ReportWire

Tag: metropolitan transportation authority

  • Commuters share opinions on the MTA’s proposed fare increases in 1st of 3 public hearings

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (WABC) — If the MTA gets its way and moves forward with its plan to raise fares, New Yorkers will fork over $3 to ride the MTA’s buses and trains, beginning in 2026.

    The proposed increase would also make it more expensive to reach the MTA’s weekly fare cap, which makes rides free after the first 12 trips in a week. The cap would rise from $34 to $36.

    Increases on the LIRR and Metro-North will average 4.4% to 8%. And even tolls on the major crossings will go up roughly 7.5%.

    Suburban riders, many of whom take commuter trains and the subways, will take the biggest hit. From Hicksville, a monthly ticket will cost roughly $300 and a one-way fare will top $15. It won’t be much better from White Plains where the monthly will top $270 with a one-way fare of nearly $14.

    Drivers on the Verrazano and the MTA’s East River crossings will be hit, too, with E-ZPass tolls hitting roughly $7.50 and $12 without E-ZPass.

    Many of the MTA’s long-standing discounts are being phased out, along with the MetroCard, in favor of the agency’s tap-and-go fare readers.

    Stoking the outrage is congestion pricing, where 80% of the tolls collected from that are supposed to go to the MTA.It’s a new revenue source projected to pump $12 billion into subways and busses, and another $1.5 billion to the LIRR and Metro North, and yet, the MTA is about to ask riders for more.

    “We have to make the budgets balance, that’s why these small incremental increases every year are so important,” said MTA CEO Janno Lieber. “Rider satisfaction level is way up.”

    The entire proposal is expected to be voted on by the MTA Board after three public hearings, the first of which took place on Tuesday night at the NYPD Transit Bureau at 130 Livingston Street in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, where New Yorkers made their voices heard.

    “Us standing here, passionate, deep. Our lives are on the line,” said one commuter who attended the hearing. “So, think about that in the sentence you’re making with the power you have absorbed from us as we’re out here struggling.”

    “Working class New Yorkers are caught in an affordability crisis,” said commuter Christian Joseph. “Food, rent, childcare and many other things. Basic necessities we need in the city. Transportation being one of them.”

    Eyewitness News also spoke with commuters ahead of the Tuesday’s hearing to get their takes on the proposed increases.

    “Too much money. The average person can’t afford what the fare is now, jumping the turnstiles, so that’s definitely too much,” one woman told Eyewitness News. “Weekend service is horrible … the homelessness on the train, the worrying about crime, yeah, no good.”

    “I don’t think that the fare should be raised any higher. I mean, people are struggling, you know, they’re trying to make ends meet, and now they’re talking about raising the fare again. It seems like they just raised the fare,” another commuter reacted. “Enough is enough.”

    If the proposal is approved, the increases would take effect in January.

    The MTA has consistently raised fares every other year, by roughly 4%, since 2009. An exception happened in 2021 when Gov. Kathy Hochul froze fares after the pandemic eroded ridership.

    Local politicians have also weighed in on the MTA’s proposed fare hikes.

    Mayor Eric Adams, who is running for reelection, said previously that he didn’t support the fare increases.

    “We have continued to fight for the cost of living in the city, I believe now is not the time to do an increase in fare hikes,” Adams said. “Some people would say, ‘Well, it’s just a slight increase.’ Every dollar matters when you are struggling.”

    Democratic mayoral nominee and frontrunner Zohran Mamdani has gone even further in proposing free bus rides for New Yorkers.

    Beyond city limits, Rockland County Executive Ed Day is calling for the MTA to immediately withdraw its proposed Metro-North fare increases for West of Hudson commuters, calling them “wholly unjustifiable.”

    “Our residents already face a value gap exceeding $40 million every year — paying far more into the system than they receive — while enduring inadequate, infrequent rail service and chronic underinvestment,” Day said.

    For those who can’t attend the remaining meetings in person, the MTA says the public can submit comments online, or via mail, or by calling (646) 252-6777 from 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily.

    Want to participate in person or remotely? The two remaining meeting times are as follows:

    Wednesday, August 20, 2025, 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
    Wednesday, August 20, 2025, 5:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

    ———-

    * Get Eyewitness News Delivered

    * More Manhattan news

    * Send us a news tip

    * Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts

    * Follow us on YouTube


    Submit a tip or story idea to Eyewitness News

    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.

