As we recently learned from Washington, D.C., transit agencies and escalators just don’t mix. Government agencies that are forced to take the lowest bids on projects often end up with escalators that can’t withstand the constant pounding they take, and fixes are costly and slow. The MTA too, as The Post briefly notes, has its own escalator problem, and agencies leaders are vowing to fix it. “I don’t think we’re providing the service,” Jay Walder said at the MTA Board meeting yesterday. “We have been trying a number of things on elevators and escalators, it’s not a budget issue, and they have not worked.”
The MTA’s Transit committee meeting books provide a more nuanced look. Scroll to page 8-25 of this pdf for the full report. In essence, the MTA hopes for a 96 percent availability goal, but but 24-hour access is now hoving around 91.7 percent. That figure omits escalators targeted for capital replacement, and it doesn’t explore for how long these escalators are out of service. A quick glance at the Transit escalator outage page shows some that have been shuttered since late October and early November, and the one at High St., for instance, was available only 44 percent of the time last year.
The systemic root of the problem seems to arise from technological failures and an inability to conduct efficient repairs, but that’s not stopping the MTA from expanding the escalator system. For instance, the current plans for the deep station at 34th St. and 11th Ave. along the 7 line extension call for only escalators — and no staircase access — at one end of the station. The MTA claims the depth makes a staircase inefficient, but I’ve often seen people walking up the flights at 63rd St. and Lexington Ave. Relying heavily on escalators though seems to be an avenue to inconvenience and steeper costs.