Tuesday’s Headlines: Just Pay for the Damn Subway Already Edition

Photo: Shinya Suzuki via Flickr
Photo: Shinya Suzuki via Flickr

Yesterday’s MTA board meeting was the usual high-stakes game over how to pay for public transit, aka the lifeblood of the city and region.

The talk was about shortfalls and dedicated funding streams (amNY, NYDN), precipitous ridership declines (NY Post), out-year budget brinksmanship (Streetsblog). The City had a good angle: McKinsey & Co., which has been so wrong about so much with regard to the city, got its forecasts wrong.

We’re tired of it.

Simply stated, millions of New Yorkers depend on transit: So, stop with the neo-liberal blather. Get congestion pricing working. Put a price tag on every one of our three million “parking” spaces to fund transit. Get people out of cars and onto trains and buses before the whole goddamn town is underwater because of climate change.

Please.

Kevin Duggan of amNY, as he often does, found a silver lining in the meeting: The MTA inked a deal to roll out cell service in its tunnels and provide free Wi-Fi at its stations. The Daily News dug into a document for an early morning dispatch: The agency will vote on fixing Roosevelt-era signals in Brooklyn before working on busy lines with newer (Nixon- and Reagan-era!) ones.

In other news:

  • Why are sharks so much smarter than people when it comes to the real danger? (Hell Gate)
  • Another car driver crashed into another Staten Island home, this one on molto pericoloso Hylan Boulevard. Either drivers on the Rock are whack or the roads stink, Joe Borelli! Maybe both? (SI Live)
  • A New York City cop who lives on Long Island got himself arrested in a road-rage incident that ended with a drawn gun. (NYDN)
  • A speeding driver killed his passenger and maybe himself outside of JFK. (NYDN)
  • The allegedly speeding, drunk man who killed a family of three, including two New Yorkers, on Jericho Turnpike, was arraigned. (NBCNY)
  • So many questions about Gateway. (Mass Transit)
  • Gov. Hochul signed a speed-camera carve-out for Medical-emergency first responders, such as Hatzolah drivers. (Yeshiva World News)
  • Who’s using all those dirt bikes and ATVs that Mayor Adams is so fond of crushing? Delivery workers, many of whom don’t realize the machines are illegal. (Documented)
  • The Riverdale Press bids the city to keep attacking the scourge of ghost cars.
  • ICYMI: Some entitled Manhattanites think that resident parking permits will save them from having to spend money on garaging their cars. They’re wrong. (NY Post)
  • We love “stupid motorist” pix because, as pedestrians, we are constantly astonished by the sheer incompetence, inattention and lawlessness of the people who routinely operate several-ton vehicles, most of which goes unremarked. On the plus side, simple infrastructure like the bollard in the picture below clearly saves lives when reckless drivers are on the road. (Via Twitter)

https://twitter.com/adamfc/status/1551623829398626306

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

Live: Follow the MTA Finance Committee’s Fare Hike Meeting

|
The MTA Finance Committee is meeting today to vote on the proposed doomsday fare hikes, and Ben Kabak at Second Avenue Sagas is doing his part to make the workings of the MTA more transparent and accessible to the public. He’s been liveblogging the proceedings from the beginning. Despite the dire stakes (or perhaps because […]

Transit Riders: The MTA Can’t Run on Cuomo’s IOUs

|
Straphangers can’t pay the MTA with an IOU, so why should Governor Andrew Cuomo get away with it? That’s the message Riders Alliance members brought to the MTA board meeting this morning. After trying and failing to swipe into the Bowling Green subway station with a giant “IOU” Metrocard, the group proceeded to MTA headquarters. In October, […]

Fare Hike 2010: Your Chance to Prop Up Albany

|
Straphangers, are you ready to subsidize the runaway state budget? By popular demand, here’s an updated graphic depiction of how the state of New York stole dedicated transit tax revenue from the MTA in last year’s deficit reduction package. The $190 million pot of money is known as the state’s 18-B obligation to the MTA. […]