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A young mother carrying shopping bags, a stroller and her 1-year-old baby daughter died on Monday after falling down a flight of stairs in a New York City subway station, officials said.
The woman, Malaysia Goodson, 22, of Stamford, Conn., was found unconscious at about 8 p.m. Monday in a stairwell of the subway station on Seventh Avenue and 53rd Street, police said. She was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead, police said.
Lt. Paul Ng, a spokesman for the New York Police Department, said that Goodson was carrying her baby, who was unharmed, in her arms. Some media reports said that Goodson was carrying the child in a stroller.
Dieshe Goodson, Malaysia’s brother, told News 12 Connecticut that his sister had been in Manhattan for a shopping trip, saying she had a lot of bags with her in addition to the stroller.
It was not immediately clear if Goodson was affected by a medical condition. The medical examiner’s office, which is investigating the death, did not immediately respond to a request for information. The agency that runs New York’s subway system, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, said in a statement it had found the stairs, railing and floor at the station where Goodson was found in good condition.
“This is an absolutely heartbreaking incident,” the agency said in a statement.
Goodson’s death drew wide attention on Tuesday. Transit and disability groups have increasingly pointed to the system’s accessibility issues for those in wheelchairs or who need to use elevators for other reasons. The station where Goodson was found has no elevators, only two escalators that head up to the street from the subway platforms, MTA said.
“This is a heartbreaking tragedy that never should have happened,” Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) wrote on Twitter. “The subway system is not accessible for everyone and that’s an environment the MTA should not allow.”
New York has the most subway stations of any transit system in the world. But three-quarters of its 472 stations do not have elevators, lifts or other features to make them fully accessible to those who are unable to use stairs, according to MTA. For the stations that do have elevators, service outages have been a long-standing complaint.
A group of disability and transit advocates planned to gather at the Manhattan subway station on Wednesday to call on Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D-New York) to commit to a plan for full subway accessibility.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/life...ed-after-falling-down-stairs-new-york-subway/