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MAYOR ADAMS SAYS IT'S NOT 'REALISTIC' FOR HIM TO RIDE NYC SUBWAY TO WORK EVERY
DAY



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By
Elizabeth Kim

Published Apr 9, 2024

32 comments

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Selcuk Acar / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

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By
Elizabeth Kim

Published Apr 9, 2024

32 comments

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Like many of his predecessors, Mayor Eric Adams regularly faces scrutiny for the
way he commutes to City Hall.

Adams has frequently claimed he rides and surveys the subway system overnight.
It’s a point he’s made this year as he’s grappled with concerns over safety in
the mass transit system while ordering more bag checks and police officers in
stations.

But on Tuesday, he said his packed schedule makes riding the subway to work
every day more difficult than being chauffeured by his police detail.

“I gotta be realistic, not only idealistic,” Adams replied when questioned by a
Gothamist reporter during a news conference.

The mayor insisted he regularly rides the subway, saying: “Not only do I do it
during the daytime, I'm out there 1 a.m., 2 a.m., 3 a.m. And not a lot of mayors
do that.”

Adams went on an early morning tour of the subways with the NYPD last week. He
also rode overnight with WABC-TV in February.



But his latest comments about his commuting habits reignited a topic that’s been
a political third rail for local mayors since the subway first opened in the
early 20th century.

“You want to be as much of a New Yorker as your constituents are,” said George
Arzt, a political consultant and former press secretary to Mayor Ed Koch. “And
to do that, you have to take the subways.”

Arzt said that for mayors, taking the subways is mostly good politics. Koch
enjoyed taking the subway occasionally and would often stand in the middle of
the subway car as his bodyguards looked on, according to his former
spokesperson.

“People want to touch the flesh,” Arzt said. “They want to see the mayor out and
about with them.”

The importance of having populist appeal is not lost on Adams, a former transit
police officer who has described himself as the city’s first working-class
mayor.

He’s been seen on the subways more than former Mayor Bill de Blasio, who was
widely criticized for insisting on being driven from Gracie Mansion on the Upper
East Side to his gym in Park Slope many mornings during his eight years in
office.



But Adams has been less visible in the system than former Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, who publicized his daily transit commutes. Bloomberg would be
chauffeured to an express subway station on the Upper East Side before taking a
morning ride downtown.

During his campaign for office in 2021, Adams gave transit advocates hope they’d
found a cheerleader for their cause. He vowed to create 150 miles of bus lanes
in four years, and bus riders gifted him a jacket bearing the words “NYC Bus
Mayor.” He also rode a Citi Bike ahead of the general election in November 2021
and told reporters he’d be the city’s first bike mayor.

But transportation advocates have begun to sour on Adams in recent years as his
administration has killed or delayed many bus and bike lane projects across the
city.

Danny Harris, executive director of the nonprofit advocacy group Transportation
Alternatives, said that while Adams doesn’t need to get out of his car every
day, taking the subway or biking more often would help him "not only to
understand the pulse of New York City but to see in real time the challenges of
accessibility."

“If the focus is to 'get stuff done,' we have a vibrant public transit system
that gets people around much faster than traveling through gridlock with
sirens,” he added, referring to one of Adams' slogans.




Tagged

new york city
public safety
Politics
transportation
eric adams

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Elizabeth Kim


Elizabeth Kim is a reporter on the People and Power desk who covers mayoral
power. She previously covered the pandemic, housing, redevelopment and public
spaces. A native of Queens, she speaks fluent Mandarin. Got a tip? Email
elkim@nypublicradio.org

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