Opinion: How to make Metroâs subways and buses safer? Riders have ideas
Good morning. Iâm Kerry Cavanaugh, and it is Wednesday, May 22. Letâs look at the week so far in Opinion.
Los Angeles Countyâs public transit system is experiencing a crisis of confidence. Thereâs been a series of violent and deadly attacks on trains and buses, including the shocking killing of Juan Luis Gomez Ramirez, a teacher visiting from Mexico who was taking the bus back to his family when he was shot in the head. He was killed just hours after L.A. Mayor Karen Bass and Metro leaders announced a âsurgeâ in law enforcement on the system, along with a directive that officers proactively walk through trains and buses.
Despite their reputation as residents of a region steeped in car culture, Los Angeles County voters have repeatedly agreed to tax themselves to expand the bus and rail system. But public support will dwindle if buses and trains do not feel safe. That threatens to send Metro into a doom spiral, with the system never gaining the ridership needed to help reduce traffic and pollution. The violence has shaken even the most steadfast transit backers, including L.A. Timesâ letter writers who shared their critiques and ideas to turn things around.
âMaking Metro safer isnât rocket science,â writes Donald Flaherty Fajardo of Los Angeles, who offered a seven-point plan, which includes requiring police to actively patrol buses and trains and remove unruly passengers, turning up the lights and cleaning the stations, and requiring city leaders to ride Metro at least once a week.
âI often see people jumping over the ticket gates at the stations without paying, which helps create an atmosphere where there are no rules. It starts making me feel foolish for paying my own fare,â writes Doug Weiskopf of Burbank. âI rode the BART system in San Francisco recently, where there were employees checking that riders had paid fares before boarding. I also saw security guards who did not allow loitering or misbehavior at the stations.â
âLos Angeles should implement designated seating areas for seniors, women, disabled riders and children to enhance safety and comfort by reserving sections painted pink for these vulnerable groups,â writes Paulette Greenberg of Culver City.
âPerhaps it is time to return to a dedicated transit police department,â writes Judy Wilson of Pasadena.
âI will not take Metro until there is a large, dependable and accountable security force and a system that will not allow people to ride unless they pay,â writes Shirley Tatsuno of Alhambra. âOur âcar-freeâ 2028 Summer Olympics transportation system is in real jeopardy unless drastic changes are made quickly.â
And Robert Joseph Narlian of Escondido writes, tongue in cheek, about his âsublime solutionâ that doesnât involve more police officers: âYou simply have an armorer on each train and bus hand out a gun to every passenger who gets on and then collects the guns when they get off. Except for the children of course. They will get knives. And the driver is allowed to carry a flamethrower.â
Wait times go down. Patient satisfaction goes up. Whatâs the matter with letting apps and AI run the ER? A lot, actually. Hospitals have already incorporated algorithms into their workflow, making medicine more âtechnology- and test-dependent and less patient-centric,â writes Dr. Eric Snoey with the Alameda Health System-Highland Hospital in Oakland. âWith AI primed to take on a substantial role in how doctors deliver care, we should remind ourselves: If we behave like machines, we certainly wonât be missed when machines replace us.â
California blew it on bail reform. Now Illinois is showing it works. The Land of Lincoln rolled out its no-money-bail program nearly a year ago, and the data show it is working well, writes The Timesâ editorial board. There has not been an increase in arrests of people released pending trial, and defendants are generally showing up for their hearings. And there are real benefits to the change: âBillions of dollars in bail bond payments that were previously extracted from families, usually from those who could afford it the least, can be used for housing, food and other daily expenses.â
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Whatever Big Oil wants, Big Oil gets. As long as it bankrolls Trump. Columnist Jackie Calmes laments that Trumpâs âdealâ offered to oil executives in exchange for their campaign contributions didnât get more attention. âAs has often been said about campaign finance, these days itâs not whatâs illegal thatâs the problem; itâs whatâs legal. Even so, Trumpâs unethical actions should shock. For more than one day.â
How do L.A.âs ethnic communities keep their identities while living with others? Just read the signs. Unlike other major American cities, L.A.âs racial and ethnic groups donât huddle in enclaves; they are spread across the region and interspersed among each other, writes Annette M. Kim, a professor of urban planning and director of USCâs Spatial Analysis Lab. âAnd itâs not just that we happen to be next door to each other. We talk to each other. We found that signs on 18% of properties in L.A. contain more than one language or cultural expression. Itâs not uncommon to see one sign featuring three or more languages.â
More from this week in opinion
From our columnists
- Jonah Goldberg: Trump and Biden agreed to debates. Thatâs a lot less important than it was made out to be
- Robin Abcarian: Israelâs Gaza war is horrific, but that doesnât mean Hamas is innocent of sexual violence
- LZ Granderson: Whose lives matter to Texasâ governor?
From the Op-Ed desk
- Studio productions keep moving out of Los Angeles. We need to stop the bleeding
- No, the Israeli-Palestinian divide is not unbridgeable. Hereâs how I know
- AI and privacy rules meant for Big Tech could hurt small businesses most
From the Editorial Board
- Texas Gov. Greg Abbottâs pardon of man who killed protester undermines trust in the justice system
- A felony conviction should not come with a life sentence on voting rights
- California can make climate polluters pay for the mess they have made of Earth
Letters to the Editor
- Opposing views on L.A. Countyâs âJane Fonda Dayâ and the Vietnam War
- Why standardized testing for 4-year-old students makes no sense
- Does divestment work, or is it just protesters trying to âdo somethingâ?
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