    Copyright © 2025 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.

    [ad_2]

    WABC

    Source link

  • Police/Fire

    [ad_1]

    In news taken from the logs of Cape Ann’s police and fire departments:

    Rockport Tuesday, July 1


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmkDEC@?8maibg 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p 3F:=5:?8 @? qC@25H2J H2D 4964<65 2?5 D64FC65]k^Am

    k9bm|@?52J yF?6 b_k^9bm

    kAmkDEC@?8mp?:>2= 42==Dik^DEC@?8m #6A@CED H6C6 >256 7C@> vC2?:E6 $EC66E 2E e 2?5 f A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mbicc A]>]ik^DEC@?8m p?:>2= r@?EC@= H2D ?@E:7:65 @7 2 C6A@CE >256 23@FE 2? 2?:>2= @? $@FE9 $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8maic` A]>]ik^DEC@?8m p G6C32= H2C?:?8 H2D :DDF65 27E6C E@H? 3J=2H G:@=2E:@? H2D C6A@CE65 @? “F2CCJ #@25]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`icf A]>]ik^DEC@?8m $FDA:4:@FD 24E:G:EJ H2D C6A@CE65 @? w:89 $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`ibe A]>]ik^DEC@?8m p C6A@CE H2D >256 23@FE 2??@J:?8 42==D 😕 |2:? $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_ibd 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p A6CD@? H2D DA@<6? E@ 2kDEC@?8m7k^DEC@?8mE6C 2 >65:42= 2=2C> H2D C6A@CE65 @? |2:? $EC66E]k^Am

    k9bm|2?496DE6C3JE96$62 |@?52J[ yF?6 b_k^9bm

    kAmkDEC@?8m{@DE 2?5 7@F?5 AC@A6CEJk^DEC@?8m H2D C6A@CE65 @? q6249 $EC66E 2E `ai_` A]>] 2?5 $F>>6C $EC66E 2E diaf A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mx?5:G:5F2=D H6C6 2DD:DE65k^DEC@?8m @? uC:6?5 $EC66E 2E hice 2]>] 2?5 r6?EC2= $EC66E 2E cide A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mgi_f 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p C6A@CE H2D >256 23@FE AC@A6CEJ 52>286 2?5 2==6865 G2?52=:D> @? q6249 $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mai_a 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m pDD:DE2?46 H2D AC@G:565 E@ 2?@E96C 286?4J @? E96 ?@CE93@F?5 =2?6D @7 #@FE6 `ag ?62C >:=6 >2C<6C dc]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`ibh 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m %96 6CC2E:4 @A6C2E:@? @7 2 >@E@C G69:4=6 @? E96 D@FE93@F?5 =2?6D @7 #@FE6 `ag ?62C !:?6 $EC66E H2D C6A@CE65]k^Am

    k9bmtDD6I |@?52J[ yF?6 b_k^9bm

    kAmkDEC@?8m{@DE 2?5 7@F?5 AC@A6CEJk^DEC@?8m H2D C6A@CE65 2E E96 tDD6I #:G6C 2E “ 2]>] 2?5 @? y@9? (:D6 pG6?F6 2E fidg A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mdi`e A]>]ik^DEC@?8m p >65:42= EC2?DA@CE H2D C67FD65 @? t2DE6C? pG6?F6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mx?5:G:5F2=D H6C6 2DD:DE65k^DEC@?8m @? y@9? (:D6 pG6?F6 2E `_ib_ 2]>] 2?5 cibf A]>]k^Am

