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Platform Barriers Installed at Major Upper West Side Train Station

August 27, 2025 | 1:05 PM
in NEWS
131
Protective edge gates recently installed at the 96th Street station on the Upper West Side. Photos by Gus Saltonstall

By Gus Saltonstall

A major Upper West Side train station now has platform barriers.

Protective edge gates were installed earlier this summer at the 96th Street 1, 2, and 3 station. As described by the MTA, the barriers are designed to prevent “intrusion” onto the tracks, which includes unauthorized entry, but also helps prevent people from falling or possibly being pushed into the train’s path.

The 96th Street stop is among the more than 65 New York City stations that have gotten the platform barriers over the past year, as Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office continues toward its goal of barriers at more than 100 subway stations by the end of 2025.

The barriers at the 96th Street station are installed on the local 1 train side of both the uptown and downtown platforms.

Protective edge gates on the 96th Street train station platform. 

“At my direction, the MTA has ramped up the installation of protective platform barriers, building on their efforts to brighten stations with LED lighting and equip every subway car with security cameras,” Hochul said in a news conference last month.

According to Gothamist, these platform barriers were adopted after an MTA study looked at other options that were not practical or were prohibitively expensive.

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131 Comments
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Sal Bando
Sal Bando
6 months ago

It makes it easier to walk on that yellow strip, as long as you have good balance. Keeps people out of your way.

14
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Barbara
Barbara
6 months ago
Reply to  Sal Bando

Great point!

0
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Pat W
Pat W
6 months ago
Reply to  Sal Bando

The idea of the yellow strip is NOT to walk on it but to stand back. That’s like driving a car on the service road.
Oy.!

22
Reply
Foodie
Foodie
6 months ago

I’m pretty sure I saw them at 66th street before I saw the 96th st ones.

13
Reply
OPOD
OPOD
6 months ago

Rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.

43
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Titan
Titan
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

And after Mamdani wins it will be the Titan

0
Reply
Ish Kabibble
Ish Kabibble
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

The most negative person on the uws. Congratulations!

2
Reply
MC Flurry
MC Flurry
6 months ago
Reply to  Ish Kabibble

But always truthful

1
Reply
Jerry
Jerry
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

A rather rude and unhelpful comment.

26
Reply
OPOD
OPOD
6 months ago
Reply to  Jerry

Being pushed in front of a train is rather rude and unhelpful, The fact that the MTA has to find a solution to all the crazy people walking around this city punching people, pushing people in front of trains and this is what they come up with?

42
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Bruce E. Bernstein
Bruce E. Bernstein
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

it’s actually a good solution. Just stand behind the barrier and you can’t be pushed.

2
Reply
Jonathan
Jonathan
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

The primary purpose of the barriers, as in other cities around the world, is to prevent people from accidentally falling onto the tracks. It will, of course, also protect against people being shoved, but, thankfully, that occurs far less often than accidental falls.

The MTA’s job is to run a vast mass transit system as safely and efficiently as possible. Barriers will approve safety and should be applauded.

It’s not the MTA’s job to solve the problem of homelessness or untreated mental illness. That enormous task falls to the city, state and federal governments.

8
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Patsy Green
Patsy Green
6 months ago
Reply to  Jonathan

What others cities? I’m very well traveled and I have never seen anything like this. Please let me know.

0
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jul
jul
6 months ago
Reply to  Patsy Green

in Paris, BA some lines are fully protected.

0
Reply
Linda
Linda
6 months ago
Reply to  Patsy Green

Chicago, Boston and DC I think

1
Reply
Cathrine Steck
Cathrine Steck
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

Mental health treatment is not the MTA’s mandate.. That should be in the portfolio of the completely innept, corrupt Eric Adams.

5
Reply
Eugene Nickerson
Eugene Nickerson
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

The reality is that the MTA does not mind losing people to uber and lyft. They will just force people who don’t have the privilege of living on the UWS and having their entire life in the same 15 neighborhoods be forced to use subways.

4
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Cathrine Steck
Cathrine Steck
6 months ago
Reply to  Eugene Nickerson

Are you kidding? They need every passenger fare they can get.

1
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Eugene Nickerson
Eugene Nickerson
6 months ago
Reply to  Cathrine Steck

MTA loses money on most trips. The less riders they have, the less service they run and they can reduce operating costs.

