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Here’s the latest from the MTA: The 1, 3, 7, C, E, B, D, F, M, J, Z, L, Q, R, W, and F and R shuttles are running normally, with no active alerts. 4 trains are serving all stations but service ...
NEW YORK CITY — Nearly a dozen subway lines saw slowdowns Tuesday morning, including two that had service suspended after a train struck a person in The Bronx, according to the MTA.
NEW YORK CITY — Commuters contended with minor delays across eight MTA subway lines Tuesday morning. The problems mostly appeared run-of-the-mill — communication issues, a disruptive...
NEW YORK CITY — Straphangers had extra time to say "TGIF" as subway delays hit several lines Friday morning. At least seven subway lines saw slowdowns during the rush hour, according to the MTA.
NEW YORK CITY — Seven train lines were delayed or rerouted Wednesday morning as the MTA coped with activated breaks, signal problems and an NYPD investigation.
On January 6, Governor Kathy Hochul announced that the MTA would restore full service overnight that same day to the early morning of January 7, and service was fully restored at 4:45 a.m. the next morning. Second derailment
- Windows Smashed In 36 Subway Trains, Vandalism Causes Mass Delays: MTApatch.com
- See It: MTA Unveils Next-Generation Subway Carspatch.com
- Famous New Yorkers Lend Voices To MTA Subways, Busespatch.com
- Straphanger Struck By Train At 28th St, Sparking Delays: MTApatch.com
NEW YORK CITY — A person on the tracks near a Harlem station caused delays for several subway lines Wednesday, MTA officials said.
NEW YORK CITY — Delays hit 10 different subway lines during rush hour Wednesday, MTA officials said. An array of problems — from disruptive passengers to crew shortages — prompted the...
Both the subway and the buses are run by the New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA), a subsidiary of the MTA. A separate crisis at Penn Station affected the routes of the three railroad agencies that provided service into the station.
NEW YORK CITY — A person on the tracks and other subway hiccups caused a slow start for many New Yorkers' workweeks, according to MTA alerts.