    k9bmv=@F46DE6C $F?52J[ yF?6 aak^9bm

    kAmkDEC@?8mgi`h A]>k^DEC@?8m]i }@ 24E:@? H2D C6BF:C65 7@C 2 5:DEFC32?46 2E E96 w2=J2C5 pA2CE>6?ED @? $49@@= w@FD6 #@25]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mdicb A]>]k^DEC@?8mi p 4C2D9 H:E9 :?;FC:6D H2D C6A@CE65 2E ~C492C5 2?5 $F>>6C DEC66ED] %96 4C2D9 H2D 36EH66? 2 3:4J4=:DE 2?5 2 G69:4=6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mbi_g A]>]k^DEC@?8mi $6CG:46D H6C6 C6?56C65 E@ 2DD:DE E96 u:C6 s6A2CE>6?E 2E |2C<6E q2D<6E @? v=@F46DE6C rC@DD:?8 #@25]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8maiab A]>]k^DEC@?8mi !@=:46 2E E96 DE2E:@? E@@< 2 C6A@CE @7 92C2DD>6?E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`i_d A]>]k^DEC@?8mi $6CG:46D H6C6 C6?56C65 7@C 2 4C2D9 H:E9 AC@A6CEJ 52>286 @?=J @? t2DE |2:? $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m“ida 2]>k^DEC@?8m]i p 5:DEFC32?46 C6A@CE65 @? #6D6CG@:C #@25 4@F=5 ?@E 36 =@42E65]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8meich 2]>]k^DEC@?8mi !@=:46 A=2??65 E@ 7:=6 2 4C:>:?2= 4@>A=2:?E 282:?DE 2 eeJ62C@=5 v=@F46DE6C >2? H:E9 2 492C86 @7 6G25:?8 2 E2I: 72C6 @7 S`_ @? (2D9:?8E@? $EC66E]k^Am

    k9bm$2EFC52J[ yF?6 a`k^9bm

    kAmkDEC@?8mhic_ A]>]ik^DEC@?8m $6CG:46D H6C6 C6?56C65 7@C 2 7:C6 2=2C> @? pE=2?E:4 #@25]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mfi`a A]>]k^DEC@?8mi p b`J62C@=5 v=@F46DE6C >2? H2D 2CC6DE65 @? 492C86D @7 5C:G:?8 H9:=6 5CF?< 2?5 =62G:?8 E96 D46?6 @7 AC@A6CEJ 52>286 27E6C G2?52=:D> @? $@FE96C 2?5 %C2823:8K2?52 C@25D H2D C6A@CE65] p44@C5:?8 E@ E96 C6A@CE[ A@=:46 H6C6 5:DA2E4965 E@ E96 q2DD #@42?286C 23@FE A2DE AC@A6CEJ 52>286] (9:=6 9625:?8 E96C6[ A@=:46 D2H 2 3=24< q|( $&’ 5:D23=65 2E E96 :?E6CD64E:@? @7 t2DE6C? pG6?F6 2?5 E96 #@FE6 `ag tIE6?D:@?] %96 G69:4=6 925 =67E 2 EC2:= @7 7=F:5 5@H? E@ q2DD pG6?F6 2?5 A2CED @7 E96 7C@?E 6?5 2?5 F?56C 42CC:286 D9:6=5:?8 H6C6 @? E96 8C@F?5 36?62E9 E96 G69:4=6] %96 5C:G6C E@=5 A@=:46 E96 42C 925 @G6C962E65 2?5 96 H2D 255:?8 >@C6 7=F:5 E@ E96 4@@=2?E DJDE6>] !@=:46 ?@E:465 E96 42C H2D >:DD:?8 2 7C@?E C68:DEC2E:@? A=2E6[ 925 7C6D9 7C@?E6?5 52>286 2?5 H2D =62<:?8 2?E:7C66K6] (9:=6 DA62<:?8 H:E9 E96 5C:G6C[ A@=:46 ?@E:465 96 2AA62C65 :?E@I:42E65[ 2?5 A@=:46 2D<65 9:> :7 96 925 925 2?JE9:?8 E@ 5C:?<] !@=:46 E96? 2D<65 E96 >2? E@ E2<6 D6G6C2= 7:6=5 D@3C:6EJ E6DED] pE E9:D A@:?E[ E96 8@=74=F3 >2?286C 2CC:G65[ 2?5 96 92?565 E96 @77:46C E96 52>2865 7C@?E C68:DEC2E:@? A=2E6 E@ E96 5C:G6C’D $&’] w6 E@=5 A@=:46 E92E :E H2D 7@F?5 😕 563C:D @7 2 C@4< H2==] !@=:46 2CC6DE65 E96 5C:G6C H:E9@FE :?4:56?E 2?5 925 E96 G69:4=6 E@H65 2H2J] !@=:46 H6?E E@ E96 :?E6CD64E:@? @7 $@FE96C 2?5 %C2823:8K2?52 2?5 D2H 52>286 E@ E96 C@4< H2== 2?5 2 EC2:= @7 A=2DE:4 G69:4=6 563C:D[ 2?E:7C66K6 7=F:5 2?5 A2CED @7 E96 F?56C42CC:286 D9:6=5:?8 DEC6H? @? E96 8@=7 42CE EC24<] p ?6:893@C E@=5 A@=:46 D96 925 962C5 2 =@F5 32?8 2?5 H6?E E@ E96 H:?5@H 2?5 D2H 2 52C<4@=@C65 $&’ C:5:?8 5@H? E96 42CE EC2:= 367@C6 :E DA65 @77 5@H? $@FE96C #@25 =62<:?8 7=F:5] %96 ?6:893@C 42==65 E96 8@=7 4=F3 >2?286C] !@=:46 7@==@H65 E96 7=F:5 EC2:= 324< E@ H96C6 E96 $&’ 925 366? 5:D23=65 2E E96 :?E6CD64E:@?] pE E96 DE2E:@?[ E96 5C:G6C C67FD65 E@ DF3>:E E@ 2 496>:42= 3C62E9 E6DE E@ >62DFC6 9:D 3=@@5 2=4@9@= 4@?E6?E D@ 9:D =:46?D6 H2D C6A@CE65=J DFDA6?565]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mrC2D96D H:E9 AC@A6CEJ 52>286 @?=Jk^DEC@?8mi $6CG:46D H6C6 AC@G:565 2E bi`_ A]>] @? vC2?E r:C4=6[ 2E cicd A]>] @? (6DE6C? pG6?F6[ 2?5 2E didf A]>] @? (6DE6C? pG6?F6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`aid` A]>]k^DEC@?8mi !@=:46 2E E96 DE2E:@? E@@< 2 C6A@CE @7 7:C62C>D]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m“i_e 2]>]k^DEC@?8mi %96 u:C6 s6A2CE>6?E H2D ?@E:7:65 27E6C A@=:46 C646:G65 2 42== 7@C 2 >65:42= 2=2C> @? r92A6= $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_id` 2]>]k^DEC@?8mi p DFDA:4:@FD A6CD@? H2D C6A@CE65 @? !62C= $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mgiaf 2]>]k^DEC@?8mi !6246 H2D C6DE@C65 27E6C 2 5:DEFC32?46 @? uC:6?5 $EC66E]k^Am