1
Reply
Bunny
Bunny
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

I agree that there are too many mentally ill people in the system people but it’s not only the MTA who is responsible. What we see in the system is representative of a larger, national problem.

7
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neighbor
neighbor
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

Totally true – but we are not on the Titanic. I think that’s the part of your comment that is inappropriate.

4
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OPOE
OPOE
6 months ago
Reply to  neighbor

We kinda are on the Titanic,

People just don’t realize it yet.

The only difference is people jumped off the Titanic, instead of being pushed off.

Last edited 6 months ago by OPOE
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Cathrine Steck
Cathrine Steck
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOE

If we’re on the Titanic, it’s not because of the MTA. It’s because of the people who voted for Trump to make their purchasing power greater (cheaper eggs anyone??) and to deal with immigration, but instead got an Autocrat who wants to take over all the levers of power and decimate the most important power of a Democracy: THE VOTE!!
Yeah, THAT Titanic.

5
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OPOE
OPOE
6 months ago
Reply to  Cathrine Steck

Ok, run with that scenario.

Not sure I’ve seen any administration official pushing people onto the train tracks.

Last edited 6 months ago by OPOE
0
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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Cathrine Steck

Yup!

0
Reply
Crankypants
Crankypants
6 months ago
Reply to  neighbor

NYC is a lot like the Titanic. Let’s see who survives. It’s astounding to think that we have to find solutions to work around lunatics and criminals, rather than getting rid of the lunatics and criminals.

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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Crankypants

The rich ‘passenger’s will survive..Hello Molly Brown..the poor poor will drown..

0
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Eugene Nickerson
Eugene Nickerson
6 months ago
Reply to  Crankypants

NYC always survives.

5
Reply
Linda T
Linda T
6 months ago
Reply to  Eugene Nickerson

I agree New Yorkers are somewhat like cockroaches, we’re survivors! Myself included, I was born in Washington Heights.

2
Reply
Eric
Eric
6 months ago
Reply to  Eugene Nickerson

The city, perhaps. It’s the people who don’t.

2
Reply
Sidney Owl
Sidney Owl
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

Stand behind that and you won’t get pushed in front of a train.

17
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Tina
Tina
6 months ago
Reply to  Sidney Owl

That’s a very busy station with lots of transfers. Have you ever been at that station when it’s jam packed? You know there’s a lot of crazy homeless people there don’t you?

Last edited 6 months ago by Tina
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Sidney Owl
Sidney Owl
6 months ago
Reply to  Tina

I use that station during rush hour at least 8 times a week, sometimes more. I’m not very worried about crazy people pushing me but if you are, those barricades are there to help you feel better. Stand behind one and you’ll be fine.

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Good Humor
Good Humor
6 months ago
Reply to  Sidney Owl

I’ll assume your comment is serious. While on the surface what you say is true I don’t think this will help if the crazy person pushes someone in front of a car.

Seems like a non-solution all in service of avoiding the actual solution (removing the crazy people).

13
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josephine
josephine
6 months ago
Reply to  Good Humor

We are all crazy.

6
Reply
Linda T
Linda T
6 months ago
Reply to  josephine

Touché!

1
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Bobbe
Bobbe
6 months ago
Reply to  Good Humor

Imagine walking along talking on your phone via hidden head set and being escorted out for being a crazy person. I’m just sayin’

1
Reply
OPOD
OPOD
6 months ago
Reply to  Sidney Owl

The fact that this is necessary should anger people. New Yorkers have been ok with well it was worse in the 90s mentally.

12
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Jerry
Jerry
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

Sorry, but I think what you’re posting here is nonsense. No one wears a sign on their head that says they are dangerous, and no one has an effective (or fair) way of detecting future violent behavior in another person based on how they look. Yesterday, a 23-year old man used automatic weapons to shoot children in a church in Minnesota; that person, according to reports, does not appear to have a criminal history. Installing subway barriers on platforms is a common-sense measure intended to make our subway slightly safer. It’s not a valid reason for fear-mongering by posting inane or inaccurate criticisms about something no society or jurisdiction on earth has an easy answer for.

Last edited 6 months ago by Jerry
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Sidney Owl
Sidney Owl
6 months ago
Reply to  OPOD

It’s not necessary. There were 8 murders in the subway system in 2024, a system that millions of people use every day, most of them late at night. The fear that people want to instill in others is a bigger problem than the subway itself.

