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| Photo by Jose Martinez/THE CITY | 
Countdown
 clocks have sprouted at more than 500 MTA bus stops citywide over the 
last five years, offering one way for commuters to learn how long 
they’ll have to wait.
        
          
But at many stops, time stands still.
        
          
THE
 CITY spot-checked 40 countdown clocks across the five boroughs — and 
found that one of every five of the high-tech signs didn’t work.
        
          
The
 eight clunky clocks included sites where malfunctioning modems cut off 
access to real-time bus information — like at West 57th Street and 7th 
Avenue in Manhattan —  or where power problems have caused extended 
outages.
        
          
“I’ve
 never seen this thing work,” Bavly Hanna, 21, said of the clock at the 
Lexington Avenue and East 89th Street stop for the M101, M102 and 103 
buses. “I don’t even bother looking at the clock because I know it’s not
 going to work.”
        
          
That’s
 because the East 89th Street sign has been out of service since July 2,
 2018, according to the city’s Department of Transportation, which 
maintains the countdown clocks through its own crews and contractors.
        
          
A
 few blocks north on Lexington, at East 94th Street, the countdown clock
 has been on the blink since May 8. THE CITY also found malfunctioning 
timers along Second Avenue and on West 57th Street in Manhattan, at 
Vernon Boulevard and 50th Avenue in Queens and at Jerome Avenue and 
Bedford Park Boulevard in The Bronx.
        
          
“It doesn’t make any sense,” said Ray Colon, 74, of The Bronx. “Why put any money into something that doesn’t work?”
        
          
        
          
Countdown
 clocks have cost the city millions of dollars since they began 
appearing at some bus stops in 2014. Last year, five City Council 
members spent more than $1 million in capital funding to install more.
 
 
 
 
 
 
5 comments:
Some won't show the nearby bus
LINKNYC is a joke
“It doesn’t make any sense,” said Ray Colon, 74, of The Bronx. “Why put any money into something that doesn’t work?”
Yes it does, if you understand where the money is going and who is benefiting from the spending. Same as it ever was...
Perhaps a clue: when the arrival estimates don't work, neither does the bus wifi
The screens inside the Q5 bus that announces the next stop does not work anymore either.
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