Fortune | FORTUNE 10月07日 22:54
纽约地铁冲浪的危险与应对
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

纽约地铁冲浪现象导致多名青少年死亡或重伤,引发广泛关注。尽管当局采取了宣传活动、部署无人机等措施,但根本性问题仍待解决。文章探讨了为何青少年能够轻易爬上高速行驶的列车,以及MTA(都会运输署)在技术和物理屏障方面的应对措施,如实验性的圆形橡胶管和锁闭车厢门。同时,文章也提及了社交媒体的推波助澜作用,以及MTA要求社交媒体平台移除相关视频。专家和MTA员工提出了不同的解决方案,但成本、安全和可行性是考量因素。与其他城市相比,纽约的地铁设计似乎更容易受到冲浪行为的影响。

🚇 **地铁冲浪的致命风险与青少年受害者:** 文章开篇即以Ka’Von Wooden的悲剧为例,生动展现了“地铁冲浪”这一危险行为的严重后果。15岁的Ka’Von因在行驶的J train车顶冲浪而坠轨身亡,他并非个例。许多年轻男孩因模仿此行为而丧生或受伤,面临被挤压、触电等多种致命风险。这一现象虽有百年历史,但近年来因社交媒体的传播而愈演愈烈,文章强调了其对青少年生命安全的严峻威胁。

🚧 **MTA应对措施的挑战与争议:** 纽约都会运输署(MTA)已采取多项措施,包括公众意识宣传(如邀请Cardi B参与)、部署无人机抓捕以及试验防止攀爬的新技术(如圆形橡胶管)。然而,许多人认为这些措施不足以根除问题,尤其是为何孩子们能轻易爬上列车。文章指出,MTA正在研究技术和物理屏障,但尚未大规模部署。例如,锁闭车厢门被一位MTA员工视为可能挽救生命的关键,但MTA方面也表示此举存在潜在风险,可能影响紧急情况下的疏散。

📱 **社交媒体的推波助澜与多方协力:** 文章明确指出,社交媒体是助长地铁冲浪风气的重要因素,许多视频美化了这一危险行为。MTA已要求社交媒体公司移除相关内容,并取得了初步成效。同时,MTA与学校合作推出漫画式宣传活动,旨在教育青少年了解地铁冲浪的危害及其对家庭的影响。尽管如此,仅靠宣传和内容审查难以完全杜绝,文章暗示需要更全面的解决方案,包括技术创新和对青少年心理的深入理解。

💰 **技术解决方案的成本与可行性分析:** 专家指出,对现有列车进行改造以防止攀爬将是一笔巨额开销,可能需要大幅提高公众的税负,这在现实中难以获得支持。因此,一些人建议利用摄像头和人工智能技术来检测试图攀爬列车的行为。然而,MTA在回应是否可行时表现得较为谨慎,未提供明确答复。文章也提到了其他城市如香港和迪拜的列车设计,它们因流线型车身、缺少外部把手以及车厢间不开放等特点,不易发生此类危险行为,为纽约提供了借鉴的可能性。

NEW YORK (AP) — Ka’Von Wooden loved trains. The 15-year-old had an encyclopedic knowledge of New York City’s subway system and dreamed of becoming a train operator.

Instead, on a December morning in 2022, Ka’Von died after he climbed to the roof of a moving J train in Brooklyn and then fell onto the tracks as it headed onto the Williamsburg Bridge.

He is one of more than a dozen New Yorkers, many young boys, who have been killed or badly injured after falling off speeding trains. Other risks include being crushed between the train and tunnel walls and being electrocuted by high-voltage subway tracks. “Subway surfing” dates back a century but it has been fueled by social media.

Two girls found dead Saturday

Early Saturday morning, New York City police found two girls dead — ages 12 and 13 — in what apparently was a subway surfing game that turned fatal, authorities said. Metropolitan Transportation Authority President Demetrius Crichlow said in a statement that “getting on top of a subway car isn’t ‘surfing’ — it’s suicide.”

Authorities have tried to address the problem with public awareness campaigns — including a new one featuring Grammy Award-winning rapper Cardi B — and by deploying drones to catch thrill-seekers in the act. But for some, a more fundamental question is not being addressed: Why are kids like Ka’Von able to climb on top of subway cars in the first place?

“When Ka’Von died … literally two weeks later, another child died. And another one. That makes no sense,” his mother, Y’Vonda Maxwell, told The Associated Press, saying transit and law enforcement officials haven’t done enough. “Why should my child have not been the end?”

MTA says it is studying the issue

Making trains harder to climb, and train surfers more easy to detect with cameras and sensors, could be part of the solution, some experts say. The MTA, which operates the subway system, has said it is studying the issue. But it has yet to report any broad new rollout of technology or physical barriers that might make it harder for people to get on top of trains.

