Current:Home > NewsNew York eyes reviving congestion pricing toll before Trump takes office -OceanicInvest
New York eyes reviving congestion pricing toll before Trump takes office
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:20:52
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is considering ways to revive a program that would have charged drivers a new $15 toll to enter certain Manhattan neighborhoods — before President-elect Donald Trump takes office and can block it.
In the days since Trump’s election, Hochul and her staff have been reaching out to state lawmakers to gauge support for resuscitating the plan — known as “congestion pricing” — with a lower price tag, according to two people familiar with the outreach. The people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were revealing private conversations.
Hochul, a Democrat, hit the brakes on the plan just weeks before it was set to launch this summer, even with all the infrastructure already in place.
She said at the time she was worried it would cost motorists too much money, but it was also widely seen as a political move to help Democrats in closely watched congressional races in the city’s suburbs. The fee would have come on top of the already hefty tolls to enter the city via some river crossings, and Republicans were expected to use it as a cudgel in an election heavily focused on cost-of-living issues.
Some of those Democrats ended up winning, but so did Trump, who has vowed to terminate congestion pricing from the Oval Office.
Now, Hochul has less than two months to salvage the scheme before the Republican president-elect, whose Trump Tower is within the toll zone, takes office for another four years
Hochul had long insisted the program would eventually reemerge, but previously offered no clear plan for that — or to replace the billions of dollars in was supposed to generate to help New York City’s ailing public transit system.
She is now floating the idea of lowering the toll for most people driving passenger vehicles into Manhattan below 60th Street from its previous cost of $15 down to $9, according to the two people. Her office suggested that a new internet sales tax or payroll tax could help to make up the money lost by lowering the fee, one of the people said.
A spokesman for Hochul declined to comment and pointed to public remarks the governor made last week when she said: “Conversations with the federal government are not new. We’ve had conversations — ongoing conversations — with the White House, the DOT, the Federal Highway Administration, since June.”
She reiterated last week that she thinks $15 is too high.
A key question hanging over the process is whether lowering the toll amount would require the federal government to conduct a lengthy environmental review of the program, potentially delaying the process into the incoming administration’s term.
The program, which was approved by the New York state Legislature in 2019, already stalled for years awaiting such a review during the first Trump administration.
The U.S. Department of Transportation did not immediately return an emailed request for comment.
Laura Gillen, a Democrat who last week won a close election for a House seat on Long Island just outside the city, responded to the congestion pricing news with dismay.
“We need a permanent end to congestion pricing efforts, full stop. Long Island commuters cannot afford another tax,” Gillen wrote on the social media site X after Politico New York first reported on the governor’s efforts to restart the toll program.
Andrew Albert, a member of the MTA board, said he supported the return of the fee but worried that $9 would not be enough to achieve the policy’s goals.
“It doesn’t raise enough money, it doesn’t clear enough cars off the streets or make the air clean enough,” he said.
___
AP reporter Jake Offenhartz contributed from New York.
veryGood! (59)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Two-time Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber retires after 13 MLB seasons
- Migrant crossings fall sharply along Texas border, shifting to Arizona and California
- Texas attorney sentenced to 6 months in alleged abortion attempt of wife's baby
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Melting ice could create chaos in US weather and quickly overwhelm oceans, studies warn
- Inside Céline Dion's Rare Health Battle
- Harris slams ‘politically motivated’ report as Biden to name task force to protect classified docs
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Rihanna, Adele, Ryan Reynolds and More Celebs Who Were Born in the Year of the Dragon
Ranking
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Horoscopes Today, February 9, 2024
- How One of the Nation’s Fastest Growing Counties Plans to Find Water in the Desert
- Hawaii Supreme Court quotes The Wire in ruling on gun rights: The thing about the old days, they the old days
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Nurse acquitted of involuntary manslaughter in 2019 death of a 24-year-old California jail inmate
- Nearly 200 abused corpses were found at a funeral home. Why did it take authorities years to act?
- Will $36M Florida Lottery Mega Millions prize go unclaimed? The deadline is ticking.
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
2 deputies shot, 1 killed at traffic stop in Blount County, Tennessee, manhunt underway
Georgia Republicans say Fani Willis inquiry isn’t a ‘witch hunt,’ but Democrats doubt good faith
A Super Bowl in 'new Vegas'; plus, the inverted purity of the Stanley Cup
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
An Ohio city settles with a truck driver and a former K-9 officer involved in July attack
Cheap, plentiful and devastating: The synthetic drug kush is walloping Sierra Leone
An Ohio city settles with a truck driver and a former K-9 officer involved in July attack