Gov. Kathy Hochul, along with MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber and Mayor Zohran Mamdani, celebrate the one-year anniversary of congestion pricing in Manhattan. Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.
Photo by Lloyd Mitchell
On the one-year anniversary of congestion pricing on Monday, Gov. Kathy Hochul declared that the program has yielded “extraordinary” results in reduced traffic and increased economic activity, “beyond what we could have expected.”
The governor, during a Monday afternoon news conference in Manhattan, stood alongside MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber and Mayor Zohran Mamdani. She lauded congestion pricing as a success in reducing car traffic, cutting air pollution, promoting the local economy, and generating vital funding for public transit.
“We changed how people in this great city and the region live, how they breathe, how they act, and now the results are in,” Hochul said of the program’s impact.
A van passes under a congestion pricing gantry in Manhattan on Jan. 5, 2026.Photo by Dean Moses
Hochul also noted that the once-fervent opposition to congestion pricing, when it was first launched one year ago, has seemingly “calmed down.”
“People like getting across the bridges faster, they like coming to the city with more time on their hands, they’re happy not to sit in traffic,” Hochul said. “So to those individuals who are driving in, their quality of life has improved as well, and I’m really proud of that, and I hope they understand what this program did for them.”
The governor touted the state’s and MTA’s success in winning most of the nearly a dozen lawsuits that opponents brought in hopes of halting congestion pricing over the past few years.=
“For those of you who are keeping score, I’ve got more than 10 lawsuits. We have a pretty good record. Every time it’s gone before a judge, the judge says, ‘no, no, the state is right,’” Hochul said.
Hochul said she believes the state will have the same result with its lawsuit seeking to block President Trump’s administration’s efforts to end the program. The Manhattan federal judge in the case, Lewis Liman, will hear oral arguments later this month.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani joined Gov. Kathy Hochul and MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber to celebrate one year of congestion pricing. Monday, Jan. 5, 2025.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell
Mamdani, who won the mayoralty on ambitious proposals like making city buses free, said congestion pricing is proof of the “change that can come when government dares to do big things.”
“This is a program that has been successful, no matter how you measure it,” he said.
Congestion pricing charges drivers entering Manhattan below 60th Street a $9 base toll during peak hours. The tolls vary based on vehicle size and the time of day drivers enter the zone, known as the Central Business District (CBD).
The governor ticked off the program’s positive impacts on congestion and safety: reducing the number of vehicles enterring the CBD by 11% — equating to 27 million fewer vehicles; allowing those enterring and exiting the zone during rush hour to move an average 23% faster over crossings; boosting bus speeds in the CBD by 2.3%; and reducing crashes in the area by 7%.
She also pointed to a 22% drop in air pollution within the CBD; a 6.3% rise in economic activity in the zone; and Broadway having its best season in history — bringing in $1.9 billion in ticket sales.
MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber takes a victory lap on congestion pricing on the program’s one-year anniversary. Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell
Furthermore, the state’s and MTA’s projections indicate the program will raise $550 in net revenues for its first year. They will then begin bonding those dollars out to bring in $15 billion to fund major capital improvements to the system over the next several years.
“It’s going to bring us more benefits, more than just less congested streets,” Lieber said of congestion pricing. “It’s the new train cars that you’re making possible. The new signals. The more ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) elevators.”
The MTA has already approved contracts for signal modernization on the A/C line in Brooklyn and Queens and to install elevators at five stations utilizing congestion pricing revenue late last year.
All 10 members of the MTA board approved the proposal on Sept. 25, which includes purchasing new railcars across the subway and commuter rail systems; building at least 60 subway stations and six commuter rail stations; investing in signal modernization and fare gates; making critical structure repairs; and boosting station environments.
The plan now heads to the State Capital Program Review Board on Oct. 1, as required by New York’s Public Authorities Law.
