Gothamist

Record Thanksgiving air travel is peanuts compared to NYC subway ridership

V.Rodriguez3 months ago

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Thanksgiving weekend is typically the busiest of the year for U.S. airlines — and Transportation Security Administration officials estimate will take to the skies this Sunday, breaking a single day record.

For frequent flyers, that’s a huge number. But for regular riders of the subway, it’s peanuts.

On most weekdays, the subway turnstiles clock about . The city’s record more than taps and swipes daily, and conductors on the commuter railroads punch or scan about 450,000 tickets.

Those numbers remain down from pre-pandemic levels , but they dwarf what U.S. airline operations consider record breaking travel.

It’s a dynamic often cited by transit advocates, who bemoan the sorry state of New York’s mass transit system when compared to its airports, which have received billions of dollars in upgrades over the last decade using state and federal funds .

“While it doesn’t bring Congress home for the holidays, the MTA provides nearly 7 million rides a day,” said Danny Pearlstein, a spokesperson for the Riders Alliance. “It’s a good time to be thankful for our common infrastructure — and for our leaders to renew their commitment to invest in public transit.”


Thanksgiving 2023 service changes

Even without that type of commitment from , the subways may prove their worth to New Yorkers who stay in town over the holiday.

Construction work on the subways is also slated to cause less disruption to service than during other holiday weekends . The MTA also plans a handful of outages to perform track maintenance and upgrades.

Here's an overview of service changes:

  • Thanksgiving Day, subways and buses will run on a Sunday schedule, but there will be additional service on the ​and the ​ in the early morning. Some subway station entrances and exits along the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade route will be closed, along with street closures in Manhattan. Read more here.
  • Service on the F train in Brooklyn will be suspended from Kings Highway to Coney Island - Stillwell Avenue from Friday night through Monday morning for signal system upgrades.
  • Q line will not run south of Prospect Park this weekend.
  • M train will not run from Myrtle-Broadway to Delancey-Essex starting 9:45 p.m. Friday through Monday morning. Transfer to the J train at Myrtle-Broadway for service to Manhattan. Details here.
  • Check the MTA's Thanksgiving 2023 official schedule for more changes this weekend.
  • Still, absent any disasters, even New York’s aging subways are expected to move millions more people than its airports.

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