Emergency exit gates at three subway stations will soon take 15 seconds to open, MTA officials announced Monday, as part of an effort to crack down on the โsuper highway of fare evasion.โ
Transit officials estimate riders skipping the subway fare cost the agency $285 million in 2022. NYC Transit President Richard Davey said riders have found it easy to slip through emergency doors when theyโre opened from the inside.
Come mid-February, the gates will be reconfigured with 15-second delays at three stations: The 138th Street-Third Avenue station on the 6 line, Flushing Avenue on the J, M and Z lines; and 59th Street on the 4, 5 and 6 lines.
MTA officials said they chose those three stations because they have enough turnstiles for masses of riders to quickly escape actual emergencies, like a fire or terrorist attack, even if the emergency gates wonโt open for 15 seconds.
โWe’ve been very careful about this, gone to the state code authority and gotten a waiver, which is basically everyone saying that we still have a safe station,โ said MTA President of Construction and Development Jamie Torres-Springer.
Davey said the agency already tested the trick out at a set of emergency gates at Brooklynโs Borough Hall station โ and that it worked in โfrustratingโ riders who tried to use the exits when there was no emergency.
โSo that’s the goal, to frustrate folks who might want to be using that as a matter of convenience, where you have a perfectly good turnstile next [to it],โ Davey said.
Officials did not say whether the 15-second waits at emergency gates will be rolled out to other stations, but itโs one of several ways the MTA is working to crack down on fare evasion.
The MTA has over the last two years hired private security to stand near turnstiles to deter fare beaters. Itโs also making adjustments to more than 3,400 turnstiles to prevent fare evasion through a maneuver called โback-cocking,โ where riders pull back the bar just far enough to…
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