One of the things I liked about living in Tokyo was that
when you were out and about and had to pee, you simply found the nearest public
restroom, never far away, and went on your merry way. Try that in San Francisco. Try it on BART or when you’re waiting twenty minutes for a
bus.
One of the things that blew my mind when I left Tokyo after
a couple decades and came back to San Francisco was that when you entered a
BART Station you were likely to hear an announcement about how many escalators
and elevators were working. “All
elevators are in operation today,” was – still is - the sign of an unusually
good day.
San Francisco’s BART has 379,000 riders on weekdays. Tokyo’s subways have 8,700,000. Possibly they have a proportionate
number of breakdowns, but I doubt it.
I have seen escalators out of order there on very rare occasions, but
usually they’re fixed in 24 hours.
The escalator at West Oakland Station has been out of order for over
seven months.
There’s a connection between public restrooms and
escalator-elevator breakdowns, in case you wondered where I was going with
this. They don’t break down
because we don’t build them right.
They break down because we have so many homeless people peeing and
defecating in them. And because we
don’t have a very good response team cleaning them up when that happens.
First it was the drug culture we live in. I remember years ago when they started
closing public rest rooms because so many people were using them to shoot
up. More recently, though, the
drug culture has now met the fear culture and we’re afraid somebody named Mohammed
is going to come blow himself up, if we give him an opportunity to go into a
room in the subway and lock the door.
I’ve still got control of my bladder, Allah be praised,
although I sense that may not always be the case. I remember visiting my father once in his later years and
asking him why he had stopped driving from his home in Connecticut to Nova
Scotia, the place he felt most at home on earth. It took a while to get the answer out of him. He couldn’t drive anymore and was
dependent on others. He admitted,
finally, that he was embarrassed he had to ask whoever was driving to stop so
many times so he could relieve himself.
It was a great opportunity for me to do something for him. "Pack your bags," I said. "We’re going to Nova Scotia tomorrow and
we can stop 100 times if you need to." (In the end, he stopped very few times, but at least
he didn’t have to worry about asking.) I see my father in myself in many ways,
and I’m wondering how long it’s going to be before I have to stop using public
transportation in the Bay Area because in emergencies, the choice is between a
dark corner and your pants. None
of the BART or Muni Stations in San Francisco have accessible restrooms
anymore.
This may feel like a very minor issue if you’re the kind of
person who never goes anywhere except by car. But it’s part of a larger picture of quality of life in
America and a slowdown in the effort to get more people in cities out of their
cars and into public transportation.
As long as we fail to find ways to adjust for druggies and the homeless,
and, even more importantly, as long as we allow the right wing to persuade us
we have to prepare for a terrorist around every corner, we make American life
that much harder for the folks Hubert Humphrey once referred to as being at the
dawn of life, the twilight of life and in the shadows of life.
It’s not just about corporations and big business and jobs
and the economy. It’s not just
about the debate between stimulus and austerity.
The fact that there are 28 escalators out of service in the
Bay Area’s BART system, with its total of 44 stations, is a sign we are not
very serious about the quality of life in America these days. Trillions of dollars for the military. Millions in bonuses for bankers. Last October Oakland closed five
elementary schools, forcing kids to travel farther from home and increasing the
class size in other schools. And
now we read West Oakland BART Station’s escalator is still out of order after
seven months?
We’ve got some very lousy priorities, it seems to me.
3 comments:
Excellent points, Alan. I hope this has gone to the city departments who might respond and repair.
Wonderful commentary. Is there possibly a connection between lack of public toilets and Depends? I've begun to think seriously about investing in a "Stadium Pal," the device immortalize by David Sedaris's essay on the topic.
Lousy priorities, indeed, Alan. And your account of your father's hesitation to go on trips rings bells for me, since my cousin, who is now reaching his 70s, told me precisely that same thing when we invited him to go on a road trip recently. He's embarrassed to take trips with anyone because he takes medicine that causes him to have to ask to go to the restroom repeatedly.
We have not built our cities--or our civilization--for the human needs of most human beings. Shame be on our heads for choosing to live this way.
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