4 AUGUST 22, 2019 RIDGEWOOD TIMES WWW.QNS.COM
Five R’wood stops on B38 line cut for longer buses
BY KEVIN DUGGAN
THE BROOKLYN PAPER
SPECIAL TO RIDGEWOOD TIMES
The Metropolitan Transportation
Authority will remove nine bus
stops along the B38 between
Ridgewood and Downtown Brooklyn
when it adds longer buses to the line
this September.
The transit agency plans to
remove five stops along the route
in Ridgewood — and four more in
Brooklyn – as it introduces longer
buses that will carry up to 20 more
passengers at greater speeds
starting Labor Day, according to
a notice agency’s New York City
division sent out to Brooklyn
Community Board 2 on Aug. 13.
“These 64-foot articulated buses
will replace the 40-foot standard
buses that have been operating
along the B38 route, in order to
improve the route’s efficiency for
our customers, and also increase
seat capacity on buses in operation,”
according to the statement.
The agency will also remove five
stops in neighboring Ridgewood,
all of which are at one to two block
intervals along Seneca Avenue.
The lost stops are located at
Seneca Avenue at Putnam Avenue
(Downtown Brooklyn-bound),
Madison Street (Ridgewood-bound),
Palmetto Street (Downtown
Brooklyn-bound), Grove Street
(both directions) and Harman
Street (both directions)
Three Bushwick stops will be
removed, namely the Ridgewoodbound
Kossuth Place and Broadway
stop, along with the Downtownbound
Bushwick Avenue stop at
DeKalb Avenue, and the two-way
stop at Cypress Avenue also at
DeKalb Avenue.
The reductions are part of the
authority’s plans to take buses off
the road and lengthen waits along
23 bus lines citywide — including
up to three extra minutes on the
B38 — which it says will save
$7 million in operating costs,
according to internal documents
released last month.
Spacing out stops like this is
one of the ways the agency plans
to make the city’s bus system —
the slowest of any major city in
the nation — run faster and more
reliably, a policy the agency piloted
in the redesign of the Staten Island
network last year.
Earlier this year, the MTA
embarked on efforts to redesign
the entire Queens bus route
network, something which hasn’t
happened in decades.
A similar re-examination
of bus routes in Brooklyn is
also planned.
Robert Pozarycki contributed
to thi s repor t for the
Ridgewood Times.
No charges for husband in
accident that killed his wife
The BP gas station on Eliot Avenue in Maspeth where a Ridgewood
woman was run over on Aug. 17. Photo via Google Maps
BY ROBERT POZARYCKI
RPOZARYCKI@RIDGEWOODTIMES.COM
@ROBBPOZ
Cops are still investigating a
deadly incident at a Maspeth
gas station on Saturday
aft ernoon in which a Ridgewood
man ran over his wife with
their SUV.
Law enforcement sources said
the incident occurred at 12:12
p.m. on Aug. 17 at the BP station
located at 60-90 Eliot Ave.
According to published reports,
Grove Street residents Isabel
Ramirez-Cohetero, 51, and her
husband were wiping down their
2006 Jeep SUV when the vehicle
started going in reverse. The
victim’s husband had apparently
left the vehicle in the reverse gear
when he had stepped out of it.
Police said that Cohetero’s
husband managed to get inside
the vehicle to try and get it to stop.
In doing so, he hit the gas pedal,
causing the SUV to accelerate —
and subsequently struck his wife,
who was behind the vehicle.
Officers from the 104th
Precinct and EMS units rushed to
the scene after receiving a 911 call.
Upon arriving, the officers found
Ramirez-Cohetero unconscious
and unresponsive.
Paramedics brought her
to Wyckoff Heights Medical
Center, where she was
pronounced dead.
The B38 bus runs from Ridgewood to Downtown Brooklyn.
Photo via Wikimedia Commons/tdorante10
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