But that is only half the battle for the MTA; the other half comes in the form of funding. Hochul halted congestion pricing, which aims to reap $1 billion in funding every year for the MTA through tolls from drivers entering Manhattan, just weeks before it was scheduled to start on June 30.
A taxi passes under an unused congestion pricing gantry.File Photo by Dean Moses
Hochul’s decision immediately threw the MTA’s capital plans into uncertainty and blew open a $15 billion hole that needed to be filled. Despite the governor’s promises that alternative funding would be found, no such plans have yet been proposed from Albany.
MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens said last week that the authority would propose issuing $10 billion in MTA-issued bonds to help fund the 2025-2029 Capital Plan. He also said the MTA expects to receive around $21 billion from federal funding and state and city bonds but noted that the agency has not yet put forward specific numbers because funding sources have not been approved.
Even so, Willens added, the MTA is not proposing a complete funding package in the plan; rather, the agency was focusing on the projects and requirements it needs to address over the next five years.
Willens said there is currently a deficit of around $33 billion and acknowledged that the remainder of the funding sources need to be identified.
The MTA quoted a JP Morgan analysis that stated that annual capital expenditures ranging between $16 billion and $23 billion were required if the MTA was to match comparable peers. A separate independent review from the Office of the New York State Comptroller estimated that the total capital needed for the 2025-2029 plan ranged between $57.8 billion and $92.2 billion.
Rally founder Numaan Akram, a mass mobility leader, advocates for the recently paused congestion pricing plan and offers solutions for Manhattan’s transit dilemma, including bus rideshares.
NEW YORK, July 31, 2024 (Newswire.com)
– Rally OurBus, the revolutionary Mass Mobility as a Service (MaaS) company, supports the MTA’s recently halted congestion pricing plan that would have contributed millions of dollars to the transit system in New York City. Founder Numaan Akram believed the tax program is an essential step to rely more on mass transit and reduce traffic issues in Manhattan, where vehicles contribute significantly to congestion and environmental strain.
Akram said increasing the congestion tax could create more space for alternative transportation. “We want to express our support for this tax as a mass mobility company even though we will be charged this toll. We are ok with it because it supports mass transit. This tax has been contemplated for years.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul directed the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) to pause a toll program that could be a financial bonanza, estimated at $15 billion. The MTA projected it could generate about $1 billion annually and use the funds for subway, bus, and commuter rail network improvements.
The congestion pricing plan was overwhelmingly approved by the MTA board and scheduled to begin May 30, with cars charged an additional $15 when entering Manhattan at or below 61st Street and trucks charged between $24 and $36, depending on size.
The cost of gridlocks in Manhattan includes $20 billion a year in wasted time and lost productivity. Each driver loses 117 hours on average stuck in traffic every year, in addition to almost $2,000 in lost productivity. Currently, 700,000 vehicles are entering the area every weekday. According to the MTA’s report on the matter, the toll would have resulted in 100,000 fewer vehicles entering the congestion zone every weekday and decreased crowding in the most congested district in the country. There has been no announcement of a new start date for the plan. The program was signed into law by former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2019.
“Let’s increase the parking tax 10 times, double the size of every sidewalk, install protected bike lanes on every road, reserve spots for taxis to pick up and drop off on every block, block off key streets for express buses, and refresh every subway station and build a hundred more,” said Akram. Rally OurBus is an on-demand bus travel company that creates event-based bus rideshares and regularly scheduled intercity routes through thousands of small private bus operators and allows people to create or find crowdsourced bus trips. Akram said the congestion pricing plan offers many potential benefits to urban transport.
According to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), the program would reduce rates for vehicles entering the district from one of the four tolled tunnels, speed the movement of emergency vehicles and provide a discount plan for qualifying low-income drivers. Emissions would also decrease by having fewer vehicles on the road and seeing an increase in transit ridership via subway, bus, and rail services.
