If you live in New York City, it’s likely you’ve been stuck underground for several minutes or waited not-so-patiently for a delayed train at least a handful of times over the last few years. But new research suggests that the subway’s chronic challenges affect some New Yorkers more than others.
The subway worst-case scenarios are much worse for low-income New Yorkers than they are for wealthier subway riders, according to an analysis published Wednesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The researchers looked at how many minutes riders in subway-dependent neighborhoods experienced poor service, a measure they call downtime, during the subway delays.
What they found: New Yorkers in the lowest income quartiles of the group they evaluated — or those with an income of about $36,460 a year experienced 42 minutes of downtime during the worst subway delays. Those in the upper quartile, or making about $77,020, experienced 35 minutes of downtime.
Subway delays, which affect and annoy New Yorkers of all stripes, mirror the inequality of the city overall.The analysis adds to the growing body of evidence that subway delays, which affect and annoy New Yorkers of all stripes, mirror the inequality of the city overall. “It’s in line with really what we’ve seen,” said Jaqi Cohen, the campaign coordinator of the Straphanger Campaign, an initiative of the New York chapter of the Public Interest Research Group focused on public transit. “Poor transit disproportionately burdens low-income New Yorkers.”
The analysis also noted that the times when low-income New Yorkers are commuting contribute to the likelihood that they’ll experience subway delays. They’re more likely to commute to work at night or during other off-hours when construction and other work is taking place.
(The Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the office of Governor Andrew Cuomo were not immediately available for comment.)