- Joined
- Jan 8, 2025
The congestion tax applies to vehicles *entering* areas below 60th street, right? But what about vehicles already there, like taxi drivers or local residents? Since Manhattan is so large and dense, what are the odds that most of the vehicles on those streets would be there regardless of a tax on outside ones entering? And further, I would bet a good amount of vehicles that do enter from outside are delivery trucks or work vans, which would have to enter regardless of a congestion tax. Also take into account that many Manhattanites don't own cars and already use public transport.Turns out that NYC is more congested now after congestion pricing than it was at the same time last year:
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Source (Archive)
I would guess that this is due to the "road diet" projects that the city has done over the past year.
This seems more like a money-making scheme than a serious attempt at reducing traffic.