    k9bmuC:52J[ yF?6 a_k^9bm

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_i_c A]>]k^DEC@?8mi !6246 H2D C6DE@C65 27E6C 2 C6A@CE @7 92C2DD>6?E 2E }:=6D q6249]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mhi_` A]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 C6A@CE @7 2 5@>6DE:4 5:DAFE6[ A@=:46 A=2??65 E@ 7:=6 2 4C:>:?2= 4@>A=2:?E 282:?DE 2 ddJ62C@=5 v=@F46DE6C H@>2?[ H9@D6 255C6DD 😀 =:DE65 2D 9@>6=6DD[ @? 2 492C86 @7 2DD2F=E @? 2 72>:=J >6>36C @? |2A=6H@@5 pG6?F6 2?5 $96A96C5 $EC66E] p chJ62C@=5 v=@F46DE6C >2?[ 2=D@ D2:5 E@ 36 2D 9@>6=6DD[ H2D 2CC6DE65 2?5 492C865 H:E9 2DD2F=E 2?5 32EE6CJ W:?E:>2E6 A2CE?6CDX]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8meid_ A]>]k^DEC@?8mi !@=:46 2DD:DE65 2?@E96C 286?4J 😕 4@??64E:@? H:E9 2 H2?E65 A6CD@? C6A@CE65 2E 2 |2:? $EC66E 2A2CE>6?E 3F:=5:?8] !@=:46 H6?E E@ 2? 255C6DD 2?5 2CC6DE65 2 afJ62C@=5 #6G6C6 >2? @? 2 492C86 @7 2EE6>AE65 2C>65 9@>6 :?G2D:@? 😕 #6G6C6] %96 >2? H2D E2<6? :?E@ 4FDE@5J 7@C E96 #6G6C6 !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E] !@=:46 D62C4965 E96 >2? 2?5 7@F?5 2 3=24< 7:C62C> 😕 2 9@=DE6C @? 9:D 9:A] xE =2E6C EFC?65 @FE E@ 36 2 qq 8F? A@H6C65 3J 2 42C3@? 5:@I:56 42CEC:586]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8meic_ A]>]k^DEC@?8mi p DE@=6? 46== A9@?6 H2D C6A@CE65 @? #2:=C@25 pG6?F6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mdicd A]>]k^DEC@?8mi $6CG:46D H6C6 C6?56C65 7@C 2 h“ 42== @? r2FD6H2J $EC66E 7@C 2 G69:4=6 :?E@ 2 76?46]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mdiah A]>]k^DEC@?8mi }@ 24E:@? H2D C6BF:C65 7@C 2 C6A@CE @7 G2?52=:D> @? qC:89ED:56 pG6?F6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mrC2D96D H:E9 AC@A6CEJ 52>286 @?=Jk^DEC@?8mi pE dia` A]>][ 2 9:E2?5CF? @? $F>>:E 2?5 |:==6EE DEC66EDj 2E ciaf A]>] 2E $E286 u@CE !2C< @? w@F89 pG6?F6j 2?5 2E ci_g A]>] @? (2D9:?8E@? $EC66E H:E9 D6CG:46D C6?56C65]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8maibd A]>]k^DEC@?8mi }@ 24E:@? H2D C6BF:C65 7@C 2 C6A@CE @7 E9C62ED @? |2CD9 $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`aicc A]>]k^DEC@?8mi $6CG:46D H6C6 C6?56C65 7@C 2 423=6 =:?6 😕 E96 C@25H2J @? #@FE6 `ag D@FE93@F?5]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mhid_ 2]>]k^DEC@?8mi $6CG:46D H6C6 C6?56C65 7@C 2 =@H92?8:?8 H:C6 @? #@86CD $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mfi_b 2]>k^DEC@?8m]i p 4:EJ @C5:?2?46 G:@=2E:@? H2D C6A@CE65 2E E96 u:EK w6?CJ {2?6 w@FD6 @? w2C3@C {@@A] p >2? H9@ H2D C6A@CE65 E@ 36 9@>6=6DD H2D C6A@CE65 E96C6 H:E9 2 E6?E] %96 E6?E H2D C6>@G65 2?5 E96 :?5:G:5F2= H6?E @? 9:D H2J]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Teachers union blasts use of ‘millionaires tax’ money

