
A writer on the verge of releasing her debut novel is facing backlash after she posted a picture on Twitter of a public transit worker eating on a train and reported details about the woman to her bosses. Natasha Tynes later apologized on Twitter and deleted her post before making her account private, but the publishing house distributing her novel dropped her and her publisher delayed the planned release of the book.
The response to Friday's post was almost immediate, with people upset that Tynes, who is Jordanian American and has called herself a "minority writer," would shame a black woman and possibly cause her to lose her job. Tynes' post showed the woman in her work uniform eating on the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority train.
The authority doesn't allow drinking or eating on its trains and buses, although officials on Wednesday had advised police officers to stop issuing tickets for those violations. "When you're on your morning commute & see wmata employee in UNIFORM eating on the train I thought we were not allowed to eat on the train. This is unacceptable. Hope wmata responds," Tynes wrote.
When the authority's Twitter account reached out for more information, Tynes replied with the time, the train and the direction it was traveling, The Washington Post reported. Tynes deleted the initial tweet by Friday afternoon, CBS affiliate WUSA-TV reports.
"I apologize for a tweet I posted earlier today, which I have since deleted," Tynes posted to Twitter, according to WUSA-TV. "I am truly sorry."
Metro officials didn't respond to questions about whether the employee faced any discipline. An official with the union for Metro workers said the woman was taking a meal break while going from one job to another.
Metro operators have "an average of 20 minutes to consume a meal and get to their next access point to ensure all buses and trains are on time, safe, and ready to serve the riding public," said Barry Hobson, the chief of staff for the Metro workers union, Amalgamated Transit Union Local 689. Hobson's statement referenced a Wednesday email from the Metro Transit police chief telling officers to stop writing tickets for fare evasion, eating, drinking, spitting and playing music without headphones until further notice.
"Understanding this email, our operator clearly was doing no wrong," Hobson's statement said.
--CBS News