
 
        
         
		East Bronx buses not effected by MTA redesign plan 
 BY ALEX MITCHELL 
 East Bronx  residents were  
 elated to learn that the Metropolitan  
 Transportation  Authority’s  
 bus route initiative  
 will have little to no impact on  
 their present bus travel confi  
 gurations.   
 The Bx8, Bx24 and Bx40  
 routes, which service Throggs  
 Neck and several communities  
 to  its  north,  appeared  to  
 be facing major rerouting and  
 inconvenient  tranfers.  They  
 will be left as is.  
 In Co-op City the Bx23, Bx26,  
 Bx26, Bx30 and QBx50 will continue  
 to service the Mitchell- 
 Lamas’ 45,000 residents.  
 The Bx8 route, which  
 would have had its terminus  
 at Layton Avenue and  
 Dean Avenue under the MTA  
 plan,    will  continue  to  snake  
 through  Locust  Point,  across  
 a piece of  Throggs Neck that  
 lies between the Throgs Neck  
 Expressway  and  Eastchester  
 Bay, as it heads north to Williamsbridge  
 Road via Crosby  
 Avenue. The MTA plan had  
 envisioned the Bx24 stating  
 in  Locust  Point,  picking  up  
 the former Bx8 stops, then  
 proceeding  to  Country  Club  
 and Spencer Estate and out  
 to Hutch Metro center via  
 Westchester Avenue. 
 In  addition  the  MTA  
 planned to replace the Bx24’s  
 current looping route through  
 Country Club and Spencer Estate  
 with a two-way route that  
 had fewer stops.  
 Residents from the shoreline  
 communities in Throggs  
 Neck loudly opposed the MTA  
 plan that requirred a transfer  
 People boarding the BX40 Bus at Tremont and Randal Avenue  Silvio J. Pacifi co 
 to access Crosby Avenue and  
 other non-residential areas of  
 the east Bronx, according to  
 Throggs Neck Homeowners  
 Association president Lynn  
 Gerbino.  
 “Between people going food  
 shopping, to seniors in our  
 community, and bad weather,  
 having  to  transfer  (at  Layton  
 Avenue) to get to Crosby Avenue  
 shouldn’t be necessary,”  
 she said, mentioning that Assemblyman  
 Michael Benedetto  
 was instrumental in  
 pressing the MTA to keep the  
 routes intact 
 Assemblyman  Benedetto  
 and Assembly Speaker Carl  
 Heastie worked quietly behind  
 the scene to mitigate the impact  
 of the bus route changes. 
 “Andy Byford, president of  
 NYC Transit told the people  
 of  Co-op  City  that  he  would  
 consider their needs after he  
 presented the fi rst draft of the  
 bus plan several months ago.  
 I want to thank Mr. Byford  
 and his team for listening to  
 its riders, Benedetto said, adding  
 the MTA was just as responsive  
 to his constituents in  
 Throggs Neck, Country Club  
 and Spencer Estate. 
 Spencer Estate Civic Association  
 vice president, George  
 Havranek opposed the Bx24’s  
 two-way bus traffi c  proposal  
 because he felt the community’s  
 narrow streets could not  
 support such a plan. 
 The bus route redesign  
 had the Bx24 travelling on  
 the area’s main thoroughfare,  
 Stadium Avenue, between  
 Throggs Neck and Country  
 Club.  Havranek explained  
 that  the  street’s  narrowest  
 point between Fairmount and  
 Layton avenues would not  
 support the route’s proposed  
 realignment.  
 “Even if you daylighted  
 the entire block, two buses  
 wouldn’t be able to pass (at the  
 same time),” he said mentioning  
 that one of the only options  
 would be to remove all street  
 parking in the area.  
 Havranek pointed out that  
 a similar logistical problem  
 would occur at Ampere Avenue  
 and Kennellworth Place  
 as well. 
 “Those streets are critically  
 to the redesign,” he said.  
 According to the redesign  
 plan, the current Bx40 coverage  
 area would have become a  
 two-fare zone, which was also  
 opposed by many in the area. 
 The Bx40 currently terminates  
 at Maritime  College.  
 The  proposed  change  would  
 terminated  the  Bx40  route  
 at Harding Avenue and East  
 Tremont Avenue and would  
 have extended the Bx42 bus to  
 Maritime College. Bx40 riders  
 would need to make a transfer  
 to reach the Pennyfi eld area. 
 The Bx40 route along Harding  
 was dramatically shortened  
 under the MTA plan,  
 cutting out service to residents  
 between Graff and Emerson  
 avenues. The proposed  
 plan had the northbound Bx40  
 making a right turn from  
 Harding Avenue onto Balcolm  
 Avenue and then a right at  
 Randall Avenue, and then returning  
 to East Tremont, on  
 its way to Westchester Square.  
 To  accomplish  this  route  the  
 MTA would remove a guard  
 rail located on Balcom Avenue  
 that deliberately prevents  
 through traffi c on the residential  
 block.  
 That plan was opposed by  
 Balcom Avenue residents that  
 fear opening the street would  
 lead  to  an  infl ux  of  speeding  
 vehicles.  
 Activist Egidio Sementelli  
 held a rally on Balcom Avenue  
 to keep the Bx40 bus route as  
 it currently is on Friday, September  
 6. 
 Other east Bronx bus  
 routes  that  won’t  be  effected  
 by the MTA redesign are the:  
 Bx23, Bx26, Bx28 and Bx30.  
 Co-op City had formed an adhoc  
 committee to present its  
 needs to the MTA in response  
 to the bus proposal. All of  
 the committee’s recommendations  
 were fully accepted  
 with the exception of one. In a  
 compromise, the group ceded  
 an expansion of the BxM7 to  
 Wall  Street  in  exchange  for  
 peak  period QBx50  service  to  
 Co-op City.  Also, City Island’s  
 Bx29  will  no  longer  service  
 Co-op City. It will now terminate  
 at Pelham Bay Station.  
 The MTA  plan wii be released  
 next week. 
 A Paqrchester resident signs the petition.  Sen. Luis Sepulveda’s offi ce 
 Sepulveda petitions for elevator  
 at Parkchester IRT train station 
 BY ALEX MITCHELL 
 Senator Luis Sepulveda hit  
 the concrete, advocating for  
 residents to sign a petition to  
 The Parkchester train station has waited  
 far too long for an elevator. 
 Luis Sepulveda 
 Senator 
 have the Metropolitan Transportation  
 Authority install an  
 elevator at the Parkchester #6  
 IRT stations which currently  
 operates without one. 
 He stood outside the station at  
 Hugh Grant Circle, collecting 204  
 petition signatures requesting an  
 elevator be included in the MTA’s  
 new, fi ve-year capital plan, on Friday, 
  August 30.   
 “The Parkchester train station  
 has waited far too long for an  
 elevator. The thousands of commuters  
 who  pass  through,  or  are  
 excluded from, this massive transit  
 hub every day deserve to have  
 a fully functioning and ADA-compliant  
 station, to serve all residents  
 and workers of Parkchester  
 and beyond,” Sepulveda said following  
 the petitioning. 
 He  is working with  the Chair  
 of the Senate Transportation  
 Committee Timothy M. Kennedy,  
 while also contacting the Governor’s  
 offi ce and the MTA to establish  
 an estimated funding of 30-50  
 Million for the elevator, according  
 to his offi ce.  
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER, S 2     EPTEMBER 13-19, 2019 BTR BTR BRONX TIMES REPORTER, SEPTEMBER 13-19, 2019 2