A 2017 analysis by the Community Service Society (CSS), the city’s leading anti-poverty organization, investigated the impact of congestion pricing and found only 4% of working residents from the outer boroughs (Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island) commute to Manhattan by car, with 56% using public transit to go to work. The funds generated from the program would benefit residents with infrastructure improvements. The study also found that the congestion fee would affect only 2% of the low-income people.
Rally is a bus rideshare company with a platform that creates on-demand bus trips across many U.S. cities, Canada, and other countries. Riders generate a trip or choose from one of the many crowdsourced trips. Whether for a concert, a sporting event or a festival, Rally unites passionate people, making the journey part of the event-day experience.
OurBus uses AI to create regularly scheduled intercity services, with more than 150 stops in the northeast United States and Canada with plans to expand internationally. The company competes with legacy incumbent bus companies on these routes by applying technology and business innovations to regional transportation.
Rally OurBus creates economic innovations to bring new business to local bus companies and promote a greener, safer form of travel. Its Mass Mobility as a Service combines technology and business model innovations in the bus industry. Rally is disrupting the mode of transportation that moves more people than any other. Its new intercity routes for regional transport and crowdfunding address surge demand travel by converting private car users to shared bus riders.
BOSTON — Transit advocates are renewing a push for congestion pricing along the state’s toll roads with new polling data suggesting support for the move among voters.
A MassINC poll released this week found that voters are getting squeezed by a double whammy of housing costs and transportation issues that have some considering leaving the state. Majorities of those polled said they are getting squeezed by both housing – 71% – and transportation costs at 57% with a shocking 38% saying they will move out of state, according to the poll.
But pollsters said 50% of those who responded to the survey want the state to study initiatives such as congestion pricing, where tolls are lowered during off-peak times and raised during rush hour to encourage drivers to use public transportation.
Transit advocates jumped on the poll’s findings to argue that voters want the state to revisit congestion tolling in the greater Boston region to reduce traffic congestion and tailpipe pollution.
“With a dire budget shortfall when it comes to transportation, we need a mix of solutions and funding sources to ensure our system works for everyone – and isn’t a crushing financial burden for people across our state,” said Reggie Ramos, executive director of Transportation for Massachusetts.
“Congestion pricing should definitely be on the table as one of those solutions we need to explore,” he said.
Massachusetts has a backlog of maintenance on roads and bridges estimated at $50 billion — a figure compounded by a decline in federal highway dollars.
Currently, the state only charges drivers on the Tobin Bridge, at two tunnels beneath Boston Harbor and along the Massachusetts Turnpike, which converted to all electronic-tolling several years ago.
Beacon Hill leaders have resisted adding more toll roads to the mix, or increasing fees, fearing public backlash over the pocketbook impact on constituents.
Congestion pricing has also been controversial in other states, including New York, where Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul recently put the brakes on a “first-in-the-nation” plan that called for charging motorists an extra $15 to drive into New York City.
Backers of the plan, including New York City Mayor Eric Adams, argued the move would reduce traffic, congestion and tailpipe pollution while raising billions of dollars to support the city’s public transit system.
But the plan was facing several legal challenges, including one by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, who called the new toll charges a “cash grab” that would hurt New Jersey commuters.
Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com
Sign up for our amNewYork email newsletter to get news, updates, and local insights delivered straight to your inbox!
Gov. Kathy Hochul on Friday doubled down on her unwavering support for President Biden in the 2024 election, while she separately proclaimed she is one of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s “greatest champions.”
Hochul made the remarks in response to two separate questions following an unrelated press conference in Albany on July 12.
The governor maintained her full-throated support for Biden on Friday amid growing calls for him to step aside as the Democratic nominee. The calls are fueled by concerns that Biden will not be able to defeat former President Donald Trump in November, following his disastrous debate performance last month and questions about his mental state.
Hochul’s remarks also come on the heels of Biden’s Thursday night news conference following the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Summit, where he fielded roughly an hour’s worth of questions primarily dealing with his fitness for office.
Hochul, who remains one of Biden’s staunchest Democratic allies and is a surrogate for his campaign, said there are no circumstances under which he would lose her support. She noted that the Biden she wants to see back in the White House is the version that appeared at the NATO Summit.