Last edited 6 months ago by Sidney Owl
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Parking nightmare
Parking nightmare
6 months ago

Looks like a pet gate. Maybe look at the Tokyo subway to see how it’s done.

17
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Evelyn
Evelyn
6 months ago

Also at the 66th St. station.

4
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Joan A
Joan A
6 months ago

Also 86th Street

3
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Ped Astel
Ped Astel
6 months ago

I saw these. Idk if they’ve done studies, tests, or trials for these, but they look so completely ineffective. lol

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Yes it's me!
Yes it's me!
6 months ago
Reply to  Ped Astel

Total waste of money and time!

10
Reply
Luke
Luke
6 months ago
Reply to  Yes it's me!

I take the train daily and appreciate them. A lot of these UWS platforms are narrow and this brings ease. They are also nice to lean on 🙂

1
Reply
Lisa
Lisa
6 months ago
Reply to  Ped Astel

I think just seeing them will help remind people not to zone out near the edge of the platform.

13
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Steve M
Steve M
6 months ago

As someone who’s been pushed onto the tracks at Penn Station I appreciate the gesture but this won’t help you when you’re walking past the un-barriered sections. There’s really no feasible solution, I’m afraid. This is just window dressing.

33
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Liberty
Liberty
6 months ago
Reply to  Steve M

I’m so sorry this happened to you. Did you need therapy to get over this criminal event? Was the perpetrator arrested? Did you receive a monetary compensation?

5
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Steve M
Steve M
6 months ago
Reply to  Liberty

I was out of commission and in therapy for months, lost a lot of work and in many ways, am still out of commission years later due to this having happened. I talked to a lawyer and he told me trying to sue the MTA with all their resources would be like trying to piss up a rope. I do appreciate your concern though. Thank you.

0
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Carmella Ombrella
Carmella Ombrella
6 months ago
Reply to  Steve M

Am I dreaming or have I read about retractable barriers that run the length of the platform and move aside when the train is in the station and the doors open? In Japan maybe? But of course those would take considerable more money and engineering than the MTA’s fixed gates.

11
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Cathrine Steck
Cathrine Steck
6 months ago
Reply to  Carmella Ombrella

Paris has them on some lines.

1
Reply
patrick mclaughlin
patrick mclaughlin
6 months ago
Reply to  Cathrine Steck

Prague and Milan too at some stations .

0
Reply
Robin
Robin
6 months ago
Reply to  Carmella Ombrella

Yes, you have. the Metro system in Europe uses them. Don’t know why MTA can’t.

0
Reply
Luke
Luke
6 months ago
Reply to  Robin

Our train cars are not uniform so it’s impossible currently to implement full platform-length barriers like Japan. Japan has them because people like to jump into the tracks on their own unfortunately

0
Reply
Eric
Eric
6 months ago
Reply to  Robin

LOL. Do you think every city in “Europe” has the same metro system?

0
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neighbor
neighbor
6 months ago
Reply to  Carmella Ombrella

They have them in Paris as well. That works. It’s expensive. But these little walls are pretty silly!

4
Reply
Sarah
Sarah
6 months ago
Reply to  Carmella Ombrella

They do have them in Tokyo. But, as you say, installing such safeguards here would be far more expensive than what they’re doing in this pilot (?).

4
Reply
Yes it's me!
Yes it's me!
6 months ago
Reply to  Carmella Ombrella

You can only imagine how much this would cost in New York and the time it would take to install the system.. Totally pointless!

4
Reply
Steevie
Steevie
6 months ago
Reply to  Steve M

It is at the 116th Street station. There are openings in the barriers that line up with the doors. I think it is a good idea. If you feel faint or are being shoved there is something to grab on to, to stop you from going over.

13
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Alix
Alix
6 months ago
Reply to  Steevie

I found that the barriers didn’t line up with the doors, or vice versa, I guess

0
Reply
Neighbor785
Neighbor785
6 months ago
Reply to  Steve M

I think a partial solution would be to increase the state’s ability to see that violent, mentally ill people are institutionalized and not left to their own devices.

