NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: No Heat or Hot Water for Some NYCHA Residents, NYPD Begins Overnight Subway Patrol, Old Subway Cars Fixed in Even Older Repair Shops, and a Community Champion

Episode Date: January 21, 2025

Thousands of New York City public housing residents are dealing with heat and hot water outages, as dangerously cold temperatures grip the region. Plus, Gov. Kathy Hochul's plan to put more law enforc...ement on the New York City subway is officially underway. Also, WNYC’s Ramsey Khalifeh visits the MTA’s subway repair shops. And finally, we meet a resident of City Island who finds different ways to serve his community.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC. I'm Jene Pierre. Thousands of New York City public housing residents are dealing with heat and hot water outages, as dangerously cold temperatures gripped the region. On the Upper East Side Tuesday morning, the Holmes Towers Complex had no heat or hot water, though they were later restored. Residents like Amanda Flores say the issues typically recur over the winter. I feel like the hot water is almost never on, and we kind of have to constantly be calling to report it, and nothing really ever gets done.
Starting point is 00:00:44 Flores says she and her grandmother often boiled water in a pot to bait. As of Tuesday afternoon, several other complexes were facing outages in the Bronx, Manhattan, and Brooklyn. Nycha says it's working to bring back surface to those complexes. Governor Kathy Hokel's plan to put more law enforcement on the New York City subway is officially underway. Mayor Eric Adams and Hockel say the six-month effort will put 300 officers on nearly all 150 overnight trains in the first phase. That's roughly two officers per train between nine at night and five in the morning. Officials argue the plan will reduce crime and the fear of crime. They also plan to install new protective barriers and LED lighting on platform.
Starting point is 00:01:31 as well as strengthening mental health policies as part of the initiative. Coming up, we continue to look into the state of New York City's crumbling subway system. That's after the break. About 40% of New York City's subway cars date back to the 1980s, and they're constantly breaking down. Now the MTA is asking state lawmakers for billions to replace them and upgrade the buildings where the trains are fixed. WMYC's Ramsey Caliphay recently visited the MTA's subway repair shops. At a depot perched 20 feet above the street in East New York, some of the city's oldest subway trains are rolling in for repairs.
Starting point is 00:02:25 We've got trains moving, it's going to be a dangerous situation. These trains carry riders on the three-line, which runs from Brooklyn up to Harlem. They break down eight times as often as the MTA's newest subway cars. This depot called Livonia Yard is where mechanics repair these old cars. And like the trains, the building is out of date and breaking down. The pits where most of the maintenance is done
Starting point is 00:02:52 underneath the train are very shallow. So the overhead power system in the facility is antiquated. The ventilation in this building is not good. When they build, the cement is cracking and flaking up. We patch it and patch it and patch it. And other spots, you know, flake up. That's Pete Stalars. The yard superintendent.
Starting point is 00:03:13 His shop is more than 100 years old, and he says it desperately needs an overhaul. On the day I visit, it's freezing inside because one of the boilers is out. Workers also complain of rat infestations in their break room. The women's lock room is the size of a small storage closet, and crews have a hard time fixing the trains, because the MTA doesn't have enough parts to replace the broken ones. Many of those parts are so old they're no longer manufactured. In fact, Stolarsky says he's forced to strip working parts from a broken train just to make another. to make another one function.
Starting point is 00:03:42 So instead of those two hours that I could be using to fix another train, I'm spending two hours taking apart a train. He says the state of Livonia Yard makes it really difficult to run full service on the three lines. Unfortunately, our performance has gone down over the past year.
Starting point is 00:03:57 The other issue, according to MTA officials, is the yard can't handle modern subway trains. So before the agency can buy new cars for the three line, the yard itself has to be renovated or rebuilt entirely. The MTA wants to pay for that, renovation as a part of its proposed $65 billion plan being debated by lawmakers in Albany. MTA chair, Jan O'Lebrough says this type of work is more important than building brand new
Starting point is 00:04:20 train lines, like the 2nd Avenue subway extension to East Harlem. It's great to build shiny new palaces. We love making new lines, but we've got to make sure that the system we have doesn't fall apart. And Livonia is maybe one of the two or three best models of that issue. Another jarring example of that issue can be found on the northern end of the one line in the Bronx. Look at this place. It's very gray, dark and dingy. It just doesn't have a good shop feel to it.
