New York Public Interest Research Group Straphangers Campaign v. Reuter

293 A.D.2d 160, 739 N.Y.S.2d 127, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2320
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 7, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 293 A.D.2d 160 (New York Public Interest Research Group Straphangers Campaign v. Reuter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Public Interest Research Group Straphangers Campaign v. Reuter, 293 A.D.2d 160, 739 N.Y.S.2d 127, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2320 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Rubin, J.

At issue on this appeal is whether Public Authorities Law § 1205 (5) requires respondents New York City Transit Authority, its president and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (collectively, the TA) to give public notice, conduct a public hearing and obtain the approval of a majority of its board of directors prior to eliminating or reducing the hours during which 53 of its token booths are staffed. Because the legislative history of the measure indicates that it is intended to be remedial, this Court affirms the expansive interpretation accorded to the statutory notice provision by Supreme Court.

By letter dated July 2, 2001, respondent Lawrence Reuter notified petitioner Straphangers Campaign that, beginning the following month, the TA planned to reduce staffing at 122 of its token booths. The affected facilities were identified as “secondary booths with low entry and exit volume,” and respondent gave his assurance that “there will continue to be a full-time booth, operating 24-hours a day, 7-days a week” at each of the affected stations. Inclusion in the plan “required that the appropriate complement of High Entrance/Exit Turnstiles, MetroCard Vending Machines and other necessary equipment be in place so that our customers would continue to have access to the system.” As a consequence of the proposed changes, some entrances remaining open on a 24-hour basis would be without staffing altogether, with access to be provided exclusively by means of High Entrance/Exit Turnstiles.

As described by the TA’s Director of Operations for the Department of Subways, the New York City subway system currently consists of 709 token booths, of which 188 are staffed part-time and the remaining 521 full-time. The first phase of the TA’s plan, scheduled for implementation on August 26, 2001, calls for staffing reductions in 53 part-time booths: 21 in Manhattan, 19 in Brooklyn, 11 in Queens and 2 in the Bronx. [162]*162The plan contemplates the elimination of 35 part-time token booths and a further reduction in the hours of operation at 18 others.

In a letter dated July 3, 2001 to Public Advocate Mark Green, respondent Reuter expressed the TA’s position that Public Authorities Law § 1205 (5) does not require a public hearing to be conducted prior to implementation of the proposed staffing reduction plan. The TA adhered to this position at a July 11th hearing before the New York City Council. This proceeding was commenced by way of a petition and order to show cause dated August 10, 2001, seeking injunctive relief. The main allegation of the petition is the TA’s violation of Public Authorities Law § 1205 (5). Petitioners also state claims based upon 49 USC § 5307 (d) (1) (I) (relating to respondents’ obligation to conduct hearings pursuant to receipt of federal block grants), Public Authorities Law § 1204 (15) (providing that the TA is obligated to operate transit facilities for the convenience and safety of the public), and the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 USC § 12101 et seq.).

Supreme Court, noting that Public Authorities Law § 1205 (5) was enacted during the 1977 fiscal crisis in response to the TA’s plan to save money by arbitrarily closing subway entrances, construed it as a remedial measure. The court stated:

“the Transit Authority is advancing a plan for ‘partial closing’ of a ‘means of public access’ to the subway which would impact upon a portion of the public within the meaning of section 1205 (5) of the Public Authorities Law. There is no dispute that the high-turnstile enclosures cannot be used as a means of access into the subway system by significant groups—e.g., mothers or fathers or care givers carrying an infant and a folded stroller, shoppers with numerous packages or bags, injured persons on crutches, people with assisting dogs, or persons with walkers, among others—because the wedge-shaped entry space is simply too small an enclosure for the passenger and whatever accompanies him or her. To such persons, ‘access’ at a subway entrance only through a high turnstile is no access at all and constitutes an effective closing of that given entrance.”

The court agreed with petitioners that the TA must hold hear[163]*163ings before implementing the plan. It dismissed respondent’s “argument that the proposed changes are merely a revision in fare collection and sale mechanisms, given that they have an impact upon public access.” The court noted that “station access changes have generally been the subject of public hearings held by the Transit Authority * * * including proposals to close unstaffed high-entrance turnstiles because they were so frequently vandalized.”

On appeal, the TA contends that Supreme Court misconstrued both the statutory language and the legislative intent: “Nowhere does the Statute mention changes to access within a passenger station, even if these internal changes might advantage some while being viewed as inconveniences by others.” The TA argues that, by employing the term “passenger station,” the Legislature “plainly indicated that it was not focusing on any one of the many components of a station * * * [I]t is clear that the Statute simply does not address the subject of passage within a subway station.” Thus, the TA contends, the court disregarded “the Statute’s focus on ‘closing’ and construe[d] ‘access to’ as meaning access within rather than to, a passenger station” (emphasis in original). Respondents conclude that the court “improperly expanded the Statute’s scope in order to achieve the social ends” expressed in its opinion.

On appeal, petitioners confine their argument predicated on Public Authorities Law § 1204 (15) to a footnote. Under this provision, the TA is obliged to hold public hearings prior to effecting changes in “routes or methods of transportation.” Thus, it reflects the requirements of 49 USC § 5307 (d) (1) (I), which mandates the solicitation of public comment “before raising a fare or carrying out a major reduction of transportation.” Petitioners have not pursued the claim predicated upon the Americans with Disabilities Act, the only mention of which is a passing reference in regard to the TA’s obligation to operate the transit system for the “safety and convenience of the public” pursuant to Public Authorities Law § 1204 (15).

Public Authorities Law § 1204 (15) grants respondent Transit Authority the requisite power to “manage, control and direct the maintenance and operation of transit facilities * * * for the convenience and safety of the public with power, in its discretion, to extend, modify, discontinue, curtail, or change routes or methods of transportation” upon 30 days’ notice to the Board of Estimate. As no change in “routes or methods of transportation” will result from the TA’s proposed staffing [164]*164reduction plan, this provision (together with the federal provision to which it relates) is inapposite. Petitioners’ remaining contention is that “substituting unstaffed turnstiles for token booths closes off a ‘means of public access’ to passenger stations” and, thus, implicates statutory notice, hearing and voting provisions.

Appellant TA takes the position that Public Authorities Law § 1205 (5), “by its terms, only applies if a subway station is closed completely or partially * * * or if there is a complete or partial closing of ‘any means of public access to’ a station.” The disputed provision states:

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Bluebook (online)
293 A.D.2d 160, 739 N.Y.S.2d 127, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-public-interest-research-group-straphangers-campaign-v-reuter-nyappdiv-2002.