What to Know
- It has been nearly two months since Gov. Andrew Cuomo's mask order went into effect -- mandating MTA riders to mask up or pay up, and according to data, riders have been following the mask rule for the most part.
- Since the $50 fine for failure to wear a mask on the MTA system went into effect Sept. 14, a mere 10 summonses have been issued -- a small fraction considering there were over 19,000 positive encounters.
- Cuomo said early September that he expected substantial upticks in mass transit use as New York City and the rest of the tri-state area take more reopening steps in the coming months -- and he wanted people who ride subways and rails to feel safe.
It has been nearly two months since Gov. Andrew Cuomo's mask order went into effect -- mandating MTA riders to mask up or pay up, and according to data, riders have been following the mask rule for the most part.
Since the $50 fine for failure to wear a mask on the MTA system went into effect Sept. 14, a mere 10 summonses have been issued -- a small fraction considering there were over 19,000 positive encounters.
According to the MTA, since Sept. 14, MTA Police and Bridge and Tunnel Officers engagement have seen 9,555 verbal mask compliances. Additionally, 9,651 masks have been distributed during the time frame. Since the start of the pandemic, the MTA has distributed about millions free masks. The day the fines rolled out was the day the MTA saw the most verbal compliance and mask distributions. The MTA Police issued its first summonse on Sept. 19. Meanwhile, Sept. 24 was the date that the most fines were issued (a total of 3).
Cuomo said early September that he expected substantial upticks in mass transit use as New York City and the rest of the tri-state area take more reopening steps in the coming months -- and he wanted people who ride subways and rails to feel safe.
To that end, the governor said Sept. 10 he was ordering the implementation of a $50 fine for MTA passengers who refuse to wear masks on public transportation.
Cuomo said that part of the reason behind the measure is that New York City doesn't need an influx of vehicular traffic, which has been the case as people tentatively return to work amid the pandemic. The goal is to convince people it's safe to ride the subways, buses, LIRR and Metro-North with COVID precautions.
The governor went on to say that although mask compliance on the MTA transit system “is very, very high, roughly 90 percent, but we want to make sure that people feel comfortable coming back to public transportation. We want people on Metro-North. We want them on the Long Island Rail Road. We want them on the subway system. They know the cars are cleaner. They know they are disinfected. The last variable is, are the other riders on the trains recognizing social distancing and are they wearing masks. That’s what people want to know.”
Chairman and CEO of the MTA Pat Foye said due to the governor’s previous executive order mandate masks on public transportation is required. He went on to say that mask compliance remains high 96 percent on buses, 90 percent on subways well over 90 percent on metro north and Long Island Rail Road, “but we want to drive it even higher. Achieving universal mask compliance is our goal” and because of this starting Monday the MTA will start fining people $50 for not following the mask directive on subways, buses, LIRR and Metro-North.
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Sarah Feinberg, the interim president of the New York City Transit, shared similar sentiments adding that the fine is “just another tool in our toolbox to ensure mask compliance.”
“This will be enforced by the MTA police and the NYPD as well,” Feinberg said. “This will be enforced just like all of our rules and regulations by law enforcement. The NYPD, MTA police and our BTL officers, our bridge and tunnel officers are already in the system. When they see someone without a mask, they remind them to put a mask on. If they don’t have a mask, they send them to the booth to get a mask or they hand them a mask from their own supply they carry and the vast majority comply… so when we have someone who is seen by an officer who is not complying, who is refusing to wear a mask, those are the folks who are going to be fined.”
Cuomo praised the MTA for the work it has done during the pandemic to keep buses and trains sanitized. However, he said there must be a plan to enforce mask-wearing compliance in the system “to give riders comfort to reengage the system.”
Following the announcement last week, Transport Workers Union Local 100 issued the following statement: "Cuomo's announcement that the MTA will be fining riders without masks $50 is a big victory for Local 100. We've been demanding or advocating for this for months - in our 10 point plan, in testimony before the state Assembly, interviews and after we released our own bus rider survey in July showing riders were not complying like the MTA claimed."