“That’s who I want dealing with [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and [Chinese President Xi Jinping] and everybody else and dealing with the challenges that we have in the Middle East and with NATO, that is the person to preserve world order,” Hochul said. “At the domestic level, there is no recent president who can touch the accomplishments of Joe Biden. That is undisputed.”
While Biden insisted at the press conference that he was the best person to beat Trump in November, he did have a couple of high-profile gaffs. One was mistakenly referring to Trump as his second in command when he meant to invoke Vice President Kamala Harris.
When asked if she would leave the governorship to accept a cabinet position in Biden’s administration if he won another four-year term, Hochul responded, “Hell no.”
“There’s no job on planet Earth that I’d rather be doing than be the governor of the greatest state in the nation for as long as the people will have me,” she said.
In a separate portion of the news conference, Hochul again defended her abrupt decision last month to indefinitely pause congestion pricing. She reiterated that she made the decision to protect the working class from the cost.
The program, which was originally set to take effect at the end of June, would have charged most people driving into Manhattan below 60th Street a $15 toll. The MTA would have then used the roughly $1 billion in annual revenue the program was set to generate to secure $15 billion in federal bonds to address the public transit system’s vast capital needs.
Without congestion pricing, or a comparable revenue stream, the MTA has had to table essential upgrades to the city’s subways like new signaling systems and accessibility upgrades for those with disabilities.
Nonetheless, Hochul defiantly claimed Friday that she has been one of the MTA’s strongest supporters.
“I am one of the greatest champions of the MTA,” Hochul said. “No one can dispute that.”
The governor pointed to her move last year to bail out the beleaguered transit agency’s operating budget, which was facing a “fiscal cliff,” by raising the payroll mobility tax on large businesses in the five boroughs.
“People did not think that I would come up with a plan last year and invest the money and time I did to find a solution to the long-term funding for the operating costs,” she said.
However, transit advocates, furious over Hochul’s decision to pause the tolling program, were quick to scoff at her comments.
Danny Pearlstein, policy and communications director for the group Riders Alliance, called Hochul’s move to halt congestion pricing a “betrayal” of public transit riders that “jeopardizes the future of our subway and bus service.”
“Contrary to the governor’s absurd claim, she has cut more transit funding than anyone in New York history,” Pearlstein said in a statement. “By ‘pausing’ congestion pricing before it even started, the governor guaranteed that essential transit upgrades like new elevators and signals will arrive late and cost extra. Amid a heat wave, she has also cast grave doubt on public transit’s ability to survive intensifying climate change.”
“I’m the patron saint of challenging projects and challenging causes. It’s not in my nature to walk or to quit,” said Lieber, the agency’s chair and CEO, in his first public comments since Hochul’s decision. “People did a lot of hard work in hard times and I couldn’t justify walking out.”
Before the governor’s about-face, which Lieber said he only learned of a day in advance, the MTA had loads of major construction work planned to modernize New York’s transit system with congestion pricing money. It planned to invest in extending the Second Avenue Subway to 125th Street, to electrify its bus fleet, to build subway elevators for wheelchair users, and to modernize Great Depression-era train signals.
But now, after what Lieber dubbed “disinvestment from mass transit,” the MTA will need to “reprioritize and shrink” its capital plan and focus instead on urgent “state-of-good-repair” work to keep the aging system from falling apart, as it proverbially did in the 2017 “Summer of Hell” that preceded the approval of congestion pricing.
“This is not something we do lightly,” Lieber said. “But we simply cannot award contracts without dedicated funding in place. That’s where we are.”
Lieber has assigned the MTA’s Deputy Chief Development Officer, Tim Mulligan, to develop a progress report on how the agency can undertake the shrinkage of its capital program and present it at the next MTA Board meeting on June 26.