Starting point is 00:04:50 That's Willie Speck, superintendent of MTA's 240th Street Yard. He takes me outside the building. Okay, so you see the strapping on the building? This building moves so much that they had to secure the building and keep it from crumbling. The bricks outside the building are literally held in front of the building. placed by metal cables and netting. They're the only things preventing the walls from falling down. I'm not sure how the engineers came up with it, but it seems to be working.
Starting point is 00:05:20 There's also a chimney filled with holes. According to spec, bricks sometimes fly off and come raining down. That's an age problem. It's very old. And when workers aren't dodging falling bricks, they have to focus on repairing one trains, and that's a struggle. The shop doesn't have enough working compressors, a key piece of equipment that powers the train's air brakes.
Starting point is 00:05:40 They're bulky and they're bulky, The shop is cramped, and there's only one track with enough space to swap out the compressors. MTA data shows a direct connection between the disrepair at the shop and poor service. Delays on the one line caused by faulty train equipment nearly doubled last year. That lack of reliability was front and center last January. I want to extend our deepest sympathies to those that were injured in this collision. That's National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homody, after two trains crashed the Upper West Side last year. It all started when a vandal pulled the emergency brakes on a
Starting point is 00:06:15 one train. Cruise tried to reset the brakes, but Homandy says that system was broken on one of the cars. Breaks in the third car back did not reset. The workers were instructed to drive the broken train backwards. Minutes later, it collided with another train, causing it to derail and injuring more than 20 passengers. Internal MTA reports show the dangerous sequence of events could have been prevented if the brakes on that one train simply worked as designed. That's WMYC's Ramsey Caliphay. New York City is supported by the efforts of people trying to make a difference in their communities.
Starting point is 00:06:56 We're calling these New Yorkers community champions. We spoke to Dan Triber. He was born and raised on City Island in the Bronx. He's made it a goal to serve his community in any way he can, whether it's participating in food and coat drives or making his family's local toy store a hub for gathering. Dance Parents House started when my wife, Raina Mia Brill and I bought my childhood home from my parents. And sort of as a joke, we started selling toys from my attic at the Brooklyn flea market.
Starting point is 00:07:29 And it was accidentally the most successful thing we've ever done in my whole life. Years of doing the Brooklyn Flea led us to purchase our brick and mortar store on City Island. It was always important for me to come back home. And it's considerably more important for me to have a storefront in a town that needs storefronts than being another guy that sells objects in Brooklyn. The storefront from the get-go, it was always important to be a community space and not just a place of commerce. So especially post-COVID, it made it important for me to have it be a place where people could get together.
Starting point is 00:08:07 So we have a handful of parties every year or book releases every year where people can meet other people. because it takes tiny moments of kindness and, like, open arms that enable people to flourish. And it doesn't matter where you came from or what you look like or what you sound like. I want you to feel comfortable walking into our space so you can learn and experience things with other people. In 2020 was when we really started to engage. in like direct community action. We started the community fridge and we put a refrigerator on our property
Starting point is 00:08:52 that we got from the South Bronx mutually. But it's not my fridge, it's the people's fridge. You know, we got together and we realized that there was a need for food on City Island and decided we can do this ourselves. It's the same thing that happened with like the coat drives, right? I mean, we've only done a couple, but like people said, hey, we're gonna do
Starting point is 00:09:13 this because people are cold and they need warm jackets. And like people who were looking to do positive things, got to do positive things. And so you can do important things on the micro level that have a really big impact. You know, we sell toys, but we also sort of try to be a positive force in the world. And we do our best to be supportive of the community when needed. Dan Triber lives on City Island in the Bronx. Thanks for listening to NYC now from WNYC. Catch us every weekday, three times a day. I'm Junae Pierre.
Starting point is 00:09:50 We'll be back tomorrow.

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