Bloomberg plan for U.S. AirTrains hit
If you like Kennedy Airport’s train to the plane — and Gov. Cuomo’s much-derided plan for a similar train at LaGuardia Airport — you’ll like presidential candidate Mike Bloomberg’s latest gambit for votes.
Plans to build passenger rail lines to some of the country’s busiest airports are part of the former mayor’s infrastructure platform to be unveiled on Wednesday.
Bloomberg (inset) wants to model those railways after Cuomo’s proposed AirTrain to LaGuardia, which has been been chided by community activists and transit advocates as a $2 billion “boondoggle” that’s a waste of taxpayer dollars.
“That is the type of project that we would be looking to prioritize under this plan,” Bloomberg spokesman Brian Reich said of the LaGuardia AirTrain.
If approved, the LaGuardia AirTrain would offer a twoseat, two-fare ride from Manhattan and other points in the city. The service would connect to the subway and Long Island Railroad at a new station at MetsWillets Point, forcing riders from Manhattan to trek to eastern Queens before doubling back to catch their flights.
Ben Kabak, who runs the transit advocacy blog Second Ave. Sagas and has led a campaign against the LaGuardia AirTrain, said Bloomberg should rethink his pitch.
“The LGA AirTrain, which would increase travel times for the vast majority of travelers and airport employees, is not a project we should be seeking to replicate around the country,” Kabak said.
Rep. Alexandria OcasioCortez (D-Bronx, Queens) has joined a chorus of Queens residents who are protesting the AirTrain. She sent a letter Jan. 10 to the Federal Aviation Administration that asked the agency to look into alternatives, like an extension of the subway’s N line.
Reich said Bloomberg will start with the country’s 10 busiest airports — six of which already have rail access.