As for transit accessibility work, which the MTA is under a federal court mandate to complete, Lieber will assign Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo to determine how the MTA can “squeeze out as much accessibility work” as possible. The MTA planned to make 39 subway stations and 9 LIRR stations accessible with congestion pricing money, all of which is now at risk; less than 30% of subway stations today are accessible.
Gov. Kathy Hochul says the notion mass transit can only be funded by congestion pricing “shows a lack of imagination.”Susan Watts/Office of Governor Kathy Hochul
Hochul’s move also complicates the MTA’s hopes to modernize its system in the future, as well, because it in effect makes capital spending more expensive. Major construction projects are funded by bonds, and the $1 billion in annual revenue from congestion pricing was to be used as backing for a $15 billion bond issue to finance its major construction priorities.
Now, without a permanent, dedicated revenue stream, bondholders could be less assured that they’ll get a return on their investment; S&P said Monday that Hochul’s decision could lead to a drop in the MTA’s bond rating, meaning it would have to borrow money at higher interest rates and, by extension, pay more to complete capital projects. S&P currently rates MTA bonds at A-.
MTA brass have thrown cold water on the idea of simply proceeding with the tolling plan as previously scheduled and ignoring the governor, whose legal authority to unilaterally pause a state law has been questioned. Lieber noted that the feds need to give a final sign-off on the MTA undertaking a “Value Pricing Pilot Program” (VPPP) before the cameras at points of entry to Manhattan below 60th Street are turned on; the state Department of Transportation, directly controlled by Hochul, now doesn’t intend to put its signature on the VPPP, imperiling the plan.
“The federal approval is what’s needed in order to initiate congestion pricing,” said Lieber. “The governor has been very upfront about the fact that that ain’t coming at this time from the state of New York, they’re not gonna sign off on it, and therefore we’re stopped.”
The indefinite pause is almost certainly going to be the subject of litigation against the state.
Following the announcement, the governor failed to convince the Legislature to pass alternate funding proposals to get the MTA $1 billion in replacement revenue, whether by raising payroll taxes or skimming from the state’s general fund. Lawmakers left Albany at the end of the session last week without approving a new funding source.
On Monday, the governor reiterated her contention that major capital projects would still be completed, and said that the idea only congestion pricing could fund them “shows a lack of imagination.“
In the meantime, a broad coalition of congestion pricing supporters — has brought the heat to the governor over what they deem a “betrayal” of her previous support for its goals. Lieber, for one, said the support has warmed his heart.
“I am incredibly moved by how New Yorkers, transit advocates but regular New Yorkers as well, have turned out in full force and raised their voices to show support for transit and for the MTA,” said Lieber. “Loving the MTA is not a 365 job for New Yorkers, but in the last week we have felt it.”
Sign up for our amNewYork email newsletter to get news, updates, and local insights delivered straight to your inbox!
New York was to make history on June 30 as the first American city to implement a congestion pricing program, decades in the making.
Now, just three weeks before the planned start date, history has been made of a different kind: New York is the first American city to very nearly adopt congestion pricing, before dropping it at the last minute without an equal alternative in place.
On Wednesday, Gov. Kathy Hochul indefinitely postponed the MTA’s congestion pricing plan, which would have charged $15 for most motorists to enter lower Manhattan in a bid to reduce punishing traffic in the central business district and finance the modernization of the city’s mass transit.
In a prerecorded address, Hochul said she could not allow the plan to move forward, citing concern over the toll’s impact on New Yorkers’ cost-of-living. Others, however, suspect that Hochul’s move is a political one, as Democrats seek to recover congressional seats in suburban areas particularly hostile to the toll.
Gov. Kathy Hochul abruptly announced Wednesday that she was putting congestion pricing on indefinite hold, just weeks before implementation.Darren McGee/ Office of Governor Kathy Hochul
“It’s nonsense. It’s all politics,” opined Sam Schwartz, the legendary traffic engineer and former city transportation official who coined the term “gridlock.” “This is really a poor decision by the governor if she’s worried about the economy.”
