Free copies of the New York subway map can be found at New York Tourist Information Offices or some station offices. Alternatively, there is a map on the wall of each station and on the inside of many of the trains.
New York City transit services offers a subway system and buses. The subway is call "NYC Transit Subway" and the bus systems are "New York City Transit" and "MTA Bus".
Any subway station token booth.
nyc subway opened
Public transportation in New York City is regulated and administered by the NYCTA (New York City Transit Authority), which is a sub-division of the MTA (Metro Transit Authority). The MTA is the New York State transit authority. See the Related Links below for more information about the NYCTA and the MTA.
All public transportation in New York City -- buses and the subway -- is operated by the NYCTA (New York City Transit Authority), which is a part of the MTA (Metro Transit Authority), which is the state transit authority.
You can take the subway to JFK. You take the A train to the Howard Beach Station, or the E or the J-Z to Sutphin Boulevard/Archer Avenue, then get the shuttle, called the AirTrain, which drops you off inside the JFK terminals. LaGuardia is not accessible by subway, but there are MTA-NYCTA (Metro Transit Authority-New York City Transit Authority) buses that go there. NYCTA is the transit authority for New York City, and they are part of the MTA, which is the New York State transit authority. Newark Airport is in New Jersey, so it obviously wouldn't be accessible by MTA-NYCTA transit (neither the subway nor the buses).
Dispatchers are represented by subway/surface dispatchers association, transit supervisors association, twu local 100 dispatchers association
New York City Subway, or just the subway, or MTA.
New York City Transit Authority was created in 1953.
New York City Transit buses was created in 1953.
New York City Transit Police was created in 1933.
New York City Transit Police ended in 1995.