emergency responders who are essential to keeping the city functioning.
But the transit agency may have deepened its work force crisis by not doing more during the early stages of the outbreak to protect its employees and delaying some steps laid out in a plan the M.T.A. had developed for dealing with a pandemic.
The transit agency was late to distribute disinfectant to clean shared work spaces, struggled to keep track of sick workers and failed to inform their colleagues about possible exposure to the virus, according to interviews with two dozen transit workers.
As the virus spread, many workers became so concerned that they took measures into their own hands: They cordoned off seats with duct tape to distance drivers from riders and used their own masks and homemade disinfectant at work, only to be reprimanded by supervisors.
Across the country, the speed and intensity of the outbreak has overwhelmed many public transit agencies, leaving them with a depleted work force and the responsibility of preventing the spread of infection.
In New York, M.T.A. officials say they responded to workers concerns as soon as they could, scrubbing down equipment and distributing other disinfectants as they have become available. And transit officials followed early advisories from the federal government that healthy people did not need to wear face masks.
Still, around 1,500 transit workers have tested positive for the coronavirus, and 5,604 others have self-quarantined because they are showing symptoms of the infection. Absenteeism is up fourfold since the pandemic began, officials say.
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41 Transit Workers Dead: Crisis Takes Staggering Toll on Subways (NYT) (Original Post)
dalton99a
Apr 2020
OP
LAS14
(13,769 posts)1. "used their own masks and homemade disinfectant at work, only to be reprimanded by supervisors."
What, on earth, possessed those supervisors??? What were they thinking??