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Congestion Pricing Is Pro-Queens
Source: Queens Ledger
Publication Date: Oct. 25, 2007 By Shane Miller Kate Slevin, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign (TSTC), which is one of 148 groups that make up the Campaign for the Future of New York, said Queens would immediately see transit improvements if congestion pricing is implemented, thanks in large part to $354 million dollars in federal money that will go to the city - money she says would be lost if congestion pricing fails. Those proposed improvements include increased service on the E and F lines, three new express bus routes, including one from College Point to Manhattan, and a new Bus Rapid Transit Route. Additional buses would also be added to existing routes in the borough, Slevin said. "These are very real and tangible improvements, but we need the money for them," she added. Likewise, a report in The Daily News on Monday stated that a few minor tweaks in the city's estimated annual operating costs could more than double the yearly expense of congestion pricing, leaving no additional money for mass transit. "If we don't do congestion pricing," argued Slevin, "we are not going to raise any money at all. It may be expensive, but we need the resources." Critics of congestion pricing have also labeled the idea a regressive tax, saying that it would have more of an impact on poorer New Yorkers who drive to Manhattan, as opposed to wealthier workers commuting by car to the central business district who can afford the extra $8 per day. However, a separate report released by TSTC and the Pratt Center for Community Development showed that it was in fact wealthier Queens residents who drove into Manhattan each day, while those making less tended to use mass transit. "People who have money make choices poor people don't," said Slevin. Should Burgess' assessment be inaccurate, however, both he and Slevin said that there are ways to address those problems should they arise, but the city won't know about them if congestion pricing isn't given a shot. The New York City Traffic Congestion Mitigation Committee, a 17-member body reviewing congestion pricing and other traffic-related mitigation options, began holding public hearings in New York City on Wednesday. There will be a hearing in Queens on Tuesday, October 30, at the York College Performing Arts Center. PlaNYC predicts that New York City will grow by one million people by the year 2030, a growth that Dan Hendrick of the New York League of Conservation Voters said is already underway in Queens. Environmental IssuesTransportation |
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