New York Daily News

Port Authority set to ax 626 jobs in virus fallout

- BY CLAYTON GUSE

Port Authority officials on Thursday laid out plans to slash 626 jobs from the agency’s 8,000-employee payroll amid a COVID-19 budget crunch.

The pandemic has sunk the region’s airport traffic by 77% from last year, while ridership on the agency’s PATH train is down 78%. Crossings on the Port Authority’s bridges and tunnels are down by 14%, officials said.

The dismal figures have depleted Port Authority revenues by $1.4 billion so far this year and that figure is expected to grow to $2.7 billion by the end of 2021, said the agency’s executive director Rick Cotton.

The losses required the Port Authority to plan an operating budget for next year that cuts costs by 15% — or $1.3 billion — and guts plans for capital constructi­on work. Cotton said the pain could be avoided if Congress comes through with $3 billion in relief for the agency.

The Port Authority in March received $450 million through the CARES Act — but money was only able to fund the region’s airports, and didn’t help stem losses in revenues at bridges, tunnels, seaports or PATH train.

The planned job cuts would primarily be executed through “attrition and voluntary severance programs,” Cotton said.

Port Authority chairman Kevin O’Toole said, “There have been no conversati­ons of fee increases or toll increases” to fill the budget hole, and asserted that Congress is the agency’s only hope.

The final 2021 budget will be voted on by the Port Authority board next month.

The Port Authority has already paused $1 billion in constructi­on this year, and will cut $1.2 billion on constructi­on costs next year without federal aid, officials said.

Cotton said the Port Authority will continue constructi­on on projects that are already underway, like the overhaul of LaGuardia Airport. Officials will decide next year which projects will be removed from the agency’s $37 billion 10-year capital plan that began in 2017.

One project that has not gotten final approval is also expected to move ahead. Plans to build a controvers­ial $2 billion AirTrain from Willets Point in Queens to LaGuardia, which will require a transfer and charge riders a second fare like existing rail links at JFK and Newark Airports.

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