Newsletter Subject

Go Deep Inside the MTA's Lost & Found

From

wnyc.org

Email Address

james@wnyc.org

Sent On

Thu, Jun 13, 2019 07:34 PM

Email Preheader Text

From Gothamist and WNYC This Week, We Go Deep Inside the MTA's Lost and Found Plus: The fight to leg

From Gothamist and WNYC [View this email in your browser]( This Week, We Go Deep Inside the MTA's Lost and Found Plus: The fight to legalize e-bikes has stalled out, and there's only a week left in Albany's legislative session. A stretch of 14th Street is about to go (sort of) car-free to make way for better bus service. And a NJ Transit bus was caught on camera jumping up on onto a highway meridian to cruise around traffic. By [James Ramsay](mailto:james@wnyc.org?subject=We%20the%20Commuters) [LF] Emma Yi About a month ago, a team of us from We The Commuters went behind the set of doors in the photo above, which is hidden in a corner of Penn Station. Then we went through another set of doors, and another set, until we wound up in a windowless maze full of lost items. Sporting equipment, jewelry, instruments, prosthetic body parts, and so many iPhones. Everything we were seeing had been there for a while; if you read this newsletter regularly, you know that items in the MTA's Lost and Found eventually pass their claim-by date, at which point they can go up for auction. But it's also the case that strangers or MTA employees regularly find lost items that riders then successfully reclaim. A new short documentary, Last Stop for Lost Property, goes deep into the world of lost items in New York City's transit system. I spoke with the film's director, Vicente Cueto, about what inspired the project and how it came together. VC: As part of the UnionDocs Collaborative program this past year, we chose to research the closure of the L train. I was looking for interesting angles to approach it, and thought it would be interesting to look at lost objects and talk about the identity of the commuters through the objects that they leave behind. Emma [Yi], the cinematographer of the project, and I spent a lot of time at subway stations and on subway cars looking for objects, and then when we would find an interesting one, we would stay with them with the camera locked on them waiting for something to happen. Most were ignored or stepped on by busy commuters. Once, we followed a bag with shoes and clothing all the way from the 8 Av L train stop to Canarsie, where it was picked up by the cleaning staff. The team behind the project and I were interested in exploring the value people place in objects, and how this is reflected by lost objects in a transient space. What are some of the most interesting things you found? I’ve read about the crazy things that end up in the lost and found office, but we only encountered ordinary objects that represent the daily commute. The most interesting discoveries were the people around the lost and found office who shared stories of recovery and loss. The project began with an interest in the objects themselves, but we quickly got drawn in to the people and voices behind the objects. The lost objects opened conversations about what losing something of value means, and allowed us to explore different levels of loss and how people cope with it. There are practical consequences, but there is also the emotional value we place we place in our objects and the memories they trigger in us. Tell me about Sonny Drayton. Sonny Drayton is the narrator and guide for the film. He's an expert when it comes to loss and lost objects, and has a very humorous and poetic way of talking about it. He loves trains, and is also very familiar with Penn Station because his dad used to work there. Although he does not work at the Lost and Found office, he has a deep knowledge of the process for claiming lost property in the subway and has seen many things come in and out of there. For example, a turtle. Emma Yi What’s the most surprising thing you learned about the process of recovering items? Does it happen more often than you’d think? It is a tedious and bureaucratic process that depends on your ability to describe your item. I was surprised to see how many categories and subcategories of items, shapes and colors you can choose from while filling in the claim forms. I think some people just give up on finding their stuff when going through the MTA’s lost and found website. Also, the office is very hard to find. It’s funny because many people get lost trying to get to the lost and found! And before they renovated the door and placed better signaling, most people would just walk by it. Over the course of making the film, what stood out to you about the relationship between commuters and their stuff? When we see lost items on the subway, it’s easy to dismiss them as a part of the atmosphere. But when we personally lose something, that object takes on a new meaning. The things that we carry mean something to us — whether it’s an important document or a child’s favorite toy. People tend to ignore or avoid dealing with things that don’t belong to them. This affects how we treat lost items and how we interact with other people, too. For example, commuters often behave towards homeless people as if they are just an obstacle, much like a lost object. [doll] Emma Yi Last Stop for Lost Property will be screening tomorrow night at Domino Park in Williamsburg as part of UnionDocs' program, ["TAKE THE L: CoLAB Preview In the Park."]( It's free, it begins at 8 p.m., and We The Commuters will be there, so come by and say hello. The MTA's New Overtime Watchdog Is Looking for Evidence of Overtime Abuse [IG] MTA IG's Office Remember that Long Island Rail Road worker who made [$344,147 in overtime]( last year? It's not clear if anything illegal happened, but it certainly fired up Governor Andrew Cuomo, who vowed this week that "we're not going to get ripped off" by potential overtime abuse. So, he appointed Carolyn Pokorny, a career federal prosecutor who'd been working in his administration, to serve as the MTA's Inspector General, the agency's internal watchdog. In her first week on the job, she went around to several train yards and offices, calling out punch cards for being archaic and suggesting that a cracked time-keeping clock had been smashed in an act of vandalism. Tony Utano, the president of the Transit Worker's Union, said the clock had a cracked screen but works fine, the way an iPhone still functions with a broken screen. The union also said these investigations have destroyed worker morale at the MTA, at a time when the transit agency and the union are in the middle of negotiating new contracts. — Stephen Nessen Best of the Week From Gothamist and WNYC [bikes] Scott Heins/Gothamist A bill to legalize e-bikes and e-scooters appears to be stalled in Albany, with just one week left in the 2019 legislative session. Many advocates see [one main roadblock]( State