N.Y.C. Congestion Pricing Begins on Sunday

1 month ago 17

New York|Welcome to the Congestion Zone: New York Toll Program Is Set to Begin

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/04/nyregion/congestion-pricing-nyc.html

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After twists and turns, a contentious plan meant to reduce traffic and pay for transit improvements is scheduled to take effect at midnight Sunday.

Traffic on a New York City street, pictured from overhead.
Congestion pricing, having survived numerous court cases and an earlier delay ordered by Gov. Kathy Hochul, is hours away from beginning. Credit...Karsten Moran for The New York Times

Winnie HuAna Ley

Jan. 4, 2025, 3:00 a.m. ET

Starting Sunday, most drivers will have to pay $9 to enter the busiest part of Manhattan. That much is clear.

But almost everything else about New York City’s congestion-pricing plan, the first of its kind in the United States, continues to be fiercely debated.

Transportation, business and civic leaders, as well as long-suffering subway and bus riders, consider the tolling plan a long-overdue step toward unclogging the city’s gridlocked streets, raising billions of dollars for an aging transit system and encouraging a more sustainable future with fewer cars.

“Congestion pricing will finally tackle the gridlock that is slowing down emergency vehicles, polluting air and wasting people’s time in traffic,” said John J. McCarthy, the chief of policy and external relations for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which will oversee the program.

But suburban commuters, residents of the city’s so-called transit deserts and public officials of both parties say congestion pricing will do little to reduce traffic while punishing drivers from outside Manhattan with few other travel options. These critics have called the tolling plan a money-grab by the M.T.A., a state agency with a history of financial problems.

“This is just simply a misguided policy,” said Ed Day, the Rockland County executive. He has sued to halt the program, which, he said, “raises serious questions about fairness, priorities and accountability.”


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