42
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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Neighbor785

What are their 🤣devices?…

0
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Ben
Ben
6 months ago

You know, I was wondering how the cranky regulars in the WSR comments section were going to find a way to complain about these safety-providing, esthetically non-objectionable barriers.

You didn’t let me down.

Honestly, not everything merits complaint…

57
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Good Humor
Good Humor
6 months ago
Reply to  Ben

I bet these cost 10 times what you are guessing they cost.

7
Reply
neighbor
neighbor
6 months ago
Reply to  Good Humor

LOL!

Maybe we should have a fundraiser, $5 to guess how much they cost. The person who comes closest gets a jar of M&Ms (or maybe, since this is the UWS, a gift card for a week’s worth of bacon-egg-&-cheese sandwiches?), the rest of the money goes to some worthy cause.

1
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Observer
Observer
6 months ago
Reply to  neighbor

Shovers determined to murder (premeditatedly or on a sudden whim) a random person they resent can appear “out of nowhere,” then escape. Riders must decide to help the victim or go after the criminal. Shovers don’t have to be certifiably ill, just feel like making someone more miserable than they are. These flimsy-looking barriers may at least remind riders to stand back.

2
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Leon
Leon
6 months ago
Reply to  Ben

The MTA has very limited resources and huge expenses. It has to allocate its resources very carefully to use them as efficiently as possible. This is not an efficient use of resources. In a world of infinite resources, this would be wonderful. But it is a nice to have, not a need to have, and the MTA has a lot of need to haves that have to be prioritized.

If there was one station where I would put them it would be 72nd Street on the 1/2/3 where the platform gets quite narrow. So I’m not sure why they didn’t start there if they are going to fund this project.

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Linda T
Linda T
6 months ago
Reply to  Leon

Do you know what would help? If people stopped… Jumping or crawling under the turnstiles! And I don’t want to hear that they can’t afford the fare… Especially if they’re jumping the turnstile holding a $1400 phone and wearing designed sneakers.

2
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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Linda T

Yes..I see it every day…The young and ‘entitled’ jump..The poor, ‘crazy’ crawl.
Old folks rarely jump..

0
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Eugene Nickerson
Eugene Nickerson
6 months ago
Reply to  Leon

The inherent problem with the MTA is that resources are ALWAYS limited. Everything has to go through the bean counters. Their job is to make hard decisions that no elected official wants to be directly accountable for. Even the advocacy groups like Riders Alliance, aren’t real grassroots groups, they’re funded by Mark Gorton among others and operate within the parameters that the MTA and big money donors let them. Not only that, they banned a disabled transit enthusiast (https://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/25/nyregion/he-loves-new-york-and-it-loves-him-right-back.html) from their events because he associated with people who disagreed with the urbanists at Riders Alliance.

I also think that no one has really spoken to some of the most condescending and arrogant figures at the MTA. Norman Silverman and Peter Cafiero who both are no longer there come to mind.

1
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Steve M
Steve M
6 months ago
Reply to  Leon

They will not be installed at 72nd because the platforms are extremely narrow. I don’t think there would be enough room left for passengers to stand if these barriers were inserted on both sides.
In any case, a deranged individual can find a way to push a victim onto the tracks, even with partial barriers such as these.

1
Reply
Liz
Liz
6 months ago
Reply to  Leon

Maybe they could get more aggressive about the farebeaters who are costing the MTA millions? If they can’t physically stop them, those hi-viz dressed guards might take photos of the scofflaws and post them online. Every time I swipe my own card I feel like a chump…..

5
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GPeck
GPeck
6 months ago
Reply to  Liz

Our neighborhood mostly pays – but other uptown stations – farebeaters en mass with someone holding the door! It is disheartening to see a fare increase while all kinds of people – clearly people with the means to pay – just waltzing in! The security guards – massive waste of money. Cops should flood the areas with rampant farebeaters – use plainclothes cops – give some meaningful punishment to these scofflaws. Put them on workcrews to clean platforms for example! And yes the system is basically a homeless shelter – this am – far north corner on the downtown platform 1 train, there are always vagrants doing god knows what there.

Last edited 6 months ago by GPeck
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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  GPeck

“Doing god knows what”…WHAT?

0
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I drive a car in NYC
I drive a car in NYC
6 months ago
Reply to  Ben

It’s Gale Brewer’s fault

7
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Sam
Sam
6 months ago

I guess you can’t push anyone on the tracks in the yawning gaps between the barriers.

