[identity profile] talonvaki.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] davis_square
I have been late - and yelled at - more times than I care to relate because of the T. Yesterday, it was "traffic." Today, a "medical emergency." These "reasons" sound ludicrous coming from the T, and believe me, it's even more suspicious sounding when I say it.

I called MBTA complaints at 617-222-5216 and spoke to Micheal. He was quite understanding and confirmed that it was not my fault that I got to work late and it was completely beyond my control. He also told me three interesting things:

  1. Porter to Downtown Crossing should only take 15-20 minutes.

  2. If you have your boss call the complaint number, they will vouch for your being late.

  3. If you have a fax machine and call them up, they will fax you a letter explaining the delay, which your boss can frame or put into your permanent file or staple to a TPS report, or whatever.
So...they can't get you to work on time, but at least they'll try to keep you from being fired. Yay, MBTA

Date: 2005-06-15 06:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bikergeek.livejournal.com
Whenever i've heard about significant delays due to a "medical emergency", it's because someone either fell or jumped in front of a train.

What other kind of "medical emergency" warrants a thorough stoppage of service and re-routing of trains? If someone has a medical emergency on board a train, call for help by radio, hold the train at the next station, wait a few minutes for an ambulance to show up, get him off of there, and send the train on its way. A handful of trains get delayed in the middle of the day. A medical emergency on the platform can be dealt with by getting the lookie-lous out of the immediate area and getting the patient out of there on a stretcher. No need to disrupt service at all. Not long ago some guy fell down an escalator and couldn't get up. No biggie, an ambulance got called and people just walked around him. (MBTA personnel were at his side to make sure he would be OK.)

Date: 2005-06-15 06:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] komos.livejournal.com
Any medical emergency that occurs on a train will result in just that. The patient will be stabilized and removed from the system prior to the the train moving again. In some cases, this will take a few minutes. In others - heart-attack with defib, for instance - the process can take significantly longer. This doesn't even take into account the delays that will be cause simply by disrupting the flow of traffic for x amount of time.

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