There are stories that just piss you off the longer you think about them, and one of the latest displays of the MBTA's ineptitude is just such a story. The story involves last Friday, a disastrous day for the T when first a disabled train on the Orange Line near Chinatown caused horrendous commuter delays in the morning, and a trash fire in the afternoon caused the Park Street station to be shut down at the height of afternoon rush. While investigating the fire, MBTA officials cut power to the third rail, stranding all the trains between JFK and Harvard Square.
Now these problems aren't all the express fault of the MBTA -- fires happen, trains can derail -- so that's not what's so annoying and infuriating about the story. The real problem lies in the T's response, or lack thereof, in the afternoon problem. In a situation like this, what does the T do for the passengers on the affected trains? Apparently nothing, because after being stuck for nearly an hour in a hot, crowded to the point of bursting Red Line train with no power, no A/C and a bunch of near-panicked middle school kids running out of air, one passenger reports that the folks stuck inside her train near Kendall actually forced open the doors and let themselves out. Upon reaching fresh air, they noticed another train stuck on the Longfellow Bridge whose passengers were similarly evacuating themselves. There was trouble on the bridge as passengers tried to keep the cars on the bridge at bay so the passengers could get off safely, too.
But where was the T? Were any announcements made? Was there any attempt made to reassure the passengers in the stuck trains? Did the drivers go from train to train telling folks it'd be all right, letting them know what happened, reassuring them that things were going to be fixed in due time? Did they even attempt to explain what was wrong, and when they might expect to be going?
Well? Did they?
Or did they just figure well, we'll just let the passengers sit in a darkened train for as long as it takes, they'll be fine, no need to tell them anything?
I don't know either way. Nobody blogging on the bloggity blog world said anything about hearing any announcements or instructions from MBTA officials, and all I could find on an official T response was a Globe article where Joey "The Mouthpiece" Pesaturo explained that an MBTA official was on the scene and that the evacuation was "unauthorized." Oh so there was at least an official on the scene. Did that official do anything official to help, or did they just sniff dismissively and make chiding "this was unauthorized!" prattling?
Take a look at the pictures on the page with the first-person account of the evacuations. Notice how people are helping their fellow passengers out. Notice how they're making sure everybody negotiates the way-too-high step off, using a fencepost for a foothold, notice how people are holding hands and providing assistance and, eventually, staving off the cars on the bridge who didn't seem to want to stop with a sudden influx of pedestrians on the road.
People were helping each other, making sure the people on their train first A. didn't panic in the hot and cramped compartments and B. made it off the train safely so they did not have to suffer any longer for, as far as they knew, was a wait for an indefinite amount of time.
What was the T doing? Judging from the pictures and the lack of any T employees involved in the evacs, not a whole damn lot.
This is just further evidence that the T treats its passengers as cargo -- freight cargo -- and not people. Freight doesn't care if it gets stuck in a boxcar for an hour or two. It doesn't complain or worry about lack of air or wonder what the hell's going on. Freight doesn't need to be told what's going on. All freight needs to do is sit there and eventually it'll start moving again, and it doesn't care either way, really.
People, on the other hand, well, people are sentient. People need to know what's going on -- even if it's "We're not sure what's happened" -- and they need to know that they're going to be okay. That's because they have brains that can rationalize and make cognitive brain thingies.
I can't say the same for the T.
Frankly I find it absolutely deplorable that the T ignored its stuck passengers to the point where the passengers felt like they had to evacuate the trains themselves. That is terrible customer service -- hell, it's not even service at all -- and staying in the trains could have posed a serious health problem if someone had panicked, or if someone had passed out, or otherwise required serious medical attention while stranded on the tracks, especially in the Kendall tunnel if there was no cellphone reception or any way to call for help.
So the next time Danny Boy Graubaskas pipes in on the station intercoms with his pre-recorded "it's your job to keep us safe from the terrists" announcement and begins his inane speech with the useless platitude "Safety is our number one concern at the T", if you hear someone in the station loudly coughing "BULLSHIT!" that person will probably be me. Because it's clearly obvious that's not the case. I wholeheartedly encourage you to join in on the coughing whenever you hear that.