13
Reply
Eric
Eric
6 months ago
Reply to  Sam

The idea is that you don’t stand in the “yawning gaps”. You do understand that, surely.

7
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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Eric

ONLY when it’s very very crowded?

0
Reply
Sam
Sam
6 months ago
Reply to  Eric

My point was sarcastic. The reason the barriers are up is so that it is more difficult to push people on the tracks. But there are huge gaps and it would hardly be a deterrerent if someone really wanted to push someone. You do understand that, surely.

4
Reply
Steve M
Steve M
6 months ago
Reply to  Sam

And don’t call him surely!

0
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Bill Williams
Bill Williams
6 months ago

Of course, the answer in the world of Hochul, Bragg, NYC Council, MTA, Heastie and soon Mamdani isn’t to fix the actual problem. It is to treat a symptom. Criminals need to be locked up and removed from not only the subway but society. The mentally ill need to be institutionalized for treatment. We have tried it their way with no bail, no incarceration and a government funded mental health industrialization complex that turns sick people loose in our communities without the proper support. None of it works! Instead of admitting their mistakes we get some pathetic execution of safety barriers. So keep voting for these clowns and screaming about Trump while getting run over by a “deliverista” on an e-bike.

42
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Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Bill Williams

Ask the President..He can bring in the military and National Guard and ICE while he’s at..America’s problems solved…Oh that’s next month? Sorry.

0
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OPOE
OPOE
6 months ago
Reply to  Bill Williams

Bill,

Stop making sense.

It upsets people.

4
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GFS
GFS
6 months ago
Reply to  Bill Williams

Sure Bill. Because the city has had the resources to put all of those with mental health issues in appropriate care, for a length of time. Oh, also, don’t raise our taxes while doing it.

I know you’d prefer to have an armed paramilitary presence in the city, who will just lock up the mentally ill, instead.

4
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Bill Williams
Bill Williams
6 months ago
Reply to  GFS

On the mental health question, it isn’t the money, it is the method of care post Willowbrook. I suggest a watch of this: https://youtu.be/7B-okvAO1tM

Now, If money is an issue in our ability to care for these people and make them and our communities safe then why would we have spent over $12BILLION on illegal immigrants since 2022?

3
Reply
Peter
Peter
6 months ago
Reply to  GFS

So you suggest what- do nothing? Ask DiBlasio where did the billions dollars go? NYC budget is $113 billion and billions are spent on homeless services and mental health care. Where does the money go?

3
Reply
Jose Habib
Jose Habib
6 months ago
Reply to  GFS

Honestly that would be incredible, would support and donate to that.

1
Reply
OPOE
OPOE
6 months ago
Reply to  Jose Habib

Same here.

0
Reply
Neighbor785
Neighbor785
6 months ago
Reply to  GFS

What’s your solution?

0
Reply
Sarah
Sarah
6 months ago
Reply to  Bill Williams

Who’s the mayor, again?

0
Reply
Neighbor785
Neighbor785
6 months ago
Reply to  Bill Williams

I am a Democrat, but I agree. Individuals who harm the citizenry should not be allowed to roam at large.

23
Reply
Farnham Maxwell
Farnham Maxwell
6 months ago
Reply to  Neighbor785

You’re a ‘Democrat’?..Good luck!

0
Reply
City Dweller
City Dweller
6 months ago
Reply to  Neighbor785

Politics has nothing to do with being safe; it’s a right all citizens should have.

5
Reply
ILikeYou
ILikeYou
6 months ago
Reply to  City Dweller

Politics has everything to do with it. Politicians make laws. Laws can protect people.

5
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Dan
Dan
6 months ago

Who’s to say that somebody couldn’t go between that and jump onto the train tracks.
And if somebody’s going to push somebody they can do it easily it’s not protecting anyone what a waste of money.

9
Reply
Running out of news
Running out of news
6 months ago
Reply to  Dan

These things add HUGE safety to the rail system and its insane they havnt been installed 50 years ago…

7
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Sam
Sam
6 months ago

Rather than allocate funds to put really effective barriers in place (see Tokyo subway system) they waste money and time with this nonsense. I mean, look at it! If you don’t understand the fatal flaw in that design you should be fired for thinking it would work.

