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
/QNS.COM