New York Post

City’s ‘power’-mad

$108M tab to fuel muni fleet a 58% hike

- By RICH CALDER and JON LEVINE

We continue to constantly monitor costs and look for efficienci­es, in line with the mayor’s fiscally responsibl­e approach.

New York City has spent more than $108 million over the past year on fuel to rev up the nation’s largest municipal fleet of vehicles — a whopping 58% increase over the previous 12 months.

Data provided exclusivel­y to The Post by Comptrolle­r Brad Lander’s office shows city agencies racked up $108,395,802 in fuel bills to power the fleet’s nearly 30,000 vehicles between July 1, 2021 and June 20. The fiscal year ends June 30.

In the previous fiscal year, the city spent $68,780,299 on gas.

Among the agencies slammed hardest were the Sanitation Department, which saw a 68% increase in costs to $31.1 million; the Transporta­tion Department, which saw a 79.3% spike to $21.9 million; the NYPD, which jumped 57.5% to $21.7 million; and the FDNY, which saw costs surge 55% to $13 million.

“Inflation and global shortages are fueling the rising cost of gas, and everyone is feeling the squeeze, including city agencies,” Lander said.

Last week, the national average price for gasoline hit $5 for the first time ever as energy prices continue to be through the roof worldwide.

Adams spokesman Jonah Allon

The surge in fuel costs comes despite efforts over the past few years by Mayor Adams and his predecesso­r Bill de Blasio to trim the municipal fleet’s size and have workers rely more on hybrid and electric vehicles. Adams plans to cut 855 vehicles from the fleet during the next fiscal year beginning July 1.

The fleet used 25,796,373 gallons of fuel in fiscal 2021 and was on pace to exceed that total during the first four months of this fiscal year, using 8,764,888 gallons, according to data released by the Mayor’s Office in February.

City officials attribute the uptick in gas use to the fact that fewer city vehicles were on the road during the height of the pandemic.

The city’s overall energy costs rose the past year by 10.3%, or nearly $139 million, from $1.34 billion in fiscal 2021 to $1.48 billion this fiscal year, the comptrolle­r said.

Fuel costs to heat, light up and run city properties spiked by 65% to $91.1 million. The city relies on natural gas and other sources of energy to operate its schools, libraries and most of its properties, and that cost use rose by 5% to $1.28 billion.

The Mayor’s Office disputed the comptrolle­r’s numbers, saying on Friday its data shows city-vehicle fuel costs rose by 50%, from $61.4 million in fiscal 2021 to $92.2 million to date this fiscal year.

“The rising cost of gas, high inflation, and ongoing supply chain issues have all contribute­d to higher fuel costs for city agencies,” said Jonah Allon, a mayoral spokesman. “Despite this challengin­g environmen­t, we continue to constantly monitor costs and look for efficienci­es, in line with the mayor’s fiscally responsibl­e approach.”

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