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Drew Kopf
Drew Kopf
6 months ago

I’ve written comments several times on this subject in the past. Let’s do it the right way. Safety first. A patent was issued back in 1908 for what would work. It’s properly elsewhere. Come on. MTA and NYC. Make happen and properly

Charles S. Shute patent 1908
https://patents.google.com/patent/US915122A/en

Saint Petersburg line 2
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_2_(Saint_Petersburg_Metro)

5
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Pat W
Pat W
6 months ago
Reply to  Drew Kopf

Very interesting. Thank you for sharing . I would think back in the day that it was to stop people from accidentally falling in or getting dizzy and topping over. I don’t think people are pushing people intentionally onto the track in 1908 and 9 — correct me from wrong.

2
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Jean
Jean
6 months ago

That won’t stop some thug from pushing someone down the stairs or stabbing them…or both

5
Reply
CarnivalCanticle
CarnivalCanticle
6 months ago
Reply to  Jean

And it won’t stop anyone from slipping on a dropped candy wrapper and breaking a hip. Good grief, one can’t be afraid of everything!

0
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Pat W
Pat W
6 months ago
Reply to  Jean

Don’t give them ideas!

1
Reply
KenR
KenR
6 months ago

No. The biggest problem with these new barriers is now EVERYONE will know where the doors will open, not just me. Dang! That ridiculously specific knowledge, accumulated over years of careful observation, was great for getting on first and getting a seat. How dare they! (Yes, I’m joking. Kind of.)

32
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Jennifer
Jennifer
6 months ago

A waste of money those barriers get in the way for people with strollers and wheel chairs.

3
Reply
RAVL
RAVL
6 months ago
Reply to  Jennifer

Who is driving their stroller or wheelchair into the side of a train or rolling on the yellow line?

0
Reply
Frank
Frank
6 months ago

I am sure someone made millions just by designing these.
MTA is corrupt. They can’t stop/get money from fare evading thieves so they “adjust” the fare up to $3 sticking it to the honest people. Don’t make me talk about their “honest” overtime pay… 🤡

6
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Running out of news
Running out of news
6 months ago

Also 145th

0
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Michael
Michael
6 months ago

The barriers are helpful

The Tokyo subway doors are estimated to cost about $7 billion, for only 128 stations (where it is possible) to install. That would only be for about 1/3 of the stations of the MTA.

Another concern is the lack of fire exits, the MTA ignores the fire code and gets away with it.

1
Reply
Rob
Rob
6 months ago

These are a good idea The 1 stations also need some deep cleaning and painting.

2
Reply
neighbor
neighbor
6 months ago
Reply to  Rob

Interesting comment. Of course the platforms are gross, but I look at the mosaics and tiles a lot(I’m a mosaicist), and they have had a lot of restoration on a number of the stations. There’s also a spot at 110th St (uptown platform, front end) where someone clearly spray-painted the wall and it was very carefully cleaned. The paint remains on the grout (shades of red and blue on what’s usually grubby gray) and on some of the tiles (as a gentle sheen of color) but it’s gone from the cream-colored tiles. So some work is happening. And we definitely wouldn’t want them painting over any of the mosaic and tiles!

But of course, yes, it would be awesome if the stations got power washed one a week!

3
Reply
Allison
Allison
6 months ago

I saw these. What an effing waste of money. It doesn’t stop anyone from falling in front of a train, or jumping. I might jump just to prove the point. STOP WASTING OUR MONEY, MTA.

6
Reply
neighbor
neighbor
6 months ago

What is the point of those barriers? If they don’t want people to be able to fall / be pushed onto the tracks, they have to do what other cities do, which involves glass walls all along the edge and doors in the glass walls that open when the subway doors open. This is pointless and a waste of money. Of course it does cost much less than the full walls, but it doesn’t serve any purpose.

3
Reply
Pat W
Pat W
6 months ago

The money spent on barriers (walls) to keep poor, desperate immigrants out and separate families at the border, should be used for subways to build proper and longer barriers.
Money is allocated to the wrong things. The above would help people whether immigrants or citizens.

0
Reply
Jan
Jan
6 months ago

Great idea! Now how to solve this problem. A friend was going from the street to the platform level and was pushed down the stairs. Maybe some barriers there, too?