Senator Liz Krueger, whose spokesperson told us is concerned about overcrowding in her Manhattan district. New York City is planning to extend its existing cap on new Ubers and Lyfts (and the like), while adding restrictions on how much time drivers can spend cruising around the busiest parts of Manhattan [without any passengers](. The Upper West Side will not get a two-way protected bike lane along Central Park West's 50-block stretch. The Department of Transportation said this week that installing such a wide lane would push too much traffic onto other streets, but the city [does plan to put in a northbound bike lane]( separated from traffic by plastic bollards and a seven foot buffer. Some guy has been putting debris on the subway tracks at several stations, and the NYPD wants riders to help catch him. In three different incidents this month, the same person has placed [Christmas lights, a shovel, a bag of concrete mix, and a fire extinguisher]( on the tracks. What Else We're Reading Blade and (soon) Uber still plan to shuttle paying customers from Manhattan to JFK Airport via helicopter, though certain city lawmakers are reiterating their calls for banning non-essential helicopter flights after a private charter helicopter crashed into a Midtown skyscraper this week, killing the pilot. ([Fast Company]( Starting July 1st, private cars will be banned from most of 14th Street between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. The stretch from 3rd Avenue to 9th Avenue will be used to pilot a new system, called the 14th Street Busway, that's meant to serve L train riders looking for alternatives while the tunnel is under construction. ([AM New York]( "They make sure that food delivery gets to New Yorkers sitting comfortably on their couches." New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer wrote an op-ed this week throwing his support behind the bill to legalize e-bikes, and decrying the city's crackdown on the mostly low-wage immigrant workers who rely on them. ([Streetsblog]( After a Times investigation detailed the devastating costs that taxi drivers face, Mayor de Blasio announced two initiatives yesterday: A plan to exempt all taxi medallion owners from paying their $1,100 renewal fees due this year or next, and the creation of a "driver assistance center," which will provide counseling, food stamps, and other benefits to drivers in need. ([The New York Times]( Watch this NJ Transit bus jump up onto a highway median to cruise around traffic. A truck driver caught this on camera Tuesday morning, and NJ Transit is not happy about it! ([NJ.com]( Summer Jams: Classical Edition Our friends at WQXR are back with a "Prelude to Summer" edition of their commuter decompression playlist. [Click here to stream it on Spotify](. 2 Minutes and 15 Seconds of DRAMA! [bus] @FuneralMadera/Twitter In case you missed it: Someone recently started stabbing the side of a bus, neighborhood locals weren't having it, and one enthusiastic man [caught it all on tape](. Weekend Service Changes: Night of June 14th – Early Morning on June 17th This is a partial list of major service disruptions scheduled for the weekend. For a complete list of the MTA's Weekender updates, [check here](. train service between 96 St in Manhattan and 242 St in the Bronx will be replaced by and trains and free shuttle buses. Uptown and trains will skip 51, 68, 77, 96, 103, 110 and 116 Sts in Manhattan. On Saturday and Sunday during the day, Hudson Yards-bound trains will skip 69, 52, 46, 40 and 33 Sts in Queens. Saturday morning through Sunday evening, Norwood-bound trains will skip 20 Av, 18 Av, 79, 71, 55, 50 Sts and Fort Hamilton Pkwy in Brooklyn. Saturday morning through Sunday night, train service between Ditmars Blvd and Queensboro Plaza in Queens will replaced by free shuttle buses. [Check here]( for complete details about the Long Island Rail Road. For NJ Transit, [check here]( for the latest service advisories. Upcoming Meetings and Events Monday, June 24th Metro-North & LIRR Committee Meeting – 8:30 a.m. NYCT & MTA Bus Committee Meeting – 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, June 26th MTA Board Meeting – 9:00 a.m. Thursday, June 27th [Whose Streets? Reclaiming NYC for Cyclists]( 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m., $12 and up Museum of the City of New York For official MTA committee meetings, registration for two-minute public speaking slots opens 15 minutes before the start time. To speak before a board meeting, you must register 30 minutes early. Both are held at at the MTA's Board Room at 2 Broadway, on the 20th Floor. James Ramsay implores you: Give that WQXR playlist a spin, you'll love it! (Photo by Amy Pearl/WNYC) Support WNYC + Gothamist Make a donation to support local, independent journalism. Your contributions are our largest source of funding and pays for essential transportation coverage and more. [Donate]( Copyright © 2019 New York Public Radio, All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: New York Public Radio 160 Varick Street New York, NY 10013 [unsubscribe]( [update preferences]( [privacy policy](

EDM Keywords (222)

year wqxr wound would world working work williamsburg went weekend week way walk waiting vowed used us union tunnel trigger trains traffic tracks time thought think things tedious team talking talk surprised sunday suggesting subway subcategories stuff stretch streetsblog streets stream strangers stood stepped stalled spoke spin spent speak something smashed side shovel shoes set serve seeing see saturday riders research represent replaced renovated rely relationship reiterating reflected recovery read queens put project process president prelude point planning plan place pilot picked photo person people pays paying passengers part park overcrowding onto often office objects next need narrator museum mta month missed middle memories meant manhattan making lyfts love lot lost loss looking look like learned know job items item investigations interesting interested interest interact installing inspired ignored ignore identity humorous hidden held hard happy happen guy guide gothamist going go give get funny funding friends free found followed finding find film filling fight familiar extend exploring expert exempt example evidence end email else easy drivers doors door donation dismiss describe depends department decrying date creation crackdown course corner contributions construction concerned commuters comes come colors clothing closure clock clear claim city cinematographer chose choose child caught case canarsie calls browser bronx bill benefits belong begins banned bag back auction atmosphere archaic approach although alternatives also albany agency affects administration act ability 12

Marketing emails from wnyc.org

View More
Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

29/05/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.