Now these problems aren't all the express fault of the MBTA -- fires happen, trains can derail -- so that's not what's so annoying and infuriating about the story. The real problem lies in the T's response, or lack thereof, in the afternoon problem. In a situation like this, what does the T do for the passengers on the affected trains? Apparently nothing, because after being stuck for nearly an hour in a hot, crowded to the point of bursting Red Line train with no power, no A/C and a bunch of near-panicked middle school kids running out of air, one passenger reports that the folks stuck inside her train near Kendall actually forced open the doors and let themselves out. Upon reaching fresh air, they noticed another train stuck on the Longfellow Bridge whose passengers were similarly evacuating themselves. There was trouble on the bridge as passengers tried to keep the cars on the bridge at bay so the passengers could get off safely, too.
But where was the T? Were any announcements made? Was there any attempt made to reassure the passengers in the stuck trains? Did the drivers go from train to train telling folks it'd be all right, letting them know what happened, reassuring them that things were going to be fixed in due time? Did they even attempt to explain what was wrong, and when they might expect to be going?
Well? Did they?
Or did they just figure well, we'll just let the passengers sit in a darkened train for as long as it takes, they'll be fine, no need to tell them anything?
I don't know either way. Nobody blogging on the bloggity blog world said anything about hearing any announcements or instructions from MBTA officials, and all I could find on an official T response was a Globe article where Joey "The Mouthpiece" Pesaturo explained that an MBTA official was on the scene and that the evacuation was "unauthorized." Oh so there was at least an official on the scene. Did that official do anything official to help, or did they just sniff dismissively and make chiding "this was unauthorized!" prattling?
Take a look at the pictures on the page with the first-person account of the evacuations. Notice how people are helping their fellow passengers out. Notice how they're making sure everybody negotiates the way-too-high step off, using a fencepost for a foothold, notice how people are holding hands and providing assistance and, eventually, staving off the cars on the bridge who didn't seem to want to stop with a sudden influx of pedestrians on the road.
People were helping each other, making sure the people on their train first A. didn't panic in the hot and cramped compartments and B. made it off the train safely so they did not have to suffer any longer for, as far as they knew, was a wait for an indefinite amount of time.
What was the T doing? Judging from the pictures and the lack of any T employees involved in the evacs, not a whole damn lot.
This is just further evidence that the T treats its passengers as cargo -- freight cargo -- and not people. Freight doesn't care if it gets stuck in a boxcar for an hour or two. It doesn't complain or worry about lack of air or wonder what the hell's going on. Freight doesn't need to be told what's going on. All freight needs to do is sit there and eventually it'll start moving again, and it doesn't care either way, really.
People, on the other hand, well, people are sentient. People need to know what's going on -- even if it's "We're not sure what's happened" -- and they need to know that they're going to be okay. That's because they have brains that can rationalize and make cognitive brain thingies.
I can't say the same for the T.
Frankly I find it absolutely deplorable that the T ignored its stuck passengers to the point where the passengers felt like they had to evacuate the trains themselves. That is terrible customer service -- hell, it's not even service at all -- and staying in the trains could have posed a serious health problem if someone had panicked, or if someone had passed out, or otherwise required serious medical attention while stranded on the tracks, especially in the Kendall tunnel if there was no cellphone reception or any way to call for help.
So the next time Danny Boy Graubaskas pipes in on the station intercoms with his pre-recorded "it's your job to keep us safe from the terrists" announcement and begins his inane speech with the useless platitude "Safety is our number one concern at the T", if you hear someone in the station loudly coughing "BULLSHIT!" that person will probably be me. Because it's clearly obvious that's not the case. I wholeheartedly encourage you to join in on the coughing whenever you hear that.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 03:39 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 03:49 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 03:55 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 03:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 04:01 pm (UTC)I've come to expect shoddy service, delays galore and unresponsive officials from the MBTA. It's all we've got, and you have to learn how to work yourself around their piss-poor management.
But I was completely aghast to learn just exactly how they mistreated stranded passengers in the middle of a Friday rush hour, ignoring them to the point where the passengers needed to get off the train in the interests of their own safety -- and then declaring such a thing "unauthorized."
