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The cousin of Malaysia Goodson, who tragically died while carrying her baby and stroller down a set of subway stairs, excoriated the MTA Wednesday for failing to implement widespread elevator service — a move she said could’ve saved the woman’s life.

“My cousin should still be here. She had her 1-year-old daughter in her hand walking down those stairs,” Dontaysia Turner, 27, railed at the transit authority’s monthly board meeting through tears.

“You have people with strollers, babies, pregnant, walkers, wheelchairs, anything you can think of struggling up and these stairs. It’s not right or fair … I don’t want anyone else’s family to feel the pain my family feels.

“We need elevators.”

Goodson, 22, was walking down the stairs at the Seventh Avenue B/D subway station in Midtown on the evening of Jan. 28 with her 1-year-old daughter and stroller in hand when she tumbled down and died.

The NYPD and the medical examiner, which has not yet determined Goodson’s cause of death, said the young mom likely suffered a medical emergency and her death wasn’t necessarily related to the subway fall.

However, Turner is waiting for the autopsy results before she makes any judgment and said even if Goodson did suffer a medical emergency, she believes her death wouldn’t have happened if she was in an elevator.

“She might’ve been roughed up but she’d be alive,” Turner said.

Goodson left behind her 1-year-old daughter, who asks about her dead mother “every day,” Turner said.

“How can we explain that to her daughter? That your mom is no longer here? We look at that little girl every day and we can’t explain that,” Turner said.

Turner, also a young mom, said the MTA has never apologized or reached out to her family and said there’s nothing they can do to take away her family’s pain, besides implement widespread elevator and escalator service.

“Put them in every station, or every two stations,” she said.

“This issue could’ve been prevented.”

MTA Chairman Freddy Ferrer responded to Turner’s testimony and admitted both he and NYC Transit chief Andy Byford never apologized to the Goodson family, a move he now calls “regrettable.”

“I regret that, I think it’s generally customary that the police officials do that but look, let me cut to the chase. Sorry it didn’t happen, that’s regrettable and I certainly want to express our condolences to the Goodson family,” Ferrer told reporters.

He reiterated a plan to build elevators across 50 stations in the next five years and said the MTA is “committed” to making the subway more accessible.

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