Schwartz was just three weeks away from seeing his decades-long dream of pricing motor vehicle traffic come into being.
“It’s 2024, we’re 25 days from implementing it, and the governor got cold feet,” Schwartz said, describing his state of mind as “devastated” to see the plan come crashing down so close to the finish line.
A history of false starts
Speaking with amNewYork Metro, Schwartz recalled his time as an engineer at the city’s Traffic Department (now the Transportation Department) in the early 1970s under Mayor John Lindsay, when he and other engineers proposed tolling the East River and Harlem River bridges as a means of controlling traffic in Manhattan.
When Abe Beame became mayor he said the tolls would happen “over my dead body,” Schwartz recalled. Beame was sued by environmental groups who took their case all the way to the Supreme Court and won, and it appeared New York would adopt an early form of congestion pricing.
But like what occurred on Wednesday, the plan was nipped in the bud by an eleventh-hour political act: in 1977, Congress passed legislation that forbade New York City from implementing such tolls.
“Gridlock” Sam Schwartz, who has advocated for and attempted to implement congestion pricing for 50 years, said he is “devastated” by Hochul’s about-face.File Photo by Ben Brachfeld
As he moved up the ladder to become the city’s Traffic Commissioner under Ed Koch, Schwartz tried in vain several more times to implement different versions of congestion pricing. But, also similarly to today, the plans were thwarted by numerous lawsuits and by politicians who got cold feet due to protests of the plan.
The dream was shelved for another two decades until 2007, when Mayor Michael Bloomberg proposed a congestion charge as part of his PlaNYC environmental proposal. By then, several world cities had adopted a congestion charge, including London, Stockholm, and Singapore; Bloomberg and his Transportation Commissioner, Janette Sadik-Khan, saw reducing traffic in the central business district as a venerable climate goal for the coming decades in the city.
Unlike most of Bloomberg’s PlaNYC proposals though, congestion pricing required approval by the State Legislature, and the administration could not secure that before abandoning it in 2008, running into opposition from powerful Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, both of whom later went to prison on corruption charges.
Alex Matthiessen, an environmental consultant who used to lead the nonprofit Riverkeeper, said the Bloomberg administration had done little to convince residents and pols outside of Manhattan that the plan was worthwhile.
“They did very little retail politicking, they consulted with very few rank-and-file legislators,” said Matthiessen. “And as a result, their plan was panned immediately as pro-Manhattan, and in favor of wealthy white Manhattanites.”
Matthiessen, a fierce proponent of congestion pricing, sought to change that. He founded the Move NY coalition in 2010, and ultimately teamed up with Schwartz to devise a new congestion pricing plan they felt would both achieve the aims of reducing punishing traffic while getting political support across the five boroughs and beyond.
Like Bloomberg’s plan before and the one adopted later, motorists would be tolled for driving into Manhattan south of 60th Street, but Matthiessen said the Move NY plan would appeal to suburban drivers by sharply reducing tolls on crossings entirely within the outer boroughs, and investing part of the toll revenue back into the state’s roads and bridges.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan tried in vain to get a congestion pricing plan approved in the 2000s.Edward Reed/Mayoral Photography Office
‘Summer of hell’ changed attitudes
It was stuck in the political wilderness for several years but that all changed in 2017, “the summer of hell,” the year subway service reliability plummeted in an extremely high-profile fashion due to long-term disinvestment, and New Yorkers were losing faith in their transit system. Transit advocates like the Riders Alliance were consistently hammering Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who shouldered much of the blame for the crisis, for his attempts to pass the buck, holding press conferences to explicitly tie the governor to the failures of the transit system.
Eventually, Cuomo acknowledged the need to invest in modernizing the system and jumped on the congestion pricing bandwagon, acknowledging that the policy’s “time has come.”
