MTA to use UV light to clean transit system

New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) detailed its unprecedented 24/7 cleaning operation and new MTA Essential Plan Night Service during the upcoming subway closure from 1 to 5 a.m., which begins Wednesday. The new cleaning and disinfecting regimen marks the most aggressive in the MTA’s history, and will include around-the-clock efforts at all facilities, including those of New York City Transit, the LIRR, Metro-North, MTA Bridges and Tunnels, and MTA Construction & Development. The MTA is also leveraging and evaluating innovative new cleaning solutions such as antimicrobial biostats and ultraviolet light to eradicate the COVID-19 virus. If proven successful, the MTA will deploy these solutions systemwide.

The MTA’s Essential Plan Night Service marks a robust increase in overnight bus service — substantially increasing the number of bus trips by 1,168 or more than 76%, and adding 344 new buses on top of the 235 already deployed increasing the operational fleet by nearly 150% during 1 to 5 a.m. period.

Subway ridership has fallen approximately 92% below normal levels as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Bus ridership has fallen more than 80%. On average, approximately 11,000 customers currently use the subway during this time, and this represents 2.5% of New York City Transit’s overall current essential customer base.

“The safety of our customers and employees is always our highest priority,” said MTA Chairman/CEO Patrick J. Foye. “Overnight closure of the subway will allow us to take our cleaning operation to a never-before-seen level. We will more aggressively and efficiently disinfect our full fleet of rolling stock every single day. Touch points at stations will be cleaned twice daily. We’ve never undertaken so challenging a task, and as Governor Cuomo has said, it’s going to take a herculean effort.”

Details on the upcoming overnight closure and MTA Essential Plan Night Service are available below:

Overnight Subway Closure

Effective on the early morning of Wednesday, New York City Transit personnel will close all 472 subway stations at 1 a.m.

Any person remaining inside stations will be asked to depart; enforcement will be performed by the NYPD in collaboration with the MTA Police Department. Officers be deployed to all 472 subway stations from 1 to 5 a.m. to make sure their critical work goes on uninterrupted. The MTA will continue to work in partnership with the NYPD to connect more homeless New Yorkers with access to the medical care and social services they need and deserve. The NYPD has intensified patrols and presence at all stations. Shuttle buses will be strategically placed at select stations to help transport unsheltered New Yorkers.

Cleaning

To more effectively combat the spread of coronavirus, the MTA is undertaking a new cleaning program unprecedented in its history, covering both public and employee facilities. Crews will further enhance cleaning of all MTA rolling stock through around the clock disinfecting, including poles, seating, floor, ceiling, doors and walls. Every car in passenger service will be disinfected at least every 24 hours through three primary activities:

Daytime Terminal Car Cleaning: After each train reaches its final destination, crews will remove trash, clean spills and biohazards, and spot clean seats, floors, and other surfaces. Trains will also be disinfected at terminals during particular hours over the course of the day.

Overnight Yard Cleaning: Trains in service during daytime hours but out of service at night will receive a more comprehensive cleaning every night in yards. Crews will remove garbage and graffiti, clean spills and biohazards, mop floors, clean seats cleaning, and disinfect surfaces.

Overnight Terminal Car Cleaning: Trains that remain in service at night will receive cleaning that is identical to the yard cleaning above, except at terminal stations.

The MTA is also investigating innovative methods to eradicate traces of COVID-19. Currently, three antimicrobial biostats are being applied to the interior of MTA rolling stock (buses and subway cars) and in control rooms and crew quarters. The antimicrobial biostats are applied after the surfaces are cleaned and disinfected with an EPA-registered disinfectant. These products lay down a protective colorless, odorless barrier on surfaces that does not allow germs to grow.

There are several methods of how these products are applied: traditional squirt bottles and clothes, mechanical sprayers, floggers, and electrostatic sprayers. These antimicrobial biostats are being used in electrostatic sprayers in a pilot across New York City Transit for improved 360-degree coverage.

