
 
		Wage strike ends with protesters cuffed in Village 
 BY DEAN MOSES 
 Fair wage strikers marched through  
 traffi c in Lower Manhattan demanding  
 “one fair wage” but the demonstration  
 ended with several protesters getting  
 cuffed Wednesday afternoon, May 26. 
 A fair wage protest saw two individuals  
 arrested after joining about 40 restaurant  
 workers  who  blocked  traffi c  along  6th  
 Avenue and Bleecker Street on May 26.  
 Their menu of demands included enforcing  
 restaurants to offer a livable wage with  
 tips included before they say they would  
 return to work. 
 The rally began just after 12:30 p.m. in  
 Washington Square Park, where advocates  
 and elected offi cials including NYC Councilmember  
 Brad Lander, New York Senator  
 Brad Holyman, and playwright Eve Ensler  
 stated that the city has a “wage shortage,  
 not a worker shortage.” 
 According to a report by One Fair Wage,  
 the organizers of the march, “Nine in 10  
 New York restaurant workers are leaving  
 their jobs due to low wages and tips.” The  
 national nonprofi t organization found that  
 half of New York’s restaurant workers are  
 considering leaving the hospitality business  
 since they can’t afford rent or their bills  
 with their meager pay, forcing them to fi nd  
 work elsewhere. 
 The report also found that women have  
 Both men were hailed as heroes by fellow protesters. 
 been found to suffer higher rates of hostility, 
  sexual harassment, and health risks.  
 Female workers at the rally shared that in  
 addition to dealing with unwanted physical  
 contact, some customers have asked them  
 to lower their masks to see if they are attractive  
 enough to get a decent tip. 
 Council Member Lander declared that  
 while Governor Andrew Cuomo eliminated  
 PHOTO BY DEAN MOSES 
 the subminimum wage for some, he failed  
 to eliminate it for restaurant workers. 
 “Governor Cuomo you’ve got an opportunity  
 to make it right, you’ve heard about  
 the fact that because of the subminimum  
 wage there is more sexual harassment for  
 restaurant servers than in almost any other  
 part of the economy. You may have heard  
 that Governor Cuomo has some reasons  
 why he might want to be making amends  
 around issues of sexual harassment, as I  
 remember he might have seven reasons  
 around  making  amends  around  sexual  
 harassment. Governor Cuomo one good  
 way of starting to make amends on sexual  
 harassment would be to end the subminimum  
 wage and get One Fair Wage for our  
 restaurant workers,” Lander said. 
 Marchers held signs stating, “Will Work  
 for  Fair Wages”  and  “Low Wages  Stop  
 America’s Recovery,” as they made their  
 way down 6th Avenue. After a short walk,  
 the demonstration halted at an intersection  
 between Downing  and  Bleeker  Streets,  
 where individuals held traffi c for about 20  
 minutes. Placing chairs and tables on the  
 roadway, protesters literally sat in traffi c. 
 “Why are we stopping traffi c right now?  
 Because low wages stop America’s recovery,” 
  one demonstrator yelled. 
 The NYPD played a monotone recording  
 demanding the group to leave the street  
 and warning of arrests for those who didn’t  
 comply. Several of the demonstrators left  
 while two remained at their table. 
 NYPD placed Zach Lerner from New  
 York Communities for Change and Fekkak  
 Mamdouh, Senior Director and Co- 
 Founder of One Fair Wage under arrest,  
 zip-tying their hands and ushering them in  
 the back of a patrol van. The pair chanted  
 “One fair wage!” as they were led away. 
 Ready to ride: MTA, advocates celebrate  
 newest elevator at Midtown station 
 BY DEAN MOSES 
 For  years,  disability advocates have  
 been calling for easier subway access  
 for wheelchair-bound New Yorkers  
 and parents with strollers — and the MTA  
 offi cially took another step on June 1 toward  
 fulfi lling that goal at every station in  
 New York. 
 Authority offi cials joined members of the  
 disabled community at the corner of 55th  
 Street and 7th Avenue on June 1 to mark  
 the installation of a new elevator leading to  
 the 57th Street station on the N/Q/R/W  
 lines — making it the 137th stop in the  
 system to have elevator access. 
 “This is a project that fi nished early because  
 when COVID happened we started  
 to take advantage of the opportunity to do  
 more work, to do it more quickly and this is  
 one of the results,” said Janno Lieber, President  
 of MTA Construction & Development.  
 “Now more than ever, as we reopen, we  
 need a transit system that is truly accessible  
 The MTA gathered to celebrate the newest wheelchair accessible station on  
 June 1. 
 to all New Yorkers. It will speed up our  
 recovery and it is justice delayed.” 
 PHOTO BY DEAN MOSES 
 Lieber was joined in the shadow of the  
 new elevator by a large crowd who helped  
 make it possible, not just in terms of the  
 physical  construction  but  also  through  
 staunch advocacy. Quemuel Arroyo, MTA  
 Chief  Accessibility  Offi cer  and  Victor  
 Calise,  MTA Board Member  and Commissioner  
 of the New York City Mayor’s  
 Offi ce  for People with Disabilities have  
 been calling for easier accesses to public  
 transportation for some time now. 
 As wheelchair users  themselves,  they  
 know the struggle to fi nd accommodations  
 that meet their needs. 
 “For far too long, wheelchair users like  
 myself, riders with vision or hearing disabilities, 
  seniors who have diffi culty with  
 stairs, parents with children in strollers,  
 and so many others have struggled to get  
 around the system. That is changing now,”  
 Arroyo said. 
 After  the  offi cial  celebration  Calise  
 and Arroyo became the fi rst users to ride  
 the elevators after its offi cial christening.  
 The pair demonstrated the ease at which  
 they can now access the turnstiles and the  
 platforms. 
 “I have to say just getting out and seeing  
 a nice accessible station is overwhelming,  
 we need to continue to be able to do this,”  
 Calise said 
 Schneps Media June 3, 2021     3