Feds ease jam on NY conge$tion
New York can finally proceed with a shorter environmental review of its plan to toll downtown Manhattan car trips, the Federal Highway Administration said Tuesday — ending years of delays begun during the Trump administration.
Under the FHWA decision, the MTA and city may now proceed with an “environmental assessment” — which “requires less time to complete than an Environmental Impact Statement should no significant impacts be identified,” the FHWA said in a statement.
Gov. Cuomo last year accused the Trump administration of holding the toll program “hostage” by refusing to signal which type of environmental review would be required to enact the program under the National Environmental Protection Action.
Tolls on auto travel in the Manhattan “Central Business District” below 60th Street were scheduled to launch at the beginning of next year. Transit officials now expect the program to get started as late as 2023.
Congestion pricing is expected to raise $1 billion each year for the perennially cash-strapped MTA, which plans to use the money to borrow $15 billion over four years for its $51.5 billion modernization plan.
“We need congestion pricing, we need to make sure we have the resources to bring back the subways and buses strong,” Mayor de Blasio said during a press conference upon hearing the FHWA’s decision.
New York will be the first US city to toll downtown car trips, but other international cities have had similar tolls in place for years, including London, Singapore and Milan.