That's also rather insulting.
For the sake of corroboration and not just making men out of straw only to throw them underneath steel wheels, I'm trying to find any kind of reaction the T had towards these people stuck in the trains. I'd like to think they addressed the passengers and their problems somehow, but from the accounts found, I have found nothing that mentions anything the T did. And that's even more upsetting.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 04:08 pm (UTC)reading this made me claustrophobic ... what a nightmare.
me me me
Date: 2007-10-08 04:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 04:29 pm (UTC)By the way, did you know that there isn't a modern communications system on the T? There is no way to broadcast messages to all trains at once, for example. The command center (such as it is) can contact one train at a time. It's nuts.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 04:39 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 04:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 05:09 pm (UTC)I see the T thinking in a similar fashion ("We know about it, so everybody else must by this point too") though they must realize that they're the source of the information. It's so illogical, it hurts the mind.
Mind hurty!
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 05:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 06:07 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 06:43 pm (UTC)It was a bad day for the T all around, really. I'd have more sympathy for them what with all the crazy problems hitting all at once if they'd focused more on communication with the passengers when the stuff happened. Man oh man.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 06:58 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 07:07 pm (UTC)When I got to North Station 99% of the people attempted to get on one Green Line train. 6 cars trying to squeeze into 2. I decided to walk, because the idea of trying to take a bus, on the street, at 8:30am from North Station to downtown seemed like the stupidest thing I had ever considered. I walked outside towards the southern end of the station in the direction of Haymarket. As I got outside, I noticed out of the corner of my eye, mostly hidden behind a building, a bus that said "BACK BAY" over near the new Greenway and the North End. No one was on the bus. In addition, not a single MBTA staffer was making any attempt to instruct people as to where the shuttle bus was, nor were they indeed even visible or present. I then walked to downtown. The shuttle bus went by as I got to Haymarket, with not a single passenger.
What strikes me again and again about the MBTA is how horribly they respond to less than absolutely perfect conditions. In the comments on that Universal Hub post about the problems, someone noted that the equipment that broke down and caused the problem did so at about 5:15. When I got to Sullivan Square at 7:50 or so, no announcement of any kind was made, nor was any made until I had already been standing in a car for at least 45 minutes and could barely feel my feet anymore.
As much as I heavily favor mass transit for everyone to use all the time, the MBTA makes me feel like I need to drive everywhere. I would drive to work if it wouldn't cost $30/day to park.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 07:13 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 07:15 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 07:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 07:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 07:49 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 11:20 pm (UTC)Keep in mind, I say this as someone who handles cases for the NYCTA. I can tell you, without question, this would have been handled differently there. There would have been conductors making announcements, at the very least, and most likely helping people evacuate the trains.
Trash fires are a bitch, and can cause holy hell -- especially at rush hour. Having multiple trains stranded as a result isn't all that unusual either (I've handled cases arising from those situations, and have seen the incident reports). But not having a conductor (or train operator, if you only have one person on the train) make announcements to tell the passengers what's up? Even if it's just, "we know you're uncomfortable, but we don't have clearance to do anything right now. We'll let you know as soon as that changes."
Wow.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 11:33 pm (UTC)All of a sudden, the idea of making my forthcoming trip to Boston a five-day vacation doesn't seem like such a good one.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-08 11:53 pm (UTC)That stuff will get on you with its ickiness.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 11:29 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 01:17 pm (UTC)Even though the Red Line trains had no third rail power, I am reasonably sure the end doors open just fine. A typical train is staffed by one driver and three conductors, each of whom is responsible for two cars. I cannot believe that it did not occur to any of them, unless it is expressly forbidden for them to leave their compartments except in An Actual Emergency, to step out and provide updates to the passengers. What did they do when they saw passengers actually forcing the doors open and getting out of the train? Did they even notice?!
(And even when there is power to the train, many of the cars' speakers are horribly out of whack, rendering PA announcements inaudible. There have been several times when I've been on a stranded train and PA announcements were made, but nobody could actually hear what was being said. We could hear some kind of tinny Charlie Brown's Teacher voice telling us something -- but whether they were telling us we'd be moving shortly, or that the train was going express someplace, or if we should get the hell out and run for our lives, who knew?)