In June, Crichlow told a news conference to introduce a new public awareness campaign that the MTA was experimenting with pieces of circular rubber tubing designed to prevent a person from being able to climb between two cars to the top of a train.

It was being piloted in between two cars to make sure it would fit into the tight spacing of the tunnels and that it wouldn’t break down or harm service or riders, he said.

“So far the equipment seems to be holding up,” he said.

Six deaths last year from subway surfing

Six people died surfing subway trains in the city last year, up from five in 2023.

Tyesha Elcock, the MTA worker who operated the train Ka’Von rode the day he died, is among those who thinks more should be done to prevent deaths.

The first sign of trouble that day was when the train’s emergency brake kicked in, she said.

Elcock discovered Ka’Von’s body between the train’s seventh and eighth cars. A group of sad-faced teens on the train made it clear what had happened. “Did y’all leave your friend back there?” she asked them.

Elcock said another operator traveling in the opposite direction saw Ka’Von on the train’s roof and reported it over a radio. Because of patchy radio service, she said, she didn’t get the warning.

But she thinks an even simpler solution could have saved Ka’Von’s life: locking the doors at the ends of subway cars. That would cut off access to the narrow gaps between train cars where subway surfers use handholds to hoist themselves onto the roof.

“Lock it when we’re in service so people can’t climb up and be on top of the train,” Elcock said.

The MTA’s leaders have said that they looking into possible ways to prevent subway surfing, including engineering solutions, but the agency declined to make any of its safety experts available for an interview.

In 2023, Richard Davey, then the head of buses and subways for the MTA, said officials were “weighing” the option of locking doors between cars — which is now done only on a handful of 1980s-era trains. But he said that locking doors “brings its own risk.” Some New Yorkers have complained that locking the passageways between train cars might prevent them from escaping to another part of the train during an emergency.

Under questioning from City Council members and reporters last year, MTA officials ruled out some other physical interventions, including building more barriers to prevent access to tracks, or putting covers over the gaps between train cars to prevent would-be surfers from climbing up.

“Listen, you have to be able to do work on top of a train car,” MTA CEO Janno Lieber said at a news conference, adding that you can’t “cover it with barbed wire.”

MTA asks social media companies to help stop the trend

The MTA has asked social media companies to take down videos glamorizing subway surfing, and reported in June that, in 2025, more than 1,800 videos had been taken down.

It’s also promoted public service announcements telling people to “Ride inside, stay alive,” in voices of local teens and, with the city’s schools, released a comic-book themed campaign this past summer designed to show the dangers of subway surfing and impact on loved ones.

More than 300,000 New York City school children use the subway to get to and from school each day.

The NYPD reported that arrests of alleged subway surfers rose to 229 last year, up from 135 the year before. Most were boys, with an average age of around 14, according to police. The youngest was 9 years old.

Branislav Dimitrijevic, an engineering professor of the New Jersey Institute of Technology, said retrofitting trains to prevent roof access would be expensive.

“There’s so many stories in transportation where things can be fixed, but they cost a lot of money. And then you ask the public, ’Are you willing to (pay) for us to fix this? But your taxes would go up tremendously.’ And people say ‘no,’” Dimitrijevic said.

Dimitrijevic suggested the MTA might be able to install cameras and use artificial intelligence to detect riders trying to climb a train. Andrew Albert, a nonvoting member of the MTA board, said he has been asking the agency about the plausibility of physical sensors but hasn’t gotten a response.

The NYPD has patrolled popular subway surfing routes with field response teams and drones, reporting in July that it had used them to make 200 rescues, mostly of teens. But the missions can’t be everywhere at once. They also say they make home visits to the homes of subway surfers they’ve identified.

Trains in some other cities, such as Hong Kong and Dubai, aren’t easily climbable. They have streamlined bodies, lack handles on the outside and don’t open between cars.

Some rail systems have resorted to extreme tactics to keep people from riding on top of trains. In Indonesia, railway officials once installed hanging metal flails to try and deter passengers from riding atop train cars to avoid overcrowding. They also tried spraying riders with red paint and hitting them with brooms.

The MTA purchased a few new subway cars that don’t have the outdoor gaps exploited by subway surfers, but they represent just a sliver of the number currently in service, and won’t be deployed on lines popular for surfing anytime soon.

____

A subheading in this story has been corrected to show that there were six deaths last year, not this year.

____

Associated Press reporter Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, contributed to this report.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

地铁冲浪 纽约地铁 青少年安全 MTA 社交媒体 危险行为 Subway Surfing New York Subway Teen Safety MTA Social Media Dangerous Behavior
相关文章