St. Louis Metro Transit and partners see additional progress on creating safer transit system

Sept. 12, 2022
The recent release of the MetroLink Task Force Incident Report for Quarter 2 underscores how a greater security presence across the entire system is the foundation for a more proactive approach to policing.

St. Louis Metro Transit and its law enforcement and contracted security partners are reporting progress in the first half of 2022 in their efforts to establish a safer transit environment for riders. 

The recent release of the MetroLink Task Force Incident Report for Quarter 2 (April – June 2022) underscores how a greater security presence across the entire Metro Transit system is the foundation for a more proactive approach to policing. The approach is resulting in an increased number of incidents being addressed and demonstrates that crime will not be tolerated on the MetroLink system. 

MetroLink boardings increased 26 percent from Quarter 2 of 2021 to Quarter 2 of 2022 as people returned to work, school and recreational activities that were cancelled or previously held virtually because of the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 177 incidents were reported, up from 160 in Quarter 1. Incidents per MetroLink boardings during Quarter 2 were 10 per 100,000 boardings (.0001). The majority (71 percent) of the incident reports in Quarter 2 2022 were self-initiated and generated by proactive policing. That is up from 66 percent for all of 2021. 

Many of the incidents were for Standard of Conduct (62 percent); followed by Violent Crime (34 percent) and Property Crime (four percent). Weapon violations accounted for 44% percent of the violent offense types and were likely the result of proactive crime-fighting initiatives targeting known “hot-spots.” 

“The effectiveness of the security measures and collaboration we have put into place over the last two-plus years is evident throughout our latest incident report. Incidents are up, but that is 100 percent attributable to the proactive work of our law enforcement partners,” said Kevin Scott, general manager of security, Bi-State Development. Bi-State Development operates the Metro Transit public transportation system for the St. Louis region. 

Over the past two years, St. Louis Metro Transit worked with its law enforcement partners to increase the number of secondary officers available to assist full-time police officers and deputies as well as Metro Transit Security Specialists and contracted Allied Universal (formerly G4S) security officers assigned to MetroLink. Metro Transit has secondary agreements with the St. Louis County Police Department, the St. Clair County Sheriff’s Department, the Metropolitan St. Louis Police Department, the City of St. Louis Sheriff’s Office and the Normandy Police Department. 

“The foundation for continued progress is the collaboration between Metro Transit and its dedicated partners in our shared quest to rebuild ridership and regain the region’s confidence in this essential regional asset,” said Taulby Roach, Bi-State Development president and CEO. “We will continue to collaborate with our law enforcement partners and contracted security teams and tweak the different measures we have in place to help ensure that the positive trends continue.” 

Security will be further bolstered after gated entrances are added to all 38 MetroLink stations on the light-rail system as part of a $52 million Secure Platform Plan. More than $10 million in private funding has been committed to the project, which also has the support of the St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones, St. Louis County Executive Sam Page and St. Clair County Board Chairman Mark Kern. All three local government entities help fund Metro Transit operations. HNTB, a national engineering firm based in Kansas City, was selected to design the new access gates. Once construction gets underway next fall, it is expected to take 24 to 30 months to complete the project. 

Visit St. Louis Metro’s website to access the full Quarter 2022 report, which breaks down the incidents per the three transit jurisdictions: St. Louis County Police Department; St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department and St. Clair County Sheriff’s Department. Reports for prior quarters can be accessed there.