Transit union calls on MTA for additional help  
 cleaning fi lthy trains during contract negotiations 
 lines are only cleaned at  
 one terminal, instead of  
 both. 
 But those trains  
 can travel hours before  
 workers can clean them,  
 according  to  the  union.  
 Terminals  like  Coney  
 Island  in  Brooklyn  and  
 Norwood-205th Street in  
 the Bronx no longer have  
 any overnight cleaners  
 to  tidy  up  late-night  
 trains  coming  in,  the  
 union said. 
 “We’ve  got  homeless,  
 cups, dirt, a lot of trash  
 — a lot of trash — and  
 it’s a lot of work and it’s  
 a safety issue for both us  
 and our customers,” said  
 David Duarte, a terminal  
 cleaner at Coney Island.  
 “We’re short-staffed.” 
 Elected  officials  
 joined the union to criticize  
 the state of train car  
 cleanliness. House Rep.  
 Adriano Espaillat called  
 the situation “embarrassing” 
  for New York  
 City. 
 There have been 2,243  
 train delays due to soiled  
 cars so far this year, the  
 union said. But the MTA  
 pushed back to contextualize  
 the problem. There  
 are about 204 soiled car  
 incidents per month  
 out of 2.1 million trips.  
 Transit President Andy  
 Byford  said  the negative  
 comments  were  “insulting” 
  to the workers 
 “On occasion, when  
 messes  are  left  behind,  
 there may be a gap before  
 cleaners can get to  
 a particular train,” Byford  
 said in a statement.  
 “From my daily observations, 
   cleaners  do  an  
 outstanding job which I  
 very much appreciate.” 
 Union employees  
 have been working without  
 a contract since the  
 spring, but the MTA  
 and representatives appeared  
 to  make  some  
 progress ahead of the  
 holiday weekend. TWU  
 Local 100 President Tony  
 Utano said that he agreed  
 to  an  invitation  to  meet  
 with MTA Chairman Par  
 Foye in an executive session  
 Wednesday. 
 The two had been  
 engaged in a bitter battle  
 around contract asks.  
 The union at one point  
 published  “confidential”  
 details of contract proposals  
 and a representative  
 threatened  to  “tar  
 and feather” Foye if he  
 appeared at a union contract  
 rally outside MTA  
 headquarters. 
 Foye, for his part,  
 alleged  that  the  union  
 was proposing a racially  
 biased  health  care  
 program, which he referred  
 to  as  a  “scam”  in  
 a lengthy email to Utano.  
 The union has disputed  
 Foye’s  description  of  the  
 proposal. 
 “MTA Chairman Pat  
 Foye  reached  out  to me  
 yesterday  and  asked  
 that  we  go  into  Executive  
 Session  to  try  and  
 reach  agreement  on  a  
 new contract. I have accepted,” 
  Utano said in a  
 statement  Wednesday.  
 “The  40,000  hardworking  
 men  and  women  
 who  move  8  million  
 people a day by subway  
 and  bus  deserve  a  fair  
 contract.” 
 BY VINCENT BARONE 
 Subway  workers  
 are pushing the MTA  
 for more help cleaning  
 urine-soaked trains. 
 Transport  Workers  
 Union Local 100,  
 the union representing  
 40,000 bus and subway  
 workers, rallied last  
 week for the restoration  
 of roughly 80 terminal  
 cleaner positions that  
 were cut over the years.  
 The calls came as the  
 union and MTA leadership  
 continue negotiations  
 for a new union  
 contract. 
 “We’re  talking  about  
 feces, vomit, urine —  
 right? Now these trains  
 could go three hours  
 without a cleaning,”  
 said  Nelson  Rivera,  a  
 union vice president. The  
 union  recently  launched  
 a  “trash  train”  contest  
 asking  riders  to  send  
 in  photos  of  their  dirty  
 trains. 
 “People should not be  
 subjected to ride in these  
 trains  in  these  conditions,” 
  Rivera added. 
 There are currently  
 378 terminal car cleaners  
 in the subway system, according  
 to the MTA. The  
 latest cut to the position,  
 carried out in the summer  
 of 2018, has meant  
 that  trains  on  some  
 Nelson  Rivera,  a  TWU Local  100  vice  president,  called  
 for  the  MTA  to  fully  restore  cuts  to  terminal  cleaner  
 positions in the subway system to better manage filthy  
 trains. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 TIMESLEDGER,14      DEC. 6-12, 2019 QNS.COM 
 
				
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