Cuomo empaneled a commission called “Fix NYC” which ultimately recommended a congestion charge that would funnel revenue back into mass transit. The MTA would use the $1 billion in annual proceeds to issue bonds and generate billions more for urgent construction priorities, like modernizing subway signals, making the subway wheelchair-accessible, buying electric buses, and keeping the 120-year-old transit system in a state of good repair, as well as expansion projects like the Second Avenue Subway.
Matthiessen was a vigorous supporter of the enacted plan but feels the original Move NY plan, which kicked some money back to drivers, might have assuaged some of the political rankling that followed.
Congestion pricing would have funded billions of dollars in MTA construction priorities, like modernizing nearly century-old train signals and making the subway accessible for people with disabilities.File Photo by Ben Brachfeld
“This was a good plan,” said Matthiessen. “I think it would’ve been a better plan if Cuomo had done what we did which was give some of the money to the drivers in the form of maintaining roads and bridges in the New York City area, and maybe reduce tolls on the outer borough crossings.”
Approval in 2019, of course, turned out to be just the beginning. The MTA initially intended to have the program up and running by 2021, but first needed approval from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). Under the Trump administration, that agency simply bided its time for a president who has recently confirmed his distaste for the policy, and had promised to unwind if reelected this year.
The process began moving forward when Joe Biden assumed the presidency, culminating in the release of a massive 4,000-page environmental assessment comprehensively studying the policy’s impacts which won the approval of the FHWA. That was followed by a torrent of lawsuits claiming the method of environmental study used was illegal, all of which remain pending.
When Cuomo resigned amid a sexual harassment scandal, advocates initially worried Hochul, his upstate-born lieutenant, was a question mark on transit, but until Wednesday she had consistently praised the program, even explicitly rebuffing arguments from critics.
Following the FHWA’s granting approval last year, Hochul said the plan would help “millions of New Yorkers…lead happier, safer, less stressful lives.”
“She showed herself to be a person of courage, or at least we thought so,” Schwartz said.
The MTA had spent over $500 million installing the gantries to assess tolls to motorists at ports of entry to the Manhattan CBD, and had recently finished that installation. The agency was just weeks away from finally implementing the nation’s first congestion pricing program when Hochul abruptly pulled the plug on Wednesday.
Matthiessen, for one, believes Hochul’s about-face on congestion pricing is disqualifying for her likely reelection bid in 2026.
The MTA spent $500 million installing tolling infrastructure at ports of entry to Manhattan’s central business district, which will now go unused.File Photo by Dean Moses
“It’s the most cowardly, craven collapse of political courage I’ve ever seen in my life. It’s extraordinary,” Matthiessen said. “She just disqualified herself for reelection in 2026. In this time of national instability and global climate chaos, we need leadership in New York, not an indecisive panderer who doesn’t know what she thinks from one day to the next.”
Schwartz, meanwhile, sees consequences emanating beyond the borders of New York’s five boroughs and 62 counties — proven to him by his experience recently at the American Public Transportation Association’s Rail Conference this week in Cleveland.
“Every city is rooting for New York City to pass congestion pricing,” said Schwartz, who now runs a traffic engineering consulting firm. “These were the transit officials of every city in the United States, Canada, and the Americas, and they were rooting for New York because if it could happen here it could happen there.”
“It’s needed now more than ever,” Schwartz continued. “We’re gonna starve our transit system yet again, we’re gonna get more people into driving yet again, and the city will become less habitable.”
NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — An official tells Eyewitness News the implementation of congestion pricing in New York City has been indefinitely postponed. It will not start on June 30 as originally planned.
There are two reasons, one economic and one political.
According to the official, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is convinced the timing is not right because Manhattan businesses have not fully recovered from the pandemic.
It is also apparently because Democrats are facing difficult House races in the New York City suburbs. Republicans have planned to use congestion pricing as a political wedge.
Congressman Mike Lawler, a Republican representing part of the Hudson Valley, wasted no time in weighing in on the governor’s decision.
The Mornings @ 10 team talks congestion pricing delays with U.S. Representative Mike Lawler.
The governor’s office declined to comment.