    Teachers union blasts use of ‘millionaires tax’ money

    [ad_1]

    BOSTON — Backers of the state’s “millionaires tax” are accusing the Healey administration of defying the will of voters by tapping into proceeds from the tax to close out the previous fiscal year budget.

    A supplemental budget filed by Gov. Maura Healey aimed at closing out the previous fiscal year budget calls for spending $225 million in “millionaires tax” proceeds to cover costs for grants to child care programs, universal free school meals, transportation service expansions and other items.

    But the Massachusetts Teachers Association, a chief proponent of the tax, is blasting the proposal to use the money this way, saying the funding needs should have been covered by other revenue sources.

    “Fair Share funds must be used to build upon the existing spending for public education and transportation, and not become dollars lost on balance sheets,” MTA President Max Page said in a statement. “Gov. Healey’s supplemental budget proposal defies the will of the voters and the spirit of Fair Share, which is raising money to grow our public education and transportation systems.”

    Voters approved the so-called Fair Share proposal in the 2022 elections, setting a new 4% surtax on people with incomes above $1 million a year. The state collected more than $2.1 billion from the tax in the previous year, exceeding projections by budget writers.

    A spokesman for the state’s Executive Office of Administration and Finance defended the governor’s proposal, saying the spending is in line with the intent of the voter-approved tax and the state budget.

    “Our administration has consistently demonstrated our commitment to fulfilling the will of the voters who approved the Fair Share surtax to support our education and transportation systems,” the agency said in a statement. “The supplemental budget filed by the Governor maintains that commitment by proposing to use a limited amount of surplus surtax for education and transportation programs like universal school meals and child care provider grants.”

    The approach, the agency said, “aligns with how surtax revenue was budgeted in Fiscal Year 2025 and is necessary to close Fiscal Year 2024 in balance.”

    Healey’s $714 million supplemental spending plan, which requires legislative approval, seeks to close funding gaps for public health, substance use treatment and education, and fund collective bargaining agreements with labor unions.

    It also calls for overhauling how Massachusetts approves renewable energy infrastructure projects, which has also drawn criticism from lawmakers who view it as an end-run around a stalled clean energy bill.

    The issue of how billions of dollars in proceeds from the tax will be spent by the state government was a key issue in the debate over the proposal.