Additionally, ultraviolet (UV) light is an efficient, proven, and effective technology for eliminating viruses, including SARS-CoV-2, from surfaces including hospital operating rooms. This pilot will focus on the use of UVs to eradicate SARS-CoV-2 from rolling stock (subway cars, buses, railcars, transit vehicles) and fixed locations (break rooms, technology centers, operation centers, offices). In March, MTA worked with Columbia University and an innovative UV startup to successfully demonstrate the efficacy of UV technology on its subway system. MTA will pilot this technology on its transit and railway vehicles in the second week of May, but will focus on subway and buses.

For essential employees who cannot complete their trips using buses, the MTA will operate a limited “Essential Connector” program offering for-hire car service. Qualified individuals will be provided with one trip per night via licensed for-hire vehicles at no cost to the rider. The MTA is partnering with CTG, Limosys, and Curb on this effort. These companies currently operate Access-A-Ride service in partnership with the MTA.

Publicado por: www.metro-magazine.com

Por primera vez en su historia, el Metro de Nueva York suspende el servicio nocturno para desinfectar trenes

Por primera vez en su historia, el Metro de Nueva York debió suspender su servicio nocturno. No correrán trenes entre la 1 y las 5 de la mañana para facilitar la realización de tareas de limpieza profunda y desinfección. Estudian aplicar luz ultravioleta para eliminar el virus. El metro y el drama de los «homeless».

La Autoridad Metropolitana de Transporte de Nueva York (MTA, por sus siglas en inglés) dispuso la suspensión del servicio en horario nocturno para realizar tareas de desinfección de trenes a partir de este 6 de mayo.

Se trata de una medida sin precedentes en el metro, famoso por su servicio continuo de 24 horas, que implica que no correrán trenes entre la 1 y las 5 de la mañana. La decisión se tomó para crear una ventana de trabajo que permita realizar labores de limpieza y desinfección profunda de cada formación.

Según explicó el ente estatal en un comunicado, todas las instalaciones (tanto de acceso al público como aquellos reservados a los trabajadores) serán desinfectados en profundidad. En los trenes, esto contempla la limpieza de “pasamanos, asientos, pisos, techos, puertas y paredes” de los coches.

La limpieza, explica la compañía, tendrá un nivel más superficial “durante el transcurso del día, luego de que cada tren llegue a su estación terminal”, mientras que una más profunda será realizado “en horario nocturno, en las cocheras”.

A su vez, la MTA también está investigando “métodos innovadores para erradicar trazas de COVID-19”, aplicando “luz ultravioleta” para eliminar el virus. Las pruebas piloto con esta técnica, realizadas en coordinación con una empresa proveedora e investigadores de la Universidad de Columbia, comenzarán en las próximas semanas.

La MTA informó que, a pesar de una caída del 92% en la cantidad de usuarios del Metro, continuará prestando servicios para los trabajadores esenciales, reforzando la frecuencia y prestaciones del servicio de buses (también administrado por la autoridad estatal) en la franja horaria en que el metro permanezca cerrado.

La suspensión del servicio nocturno afecta particularmente a la gente sin techo que suele habitar en estaciones y trenes. La MTA informó que trabaja en coordinación con el Departamento de Policía de Nueva York para garantizar el cierre de las estaciones y asegurar que ninguna persona permanezca en el metro después del horario de cierre.

Hasta el momento, precisó el ente, “trabajadores y oficiales de policía han establecido contacto con 252 homeless, 139 de los cuales aceptaron” recibir asistencia médica y social. Se trata de un tema sensible en la ciudad, donde la gente sin techo se encuentra en una situación de vulnerabilidad extrema frente a la pandemia: sin ir más lejos, durante el fin de semana pasado dos personas fallecieron en instalaciones del metro.

Al momento, la ciudad de Nueva York tiene 327 mil casos de coronavirus y más de 20 mil muertos por causa de la pandemia.

Publicado por: www.enelsubte.com