There's no easy solution to this problem. The government has a budget surplus, which of these moles do you whack?
Public Universities threatening to strike over budget cuts
Aerolineas Argentina threatening to strike over budget cuts
Bus Lines threatening to strike over subsidy cuts
Train lines falling apart
Petrol sector threatening to strike over ganacia tax
Agro sector threatening to withhold grains over low exchange rate
US Justice threatening to confiscate YPF shares & public bonds over unpaid litigation awards
Provincias threatening to segregate over unpaid "participation" & suspended public works
The list goes on and on....pick your gripe and stand in line, because nobody thinks their sector deserves a budget cut.
Of that list, "train lines falling apart", along with the parallel problems on the Subte, presents an immediate and undeniable threat to public safety, with a very real risk of a mass casualty event
right now.
How many of the others do? I don't see any others that present the same risk, with the possible and partial exception of the airline issue, but even that is reaching.
I was on the B line again today. For those not familiar with it, there are two kinds of cars, the newer ones are 1980's looking orange and white, with hard plastic seats facing fore-and-aft. You have to lift a handle to open the doors. The older ones are ancient Mitsubishi cars with plush velvet bench seats facing side-to-side. The former have all but disappeared in recent months; 4 out of 5 trains, maybe more, are the Mitsubishi museum pieces. I was on one of those both ways today, and the couplings between the cars are dangerously slack in many cases. They slam back and forth as the train accelerates away from a station. That slamming of tons of mass back and forth, again and again, means metal fatigue. Sooner or later, those couplings are going to fail.
The other alarming thing I noted is that the brakes are
not working right, and that is a safety issue of the highest order.
First world or third, arrogant Yanqui or humble Argentino, these are serious issues of public safety, with a very real risk of mass casualties. These problems, if they continue to be ignored, will kill people.