“I think it’s a great step in the right direction,” said Mayor Mark Sokolich, (D) Fort Lee. “We’re not in Fort Lee trying to get the MTA to not operate properly we’re just trying to make sure there’s fairness in the process.”
Sokolich said Fort Lee would have had to cope with a 25% traffic increase throughout their area which would have negatively impacted the air quality.
The Mornings @ 10 team talks with Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich on congestion pricing being postponed.
On the flip side, Sam Schwartz, a transportation expert called the decision by the governor, disappointing.
“I’m very disappointed, I thought the governor had a lot of courage to proceed even though it was another governor that recommended it. I’m disappointed by her saying the timing isn’t now, the timing is now,” he said. “The reality is that the transit system will suffer.”
The MTA, which would potentially face a $1 billion budget deficit without implementation, declined to comment.
Lindsay Tuchman has the latest on Mayor Adams’ response to congestion pricing delays.
“I communicated with the governor for the last few days and I consider the governor a partner and I’m really pleased that the two of us have been able to align on so many issues,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams said. “I’ve said this over and over again, you guys and ladies have asked me over and over again about congestion pricing and I say that we have to get it right. We have to make sure that it’s not a due burden on everyday New Yorkers. We have to make sure that it’s not going to impact our recovery. We got to the point of more jobs in this city than in the history of the city because of the support in the recovery effort. And I think if she’s looking at analyzing the recovery effort and looking at what other ways that we can do it, and do it correctly, I’m all for it. This is a major shift for our city and it has to be done correctly.”
There were several lawsuits against congestion pricing, and one official on Staten Island said they are waiting for a final decision by the state before deciding what to do with their lawsuit.
“It’s a little premature to make that decision because we don’t know what’s going to come out of the state, once the state makes its official position, then we’ll decide what to do with the litigation,” said Vito Fossella, Staten Island Borough President.
The Mornings @ 10 team congestion pricing delays with Staten Island borough president Vito Fossella.
On Long Island, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman said that the governor couldn’t deny that the plan was a bad idea for the whole metropolitan area coming out of the pandemic.
“I’m very grateful that the sole vote against this on the MTA was our representative,” Blakeman said. “I just hope that the governor isn’t contemplating a commuter tax on the suburbs.”
The Mornings @ 10 team talk with Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman on congestion pricing.
There remains a belief that congestion pricing is inevitable. The plan would charge a $15 toll for passenger cars driving south of 60th Street from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekdays. There are certain exceptions. Several lawsuits are challenging the plan.
Do you have questions or story ideas about congestion pricing? Tell us how congestion pricing could impact your commute. Eyewitness News would love to hear from you.
NEW YORK (WABC) — Representatives from New Jersey and the MTA are back in court to try to come to a resolution over the state’s lawsuit in opposition to congestion pricing.
Getting close but not quite there yet is how the negotiations are described involving that lawsuit.
Wednesday, there will be a mandatory settlement conference in Newark between New Jersey and the MTA to see if the lawsuit the state filed can be resolved.
There’s also a separate case before a federal judge in New York pending.
Congestion pricing, which would charge most drivers $15 to drive below 60th Street, is still set to begin mid-June.
But now, Mayor Eric Adams has come out saying while he doesn’t have reservations, there needs to be more exemptions than there are currently, including for city workers using their own vehicles.
His administration also working on an exemption for yellow school buses.
Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is also sharing his thoughts in an op-ed for the NY Post, saying yes he approved congestion pricing back in 2019, but thinks it needs to be paused altogether now. He said it needs to come at a time when people feel safe riding the subway and:
“What impact will an additional $15 entry surcharge have on New York City’s recovery in this moment – when the migrant crisis, crime, homelessness, quality of life and taxes are all pressing problems?”
There is a hearing scheduled for early April in the New Jersey lawsuit and a judge is expected to rule before the planned start date.
Have a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover? Send it to Eyewitness News using the form below. If attaching a video or photo, terms of use apply.