Hochul Halts Congestion Pricing in a Stunning 11th-Hour Shift - Governor decides not to do something retarded, urbanists assblasted

Hochul Halts Congestion Pricing in a Stunning 11th-Hour Shift​

Weeks before New York was to charge motorists to enter Manhattan’s business district, Gov. Kathy Hochul postponed the program citing economic concerns.


Gov. Kathy Hochul on Wednesday directed the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to pause the congestion pricing program.Credit...Cindy Schultz for The New York Times
By Grace Ashford
Reporting from the State Capitol in Albany, N.Y.
June 5, 2024Updated 1:36 p.m. ET
Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York announced on Wednesday that she was shelving the long-awaited tolling plan known as congestion pricing, just weeks before it was to go into effect.
“After careful consideration I have come to the difficult decision that implementing the planned congestion pricing system risks too many unintended consequences,” Ms. Hochul said, adding: “I have directed the M.T.A. to indefinitely pause the program.”
The decision, Ms. Hochul said, was not an easy one, but nonetheless crucial in light of the lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic on working families and New York City’s economy.
The congestion pricing plan, the first of its kind in the nation and a program that has been decades in the making, was slated to start June 30. Drivers using E-ZPass would have paid as much as $15 to enter Manhattan south of 60th Street.

The governor said she feared that instituting a toll to drive into the borough would “create another obstacle to our economic recovery.”

“Let’s be real: A $15 charge may not seem like a lot to someone who has the means but it can break the budget of a hard-working middle-class household,” Ms. Hochul said.
Word of the governor’s last-minute misgivings began to circulate in Albany on Tuesday night, and quickly sent shock waves through the New York State Capitol by Wednesday morning, the penultimate day of the legislative session.
Few could say that they loved congestion pricing. It was a politically unattractive proposal championed by both economists and environmentalists as the solution not only to the financial woes of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the state agency that runs New York’s subways and buses, but also the city’s infamous gridlock.
But after decades of debate, hearings, studies and planning, most Democrats had made a grudging peace with the plan — none more publicly than Ms. Hochul, who has defended it as a necessary step toward rebuilding New York’s economy.

Just two weeks ago, the governor told attendees at the Global Economic Summit in Ireland that implementing congestion pricing was critical to “making cities more livable.”
“I’m very upset that suddenly, out of the blue, this would pop up,” Senator Liz Krueger, a Manhattan Democrat said on Wednesday, adding: “If we stop congestion pricing now we’re never going to get it.”
Kate Slavin of the Regional Plan Association, a nonprofit urban research and advocacy group that has championed the tolling program, called the move “a total betrayal of New Yorkers and our climate.”
But even as transit advocates decried the move, an undercurrent of support was stirring among lawmakers, particularly those representing purple districts.
“Many see it as welcome news,” James Skoufis, a Democrat who represents Orange County in the State Senate said, adding that despite the plan’s approval five years earlier, opposition had been growing in the Legislature. “Some of it is outspoken, some of it is quieter, but it is widespread.”

In her address, Ms. Hochul stressed her commitment to public transit, and ensuring that the transportation authority had the funding it needed to complete long overdue capital projects. But she said that the city’s outlook had changed since the plan was approved in 2019. “Workers were in the office five days a week, crime was at record lows and tourism was at record highs,” she said. “Circumstances have changed and we must respond to the facts on the ground.”
Ms. Hochul needs only the approval of the authority’s board to halt implementation of the plan. But without the projected $1 billion a year for the city’s buses and subways, the transit system would soon fall into crisis.
Ms. Hochul could fill that gap, at least temporarily, with money from the state reserves. But she is also said to be looking at a more durable revenue source, in the form of a tax on city businesses, which would require the approval of the State Legislature.
Reporting was contributed by Nicholas Fandos, Jeffery C. Mays and Claire Fahy.
Grace Ashford covers New York government and politics for The Times. More about Grace Ashford

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The $15 charge was basically to keep the subway system afloat.

@quaawaa
 
My completely uneducated guess about the congestion pricing thing is it was determined that people driving into the city would sooner move out of the state entirely than pay extra for the privilege to enter said city, thus either nullifying the perceived increase in funds or even causing an outright net negative for the economy as a whole.
Well, remember, the idea was that the MTA needed more funding (as it always does). If the State of New York/Hochul weren't thinking of how congestion pricing actually worked, the bugmen definitely haven't.

Their line of thinking goes that if people stop coming in by car is "Well, that means the Manhattan area can have less cars, and that's always good" but that also means that the MTA won't get the expected funding, and that means a budget shortfall. There's also the risk of a New York City business simply moving to the suburbs (or out of the city altogether). I generally don't have nice things to say about Hochul but even she figured this out—to quote her, the congestion pricing "risks too many unintended consequences".
 
There's a lot of reddit salt:

How many people die on/due to public transport in NYC yearly? I'm assuming fewer than 250 people get stabbed/shit/pushed in front of trains by niggers, but I wonder how those events and accidents compare to driving deaths.

Are all the pedestrians/cyclists killed by cars, incidentally? Bus fatalities go towards public transport.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: IAmNotAlpharius
City folk basically think they are the center of the universe and often times go psychotic when they see actual greenery.
You just reminded me of one of my all time favorite reddit screengrabs:
agender human is terrified.png
 
You just reminded me of one of my all time favorite reddit screengrabs:
View attachment 6059621
There’s actually a lot of data that argues the idea that people who literally don’t touch grass, see flowers, see trees, or whatever get psychotic. It was originally something they studied as cities got bigger, but zoo animals exhibit it too.

Captivity with no plant life causes you to go nuts basically.
 
How many people die on/due to public transport in NYC yearly? I'm assuming fewer than 250 people get stabbed/shit/pushed in front of trains by niggers, but I wonder how those events and accidents compare to driving deaths.

Are all the pedestrians/cyclists killed by cars, incidentally? Bus fatalities go towards public transport.

Hey, BIGOT--

259 people dieded TO cars!

NOT from cars
NOT in cars
NOT on cars

but TO cars.
 
You just reminded me of one of my all time favorite reddit screengrabs:
View attachment 6059621
Funny considering they’re environmentalists. I like the green.

I suspect a lot of r/fuckcars are people who lived in NYC and had to move out because they’re broke. So they piss themselves because they can’t function in small towns or suburbs.
 
The "Congestion Zone" would also have affected trucks (even more than $15) so the price of goods would go up for everybody. This isn't new, like thinking fuel costs won't affect them if they don't use a car, but still hits them in food and heating anyway.

congestion pricing.png
 
The "Congestion Zone" would also have affected trucks (even more than $15) so the price of goods would go up for everybody. This isn't new, like thinking fuel costs won't affect them if they don't use a car, but still hits them in food and heating anyway.

View attachment 6061225
Half of its supporters would hate it the second after they get their bill from Uber. $2.50/ride adds up fast.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: TowinKarz
My only regret with those numbers its that they aren't saying it was 259 cyclists and nobody else.

As to car accidents, how many people die of other causes in NYC every year? Maybe they should try putting down the fork instead.
 
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