    A chief criticism was claims by tax proponents that the money will be devoted exclusively to transportation and education spending were misleading.

    A 2022 report by Tufts University’s Center for State Policy Analysis ahead of the tax’s approval by voters warned that while the plan clearly stated the money must be devoted to education and transportation, not all the surtax revenue is likely to be spent in those areas.

    “The problem is fungibility, or the ease with which lawmakers can shift money between programs,” the report’s authors wrote. “There is nothing illegal or untoward about this approach; it’s a common part of legislative horse-trading.”

    The report estimates that for every dollar raised by the surtax, spending on the stated earmarks is likely to increase by 30 cents to 70 cents, with the remainder being “diverted to other areas of the budget,” they wrote.

    It also noted that revenue from the tax would be “highly volatile” and is likely to rise or fall sharply, depending on the economic conditions. The number of people paying the tax will increase gradually over time, the report noted.

    Supporters say taxing the rich means more money to improve neglected public schools, expand child care options, and fix potholed roads and crumbling bridges.

    Opponents argue the tax is hurting businesses and driving away corporate investment and job creators, while putting a drag on the state’s economy as it recovers from residual impacts of the pandemic.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

    [ad_2]

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

    Source link

  • Hochul deploys National Guard troops to New York City subway amid rising crime numbers

    Hochul deploys National Guard troops to New York City subway amid rising crime numbers

    [ad_1]

    Hochul deploys National Guard for subway bag checks amid rising crime numbers


    Hochul deploys National Guard for subway bag checks amid rising crime numbers

    03:14

    NEW YORK — Following a series of violent incidents in the New York City subway system, Gov. Kathy Hochul on Wednesday announced a new five-point safety plan that includes bringing in hundreds of National Guard troops and adding new security cameras. 

    Hochul announced that a combined 1,000 personnel — including 750 National Guard troops, along with MTA Police — would be deployed in the subway system to help the NYPD conduct bag checks in an effort to keep weapons off trains.  

    “Let me just be very, very clear. These brazen, heinous attacks on our subway system will not be tolerated,” Hochul said.  

    This came in addition to Mayor Eric Adams‘ announcement Tuesday to add more police officers and re-institute bag checks

    “I know how it plays on your psyche when you hear about some random acts of violence and that’s why we must be proactive,” Adams told CBS New York in an interview earlier Wednesday ahead of Hochul’s announcement.  

    The governor and mayor both argued the new safety plan will protect both passengers and transit workers. However, within an hour of the its announcement, another subway conductor was attacked. The conductor was struck on the head with a bottle at the East 170th/Jerome Avenue station, the NYPD said.

    Adams speaks ahead of announcement


    Mayor Eric Adams speaks with CBS New York about subway bag searches

    07:50

    In Wednesday’s interview with CBS New York, both the mayor, who was noticeably absent during the governor’s announcement, and NYPD Transit Chief Michael Kemper, defended the bag checks as an important safety tool.

    “Including with what they’re doing checking bags to make sure explosive or illegal weapons are not entering our subway system, it’s also creating another sense of presence,” Kemper said.

    City Hall sources told CBS New York that each week the NYPD will deploy 94 bag-screening teams at 136 stations, about one-third of the 472 stations in the system.

    Hochul’s 5-point plan


    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announces 5-point subway safety plan

    35:12

    In addition to the bag checks, Hochul’s plan incudes:

    • Amending state law to ban repeat offenders
    • Installing cameras in each conductor’s cabin
    • $20 million for mental health outreach
    • A plan to improve coordination between police officers and district attorneys to go after repeat offenders, the suspects who seem to make all the headlines that scare people

    “There’s a psychological impact. People worry they could be next,” Hochul said.

    Transit riders have mixed feeling about whether bag checks will improve safety.

    “How many people do you know that actually carry a knife or gun in their bag when it is they are ready to stick you up, ‘Oh, hold up, I’m going to go into my bag.’ It doesn’t make sense,” one person said.

    “New York City’s subways are crazy. You don’t know what to anticipate anymore. I would rather the bag checks than end up dead,” another said.

    “I know these are difficult times in many ways and I’ve been through bag checks before. They do them at theaters. I can do it if I have to do it,” another added.

    Richard Davis, the head of the Transport Workers Union, said the measures don’t go far enough, and that the 1,000 National Guardsmen and MTA Police cannot be temporary. CBS New York asked Hochul how long the surge would last, but she refused to say how long and how long the state would fund the program.

