Shabby subways make a hard life worse for NYC's super commuters
We spoke with nearly 100 riders as part of our investigation on the state of the city's mass transit. Some have incredibly long commutes.

For the last three months, we’ve spoken to nearly 100 subway riders as part of our reporting on the MTA’s $65 billion plan to fix New York City’s aging public transit.
Dozens and dozens of commuters had familiar complaints: the overcrowding, the inaudible announcements over broken loudspeakers and the infuriating delays.
But a surprising number of riders also had shockingly long daily commutes. Some travel from Far Rockaway, Queens to the South Bronx, or from the South Bronx to Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. One woman’s daily commute from Staten Island to Eastern Queens takes upwards of three hours.
They’re New York City’s super commuters, who spend hours on trains without ever leaving the five boroughs.
Finally starting to get some light in the media. It is crazy how awful the commutes are if you live in 1 outer borough and work in another and have to depend on mass transit. Those Brooklyn to Bronx trips are no joke ... doing Brooklyn to Flushing wasn't fun either, I can't imagine doing to Far Rock to the Bronx.

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