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Boarding crowded trains

1 min video · safe-or-risky quiz

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Key rules

Do

  • Stand to the side of the doors and let everyone exit first.
  • Step in decisively and move toward the center of the car.
  • Watch the gap between platform and train when boarding.

Avoid

  • Pushing onto the train before riders have exited.
  • Holding the doors open for one more person.
  • Boarding the last car alone late at night.

Day 8: Boarding crowded trains. Practical drills you can run on your commute today. Week 2 of the year-long curriculum. Here are the rules for this one. Run this through your morning routine: a Long Island City crossing near a truck route. Here's what keeps you out of trouble. Boarding etiquette is a safety system: let riders off, board with intent, and don't hold doors. The whole platform depends on it. Make it a habit by the end of this week. Three things to do. Do 1: Stand to the side of the doors and let everyone exit first. Do 2: Step in decisively and move toward the center of the car. Do 3: Watch the gap between platform and train when boarding. Three things to avoid. Avoid 1: Pushing onto the train before riders have exited. Avoid 2: Holding the doors open for one more person. Avoid 3: Boarding the last car alone late at night. Why this matters: Held doors and shove-boarding cause platform-edge incidents and the closing-door injuries the MTA tracks every month. Risky move: Following a runner who crosses against the light. Their gap is not your gap. Decide for yourself at every crossing. Safe move: Walking an extra block to a lit, signaled corner after dark. Lighting plus a signal dramatically cuts your risk at night. Risky move: Crossing a wide avenue without checking the median for turning traffic. Medians hide left-turning cars accelerating across your second half of the crossing. Safe move: Pausing audio before stepping into the crosswalk. A second of silence is cheap insurance against the thing you did not see. Risky move: Walking behind a stopped bus to flag a cab. Buses pull out without warning and the next vehicle is often right behind. Safe move: Letting passengers exit the subway car before stepping on. Prevents the shoving that pushes people toward the platform edge. Risky move: Wearing both earbuds at full volume through a busy intersection. You lose horns, sirens, and bike bells. Pause audio at the curb. Safe move: Letting a right-turning truck complete its turn before stepping off. Removes you from the truck's huge right-side blind spot. Risky move: Stepping into a crosswalk while a driver is staring at their phone. If their eyes aren't up, treat the car as if it has no driver. Wait. Safe move: Holding kids' hands and keeping them on the inside of the sidewalk. Puts an adult between them and the curb — the simplest, strongest protection. Risky move: Stepping straight into a bike lane to look for cars. Treat the bike lane as its own crossing. Check it before you step in. Risky move: Crossing in front of a stopped school bus that still has its stop arm out. Kids are crossing or about to cross. Wait for the arm to retract. Risky move: Assuming a driver sees you because their headlights are pointed your way. Headlights illuminate the road, not driver attention. Confirm with eye contact. Safe move: Standing behind the tactile strip until the train fully stops. Keeps you outside the danger zone for sway, suction, and the platform gap. Risky move: Stepping into the street to walk around a construction shed. The shed is narrow for a reason. Stay inside it even if it's slower. Safe move: Waiting on the curb until the steady white walker appears. Steady walker is your green light. Cross at a normal pace. Risky move: Stepping off the curb the moment the hand starts flashing. The flashing hand means do not start a new crossing. Wait for the next steady walker. Safe move: Crossing only at the marked crosswalk even if it adds 20 seconds. Drivers expect pedestrians at corners and almost never expect them mid-block. Risky move: Crossing mid-block in dark clothing at night. You are nearly invisible. Walk to the lit corner and use the signal. Safe move: Stepping back when a cyclist rings a bell behind you. A bell is a request for space. Giving it prevents a sudden swerve into traffic. Watch the clip, then decide which of these reads is the safer call for boarding crowded trains.

Spot the behavior
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Following a runner who crosses against the light.

Is this safe or risky?