    She tartly pointed out that New York City has an unanticipated $3 billion surplus.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How charging drivers to go downtown would transform American cities | CNN Business

    How charging drivers to go downtown would transform American cities | CNN Business

    [ad_1]


    New York
    CNN
     — 

    President Joe Biden’s administration is set to allow New York City to move forward with a landmark program that will toll vehicles entering Lower Manhattan, after a public review period ends Monday.

    The toll is formally known as the Central Business District Tolling Program — but it’s commonly called “congestion pricing.”

    In practice it works like any other toll, but because it specifically charges people to drive in the traffic-choked area below 60th street in Manhattan, it would be the first program of its kind in the United States.

    Proposals range from charging vehicles $9 to $23 during peak hours, and it’s set to go into effect next spring.

    The plan had been delayed for years, but it cleared a milestone last month when the Federal Highway Administration signed off on the release of an environmental assessment. The public has until Monday to review the report, and the federal government is widely expected to approve it shortly after.

    From there, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) can finalize toll rates, as well as discounts and exemptions for certain drivers.

    New York City is still clawing out of from the devastating impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Congestion pricing advocates say it’s a crucial piece of the city’s recovery and a way to re-imagine the city for the future.

    “This program is critical to New York City’s long-term success,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said last month.

    The plan would also mark the culmination of more than a half-century of efforts to implement congestion pricing in New York City. Despite support from several New York City mayors and state governors, car and truck owners in outer boroughs and the suburbs helped defeat proposals.

    In 2007 Mayor Michael Bloomberg called congestion “the elephant in the room” when proposing a toll program, which state lawmakers killed. A decade later, Gov. Andrew Cuomo — who had long resisted congestion pricing — said it was “an idea whose time has come” and declared a subway state of emergency after increased delays and a derailment that injured dozens. Two years later, the state gave the MTA approval to design a congestion pricing program.

    Ultimately, it was the need to improve New York City’s public transit that became the rallying cry for congestion pricing.

    Each day 700,000 cars, taxis and trucks pour into Lower Manhattan, one of the busiest areas in the world with some of the worst gridlock in the United States.

    Car travel at just 7.1 mph on average in the congestion price zone, and it’s a downward trend. Public bus speeds have also declined 28% since 2010. New Yorkers lose 117 hours on average each year sitting in traffic, costing them nearly $2,000 in lost productivity and other costs, according to one estimate.

    The toll is designed to reduce the number of vehicles entering the congestion zone by at least 10% every day and slash the number of miles cars travel within the zone by 5%.

    Congestion comes with physical and societal costs, too: more accidents, carbon emissions and pollution happen as belching, honking cars take up space that could be optimized for pedestrians and outdoor dining.

    Proponents also note it will improve public transit, an essential part of New York life. About 75% of trips downtown are via public transit.

    But public-transit ridership is 35% to 45% lower compared to pre-pandemic levels. The MTA says congestion fees will generate a critical source of revenue to fund $15 billion in future investments to modernize the city’s 100-year-old public transit system.

    The improvements, like new subway cars and electric signals, are crucial to draw new riders and improve speed and accessibility — especially for low-income and minority residents, who are least likely to own cars, say plan advocates.

    New York City is “dependent on public transit,” said Kate Slevin, the executive vice president of the Regional Plan Association, an urban planning and policy group. “We’re relying on that revenue to pay for needed upgrades and investments that ensure reliable, good transit service.”

    Improving public transportation is also key to New York City’s post-pandemic economic recovery: If commutes to work are too unreliable, people are less likely to visit the office and shop at stores around their workplaces. Congestion charge advocates hope the program will create more space for amenities like wider sidewalks, bike lanes, plazas, benches, trees and public bathrooms.

    “100 years ago we decided the automobile was the way to go, so we narrowed sidewalks and built highways,” said Sam Schwartz, former New York City traffic commissioner and founder of an eponymous consulting firm. “But the future of New York City is that the pedestrian should be king and queen. Everything should be subservient to the pedestrian.”

    While no other US city has yet implemented congestion pricing, Stockholm, London and Singapore have had it for years.

    These cities have reported benefits like decreased carbon dioxide pollution, higher average speeds, and congestion reduction.

