Metro Transit police chief: No easy fix for 'sleepers' on trains

Met Council addresses seasonal surge of homeless people seeking shelter.

October 4, 2018 at 4:04AM
A homeless woman who identified herself only as Rita talks about spending nights on the Metro Transit light-rail trains to keep out of the cold in Minneapolis. ] ANTHONY SOUFFLE • anthony.souffle@startribune.com Overnight riders sleep on the Metro Transit light-rail trains Thursday, Dec. 22, 2016 in Minneapolis. Each day, dozens of these sleeping passengers are roused by police, and told to move along. As cold weather finally descends on the Twin Cities, those lacking shelter seek it out
A homeless woman who identified herself only as Rita talks about spending nights on the Metro Transit light-rail trains to keep out of the cold in Minneapolis. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

As temperatures dip, the number of homeless people seeking temporary shelter on Metro Transit trains and buses goes up, too.

In the summer, about 200 people sleep on both the Blue and Green light-rail lines every night, but that figure inevitably surges to more than 350 nightly during the winter, according to Metro Transit Police Chief John Harrington.

It's a conundrum facing transit agencies nationwide — and one with no easy fix. "We are not going to arrest our way out of the problem," Harrington said at a Metropolitan Council meeting Wednesday.

The regional planning body and its police force will continue to partner with local social service agencies to assist homeless passengers — a strategy that he says works "reasonably well."

The council has also named a point person who will create a registry of homeless people using transit for shelter and issue federal housing vouchers. This will help prevent duplication of services, said Terri Smith, director of the council's Housing and Redevelopment Authority, who is leading the effort.

Metro Transit has been "buried" with consumer complaints in recent years regarding homeless people on trains and buses, and the pace of these calls is increasing, Harrington said. In 2015, the transit provider received 1,273 calls regarding people sleeping on trains, but that number could reach 3,500 this year, he added.

The safety of passengers, including the homeless, and train and bus operators concerns police, as well.

A light-rail operator was attacked with a box cutter after telling so-called "sleepers" to leave the train one evening, Harrington said. Passengers have been robbed and assaulted aboard trains. And recently, three homeless women reported being raped on transit platforms, he said.

"This speaks to the problem: If you ask people why they're sleeping on the train, a lot of them will say it's safe," he said. "We're often the last resort."

Sleeping on trains and buses is not illegal, and police have said the vast majority of those who do so pay their fares. Metro Transit offers discounted fares to organizations that assist those experiencing homelessness.

The issue of homeless passengers seeking refuge on public transit has vexed transit providers for decades. "If you ask transit police chiefs their No. 1 concern, they'll say [the homeless issue] is it," Harrington said.

Other transit agencies are trying similar outreach programs. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority in Los Angeles has increased spending on law enforcement and security by 40 percent and deployed social workers on the subway's Red Line, according to media reports.

Overall, successful policies "target behavior rather than groups of individuals," said a 2016 study by the federal Transit Cooperative Research Program. Partnerships "are essential and enforcement is necessary, but not sufficient," according to the study. The research was based on surveys completed by transit agencies across the country, including Metro Transit.

"People who are homeless are often incorrectly viewed as a homogeneous group," the study concludes. "Case workers and others at social service and nonprofit agencies have a much greater understanding of people who are homeless and they can persuade these individuals, who may initially be service-resistant, to accept services."

For regular transit riders, the presence of homeless people sleeping on trains (and occasionally on buses) comes as no surprise.

Mark Snyder, who lives in northeast Minneapolis and commutes to work by bus and the Green Line, said via Twitter: "As long as they leave the rest of us alone, I'm fine with it." Others on Twitter pointed out that rowdy behavior on transit typically doesn't involve homeless people.

John Harrington, Lisa Boysen and John Kirkwood at the 2017 Gala celebrating Circus Juventas. [ Special to Star Tribune, photo by Matt Blewett, Matte B Photography, matt@mattebphoto.com, November 4, 2017, Circus Juvantas, St. Paul, Minnesota, SAXO 1004615935 FACE111917 John Harrington - former police chief
Metro Transit Police Chief John Harrington (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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about the writer

Janet Moore

Reporter

Transportation reporter Janet Moore covers trains, planes, automobiles, buses, bikes and pedestrians. Moore has been with the Star Tribune for 21 years, previously covering business news, including the retail, medical device and commercial real estate industries. 

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