Police Interactions with SEPTA Riders During COVID-19
Published: Apr 10, 2020
2 minute read
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, April 10, 2020
Two videos circulating Friday morning give a glimpse into the disturbing reality faced by transit riders in Philadelphia. In one, a man who appears to be a SEPTA supervisor orders riders off a bus, some with face coverings, stating if you dont have a mask you cannot ride public transportation. In another, no less than seven Philadelphia police officers are shown dragging a transit rider off a bus, apparently for not wearing a face mask.
If riding public transit requires a face mask, then SEPTA must provide masks to transit workers and riders.
On Thursday, SEPTA urged riders to wear face masks, despite masks still being listed as a prohibited item on other parts of SEPTAs website. At some point later in the day, masks apparently became a condition for riding transit, although a rider would only know this if they asked SEPTA directly on Twitter. Bus operators received a conflicting message that transit riders did not have to wear a mask.
Under normal conditions, conflicting messages from SEPTA management might only cost riders their time missed birthdays, graduations, job interviews, doctors appointments. During the COVID-19 pandemic, an interaction with an armed police officer could cost a Philly transit rider their life. The Philadelphia Police Department began limiting contact with the public on March 17th. Was this interaction necessary? This response indicates that harassment and profiling will be used to determine who is allowed to use public transit and who is considered essential.
Friday, SEPTA said its transit police will engage customers to make sure riders are traveling for an essential reason. SEPTA must define these essential reasons and ensure any interaction with police does not end in violence.
Hopefully the death of public transit. If they keep some stupid social distancing for riding a bus or train they will need at least 75% more money.