    Just one year after London added its charge in 2003, traffic congestion dropped by 30% and average speeds increased by the same percentage. In Stockholm, one study found the rate of children’s acute asthma visits to the doctor fell by about 50% compared to rates before the program launched in 2007.

    Some groups are fiercely opposed to congestion charges in New York City, however. Taxi and ride-share drivers, largely a low-income and immigrant workforce, fear it will hurt drivers already struggling to make ends meet. The MTA said congestion pricing could reduce demand for taxis by up to 17% in the zone.

    Commuters and legislators from New York City’s outer boroughs and New Jersey say the program hurts drivers who have no viable way to reach downtown Manhattan other than by car, and that this would disproportionately impact low-income drivers. (But out of a region of 28 million people, just an estimated 16,100 low-income people commute to work via car in Lower Manhattan, according to the MTA.)

    Other critics say it could divert more traffic and pollution from diesel trucks in Manhattan into lower-income areas like the Bronx, which has the highest rates of asthma hospitalization in the city.

    The MTA and other agencies have plans to mitigate many of these adverse effects, however.

    Taxis and for-hire vehicles will be tolled only once a day. Drivers who make less than $50,000 a year or are enrolled in certain government aid programs will get 25% discounts after their first 10 trips every month. Trucks and other vehicles will get 50% discounts during overnight hours.

    Additionally, the MTA pledged $10 million to install air filtration units in schools near highways, $20 million for a program to fight asthma, and other investments to improve air quality and the enviornment in areas where more traffic could be diverted.

    The stakes of New York City’s program are high, and leaders in other cities are watching the results closely.

    If successful, congestion pricing could be a model for other US cities, which are trying to recover from the pandemic and face similar challenges of climate change and aging public infrastructure.

    “It’s good to see New York City’s program is moving forward,” said the Los Angeles Times Editorial Board last month. “Los Angeles should watch, learn and go next.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • North America’s largest transportation network suspends use of Twitter for service alerts | CNN Business

    North America’s largest transportation network suspends use of Twitter for service alerts | CNN Business

    [ad_1]


    New York
    CNN
     — 

    North America’s largest transportation network suspended the use of Twitter for service alerts Thursday, saying the “reliability of the platform can no longer be guaranteed.”

    The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which serves 15.3 million passengers across a 5,000 square-mile area surrounding New York City, Long Island, New York State and Connecticut, also said their access to Twitter through its Application Programming Interface (API) was involuntarily interrupted twice over the last two weeks.

    “The MTA does not pay tech platforms to publish service information and has built redundant tools that provide service alerts in real time,” MTA’s Acting Chief Customer Officer Shanifah Rieara said in a statement. “Those include the MYmta and TrainTime apps, the MTA’s homepage at MTA.info, email alerts and text messages.”

    “Service alerts are also available on thousands of screens in stations, on trains and in buses,” Rieara said. “The MTA has terminated posting service information to Twitter, effective immediately, as the reliability of the platform can no longer be guaranteed.”

    The @MTA app will remain active and customers will still be able to tweet at MTA accounts, including @nyct_subway, and get responses, according to the MTA.

    – CNN’s Julian Cummings contributed to this report

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • New York MTA resumes transit alerts on Twitter | CNN Business

    New York MTA resumes transit alerts on Twitter | CNN Business

    [ad_1]



    CNN
     — 

    New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority said it would resume posting automated transit alerts to Twitter on Thursday after the social media company backtracked on a plan to charge public service accounts for access to the platform.

    In a statement Thursday, MTA Acting Chief Customer Officer Shanifah Rieara said Twitter had tried to charge the MTA more than $500,000 a year for access to its platform, but that the MTA refused.

    “We’re glad that Twitter has committed to offering free API access for public service providers,” the MTA tweeted, referring to the software interface that enables third parties to create automated posts on Twitter.

    In another tweet, it added: “We know that customers missed us, so starting today, we’ll resume posting service alerts on @NYCTSubway, @NYCTBus, @LIRR, and @MetroNorth.”

    In recent weeks, Twitter has sought to charge businesses for the ability to access its platform. Its paid plans cost as much as $2.5 million a year for top-tier access. The paywall’s introduction in March prompted widespread warnings by public services of possible disruptions to weather and transit alerts.

    Amid the outcry, Twitter changed course on Tuesday and said that verified government accounts would once again be able to post automated tweets for free.

    [ad_2]

    Source link