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Bloomberg touts F express


By Gary Buiso
Wednesday, August 5, 2009 12:04 PM EDT
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Mayor Michael Bloomberg stopped at Enzo’s Pizzeria (488 Kings Highway between McDonald Avenue and E. 2nd Street) to chat with local residents about his proposal to create an F express train, as well as enjoy a slice. Photo by Paul Martinka
The mayor this week called for express service to be reinstituted on the F train, an overcrowded line whose popularity has soared over the past decade.

The proposal calls for the V train, which currently terminates at 2nd Avenue in Manhattan, to extend into Brooklyn and make local stops along the F line, while a set of express tracks that currently sits fallow on the F line should be reactivated once the Metropolitan Transportation Authority completes repairs to the Culver Viaduct, along which the F rumbles.

“Now is the time to act,” the mayor said in a statement. “New Yorkers deserve better and more affordable transportation.Unfortunately, the lack of accountability and efficiency is crippling our service and, rightfully, eroding taxpayer confidence in the system.My plan puts government back on the side of the people and provides greater mass transit access virtually citywide.”

Express service on the F, the report states, “will have the combined benefits of shorter commute times and less crowded trains for Brooklyn commuters.”

The proposal was part of a larger transit reform plan, candidate Bloomberg’s first policy announcement of the 2009 campaign. Other items in the plan include free crosstown buses across Manhattan on certain routes, and notification of how long it will take for the next bus or train to arrive in a particular station.

On August 4, the mayor made a campaign stop to Enzo’s Pizzeria on Kings Highway, a restaurant that stands in the shadow of the Culver Viaduct, to chat with area residents and eat a slice of pizza.

In a prepared statement, the MTA said it welcomes the mayor’s input and “looks forward to working with him and other elected officials in finding ways to make the MTA more efficient and transparent while being certain the MTA has the funding it needs to continue providing critical services to all New Yorkers.”

Work on the Culver Viaduct, which is expected to extend into 2012, would preclude express train service, transit officials have said.

An MTA official who wished to remain anonymous told this paper that the mayor’s plan presented a lot of ideas “without much detail” on their implementation.

Jason Chin-Fatt, a field organizer for the Straphangers Campaign, a commuter advocacy group, said anything that would bring better service for F train riders is welcome. “It might decrease some of the inefficiencies within that line,” he said.


“But who knows if the MTA would actually do it. Who knows if they’ll listen to the plan,” Chin-Fatt added. Four of the 17 members on the MTA’s board are selected by the mayor.

According to a recent study by the Center for an Urban Future, popularity on the F has grown precipitously from 1998-2008. At the York Street station for example, ridership rose 131.5 percent, while Smith and Ninth Street has seen a jump of 64.7 percent, and the Bay Parkway station a steady climb of 57.9 percent.



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Wilda Maymi wrote on Aug 5, 2009 3:30 PM:

" So you are enjoying your slice of pizza and where you are eating think about how to get the City Clean up. I would like to see the City clean up the next time I come to visited . My nieghborhood was so dirty and the streets, parks and sidewalk. Maybe you should give people tickets when they throw paper or any trash on to the streets,park and sidewalks . I live all my life in Bronx New York and when I live in the bronx it wasn't so dirty. Now the train and the buses are $2.25 where is the fund to keep the City Clean. Then you wanted to take out the homelness but you don't wanted to give them jobs. When they are the ones that pick up the trash the people throw out. Start a program Call Change & Clean . Have the people of the City donated items they have extra in their home to raise fund to clean the City and pay teenager and college student to do the job. Sincerely a New Yorker. and a proved American and a register voter. Clean your , mine Cities up. "

Wilda Maymi wrote on Aug 5, 2009 3:37 PM:

" Whio????/ is responibiities is to clean up the City. I would give ticket to Landlord, fastfood restr, any service that creats trash, and I would give fine to people who throw t h ier trash in the streets, sidewalks, and parks, also it great that you have created more parks for children but how about the teenagers and young adults. Why? not created Youth program or Youth Center for the youth. Maybe if you start ticketing for trash you will raise fund for the youth. to build center of after school. Sincerely once again Wilda Maymi who love her city and which she could come back and make a difference. proved american and a register voter. "

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