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 02:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 03:56 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 04:13 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 05:15 pm (UTC)Safety is their number one concern. Since it certainly isn't service, reliability, or timeliness.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 05:41 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 05:49 pm (UTC)wait, we had someone good come from boston once
Date: 2007-10-09 05:52 pm (UTC)Fred Allen was funny and everybody liked him and he's ... been dead since the 1950s.
Well, hell.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 06:19 pm (UTC)On a purely selfish and personal note, my Friday ended with my commuter rail train home being canceled because of signal problems (first time that's ever happened in 10 years of commuter railing) -- I'm glad it didn't also involve this!
another perspective
Date: 2007-10-09 07:02 pm (UTC)I am not trying to be antagonistic here, so please don't take this as antagonism. Clearly the MBTA has handled this situation very poorly, and could do with some positive PR (and probably more funding). I do however want to mention that a lot of people in this country simply do not have access to mass trans, and even though there are big issues like this at times, you are lucky to have the T.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-09 10:02 pm (UTC)Re: another perspective
Date: 2007-10-10 08:05 pm (UTC)Re: another perspective
Date: 2007-10-10 08:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-11 01:08 am (UTC)Re: another perspective
Date: 2007-10-11 05:09 pm (UTC)(I find the comment about folks asking you if you want a lift interesting for two reasons: one, the fact that the car-dependent mindset has given the Charleston citizens the same type of "Nobody walks in LA" kind of philosophy -- I don't consider it an attitude -- but two, the fact that complete strangers will routinely stop and ask if you need help. That second part amazes me, and it's something you definitely don't get in a Northern state.)
However, as good as it is to have the option to take public transportation in this city, the thing is that our public transportation is rife with problems. It's a paradox; a state-funded agency that operates as a private corporation, which means it's not obligated to share with the public a lot of details that regular agencies must provide. It also feels as if it just doesn't need to apologize for anything, either, other than perfunctory "we apologize for the inconvenience" signs.
The system has problems with providing reliable, on-time service, it has even more problems with informing passengers with updates when they're not providing the reliable service, it has problems helping customers when they're stranded and no officially employee shows up to assist or reassure them, and now we're seeing signs -- quite literally, in one case -- that some safety measures are now being seriously compromised in the name of saving money.
A service which does not live up to its promises (the "Customer's Bill of Rights" that the T drafted up many moons ago just does not apply anymore) can't be reasonably called a working service. If the public transportation can't get you where you need to be safely and on time, well, you might as well walk and cross the highway lanes. But unfortunately most people, when faced with the thought of another crowded, slow, stopping-between-every-station T train without any announcements of what's going on, are going to choose to drive.
I love Boston. I love the transit system, when it works. But when it's my tax money and my almost-$60.00 a month that give me the privilege of riding, I do believe that I have the right to pipe up when I see things seriously going wrong.
Re: another perspective
Date: 2007-10-11 05:31 pm (UTC)As an aside, my parents went to Japan a few years ago and spent some time on the trains there. Apparently it is common practise to wait a bit if someone has booked a ticket and is late or running to the platform, and then adjust the train speed on the journey to make up for the lost minute. That's how crazy precise they are. I have no idea what train fares (or taxes) are like in Japan, but clearly there is a functional model in existence. I am so sad that the problem will probably come down to lack of funds, plain and simple, but if enough people kick up a fuss hopefully things will improve.
In South Carolina there seems to be just a lot of apathy about public trans. In Miami too, where I lived for two years, there was this sense of prejudice against it (only smelly homeless people take the train, it's not safe for us white people, and other stupidness). Living in England was really eye opening for me in terms of truly living without a car. Even in Boston I still had one, and used it for grocery shopping. There I really lived without one and it was good, and I wish I could explain to people somehow that it is totally possible and actually really nice to not be involved with rush hour road traffic.
I suspect I'm preaching to the choir here though :P Ok, so I'm not going to go back and edit this for clarity because I probably ought to be getting on with my actual job now, but thanks for the thoughtful reply. This kind of issue is something I'm very interested :)