1
Reply
Wijmlet
Wijmlet
6 months ago

Alas, a good thing to have today.

0
Reply
Cita
Cita
6 months ago

The Paris subway system has the most effective barriers. But of course, that beautiful city also doesn’t allow criminals and the homeless to roam the stations. I feel safe there. Same with Madrid. New York is a so far behind when it comes to public transportation. The stations are cleaner too.

2
Reply
Ron Wasserman
Ron Wasserman
6 months ago

Has the reporter, or anyone noticed that the barriers have wide open spaces between them? Or is this just a press release restatement. Pretty much all they are good for is that you can lean now farther out to look down the tunnel using them for leverage,

1
Reply
ericuws
ericuws
6 months ago

What about if the train has an emergency, and can’t line up the doors with the gaps? Getting out of the train could be cumbersome.

2
Reply
Neil K
Neil K
6 months ago

This is a mediocre solution to keeping people off the tracks (for any reason). What we need are not Tokyo-style gates but rather the kind of “platform screen doors” (as they are called) that we see being implemented in subways around the world, including London, Melbourne, and Seoul (not to mention on the JFK AirTrain platforms right here in NYC). You can see them here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncSFoJFv72c

These would not only restrict access to the tracks, they would help keep subway platforms dramatically cooler by preventing subway train a/c exhaust heat from venting into the stations (the main source of heat on platforms) and they would keep brake dust from dirtying the stations (one of the main sources of grime in the subway system).

2
Reply
Carmella Ombrella
Carmella Ombrella
6 months ago

Not perfect, but if they keep eager commuters off the yellow line (and leaning over the tracks to spot the oncoming train), they could be helpful. I don’t think they’re a great solution (see my comment about retractable gates) but maybe we shouldn’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. (OMG, did I just say something positive about the MTA? The meds may be working.)

Last edited 6 months ago by Carmella Ombrella
0
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AnnieNYC
AnnieNYC
6 months ago

I don’t know if these will be good enough or not, and I don’t pretend that these will solve all the problems, but I think that trying to find some solutions (and ones that won’t cost us an arm and a leg in added fare fees to cover other, potentially better but certainly lots more expensive, and still partial solutions because the social aspects of violence aren’t solved by even the fanciest barriers) is a good thing. So, these may be better than nothing. We’ll see. Meanwhile, having something to stand behind and having something to hold on to if one isn’t all that steady, are good things. Just because it won’t solve everything, doesn’t mean it is not worth trying.

1
Reply
Eugene Nickerson
Eugene Nickerson
6 months ago

Platform screen doors would be the best solution, but it would cost the MTA an arm and a leg to do it while crying broke.

1
Reply
Holli
Holli
6 months ago

“Barriers” is a very loose term for that. What, exactly, are they supposed to do? Won’t stop people. I get they can’t do what the London tube does in terms of actual barriers but this is just a waste of money.

0
Reply
Tey
Tey
6 months ago

Nice attempt at trying to protect people from being pushed or jumping on the tracks themselves, but they’re not tall enough. If a person wants to climb over it’s too easy.

0
Reply
Robin
Robin
6 months ago

The 86b St. downtown station has the barriers installed in about 2/3 of the station’s platform–the front 2 or 3 cars do not have them. Does anyone know why? Did they run out of supplies or money? Since I usually stand at the front at the train, this is not happy news.

0
Reply
Cathrine Steck
Cathrine Steck
6 months ago

They’re also at 86th. I can’t really see the purpose in the design.

1
Reply
Steevie
Steevie
6 months ago

Someone said the barriers are flimsy. They aren’t. They look like chain link fencing but they are a much heavier metal and are solidly bolted into the platform. Pushing with both hands, I could not move it even a centimeter. One good thing about the barriers is I do not think they will ever need any maintenance or repair. Any protective barrier that was mechanical would totally baffle the MTA .

0
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UWS Since 1987
UWS Since 1987
6 months ago

an extremely expensive solution that will change nothing,

2
Reply
Vigil Thompson
Vigil Thompson
6 months ago

How often will the subway train not stop in the right spot so the doors are blocked?

0
Reply
Steevie
Steevie
6 months ago
Reply to  Vigil Thompson

There is still enough space between the door and the barriers for passengers to leave the train, although it will be slower.

0
Reply

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