The Fordham Ram

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  • S

    safes MarcosMar 28, 2016 at 4:48 am

    so strangely hot

    Reply
  • S

    SerafinNov 9, 2015 at 12:41 am

    It is all about Race. Bronx lost its train service after the white flight. Data don’t lie.

    Reply
  • I

    Informed commuterOct 23, 2015 at 5:08 pm

    Why does the MTA hate us, you ask? Answer: they don’t.

    The insinuation that the MTA has some specific vendetta against Fordham is provocative and attention-grabbing, but, unfortunately, not rooted in any sort of factual evidence. The only part of your argument that stands up is that of cost: it is true that the MTA doesn’t offer college students in New York (at any school, mind you) discounted services. And yes, that should change. If schools in other cities choose to provide their students with public transportation options, that’s their prerogative (and their expense). Your gripe is not with the MTA.

    It takes a special kind of selfish to think that the MTA is passive-aggressively “scrubbing connections” with our school. The Fordham Road B/D station is half a mile from the Walsh Gate. The Bronx Lebanon Hospital Center is significantly closer, as is Public School 246. The mere presence of an institution in proximity to a New York City Subway stop does not somehow guarantee naming rights.

    Before the MTA, subways were run by three companies: The Interborough Rapid Transit Company, The Independent Subway System, and the Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Corporation. Though each of these companies had a different ownership structure, the city was somehow involved in each. Each of these companies constructed, owned, and operated various lines in our city to their own corporate specification. The subway you see today is a continuation of the legacy of these three companies. The present-day MTA wasn’t formed until 1965, well after these subway lines and stations were constructed. Stations were primarily named by street or intersection; however, in order to reduce confusion owing to numerous stops sharing the same name, the MTA decided to conjoin the existing names with that of a nearby institution. For example, the Eighth Avenue, Seventh Avenue, Lenox Avenue, and Lexington Avenue lines all have a station called 116th Street. The Columbia University name was appended to the nearby stop on the Seventh Avenue line because it’s the most significant nearby landmark.

    As for the Metro-North, the MTA is the operator of all Metro-North trains east of the Hudson River, but the majority of New Haven Line trains and all the trackage in Connecticut is owned by the Connecticut Department of Transportation, as opposed to the Harlem and Hudson Lines, where the MTA is the sole owner and operator. New Haven Line service utilizes a different fare structure than Harlem and Hudson service, as revenue has to be split between ConnDOT and the MTA; as part of their operating agreement, ConnDOT stipulates that MTA not transport passengers traveling solely in the state of New York on their trains, as it would deprive the state of proper revenue. When you buy a ticket from Fordham to Grand Central, there would be no way of knowing which line you redeemed that ticket on. Therefore, the state of Connecticut banned such a capability in their operating agreement.

    The MTA is a gargantuan public benefit corporation currently facing a $15 billion budget shortfall. The notion that the organization has either the time or the inclination to slight our community of ~15k students in the most passive-aggressive of ways, when facing issues that are exponentially more pertinent, is laughably selfish. We are already spoiled by Metro-North service: Fordham is the ONLY Harlem – New Haven transfer station in the entire system, and frequency of trains is no less than that at similar stations (significantly more, in fact, than frequencies at Melrose or Tremont). The MTA isn’t just going to go drilling under Fordham Road to make good on a nearly fifty year old promise of a subway line.

    The only “responsive action” you should take is to better educate yourself on the priorities of a corporate entity trying to meet the needs of nearly 13 million people in NYC/Westchester/Southern Connecticut/Long Island, and not whine so much about how you feel personally slighted because of the MTA’s (apparent) conspiracy theory deprive us of our (apparent) Jesuit-given right to a named subway station.

    Sincerely,
    A Fordham student

    Reply
  • A

    AlexOct 22, 2015 at 10:19 pm

    Many CUNY schools do not have their distinction at their stations. For example, CUNY Hostos Community College sits on top of 149-Grand Concourse station with access to 4,5, and 2 trains but is not noted in the signs.

    The distinction came at a major cost and these colleges paid their dues.

    Reply
  • J

    Jack MaritainOct 21, 2015 at 10:21 pm

    New York Institute of Technology and John Jay College have their own directional signs due to the schools’ exceptionally rigorous curriculi and global prestige.

    Reply
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Why Does the MTA Hate Fordham?