NYC Congestion Pricing to Take Effect After Years of Delays

(Bloomberg) -- Congestion pricing will finally take effect on Sunday in New York City, though its long-term future still remains uncertain.

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Drivers entering parts of Manhattan will be charged $9 during peak hours in a program following similar initiatives in London, Stockholm and Singapore that aims to reduce the worst traffic in the world. The first initiative of its kind in the US, congestion pricing promises to bring $15 billion to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the agency that runs the city’s century-old subway and commuter-rail lines, for desperately needed upgrades.

“We’re doing something to deal with the reality of the way that congestion is hurting our city and costing people time and money, that we’re protecting the interests of New Yorkers from a health standpoint,” Janno Lieber, the MTA’s chief executive officer, said late Friday after a judge ruled against New Jersey’s request to stop the program from starting on Sunday.

New York may present a model for developing additional revenue sources for transit, said Tiffany-Ann Taylor, vice president for transportation at the Regional Plan Association, which works to improve the economic health and quality of life in the region.

The debut follows years of political bickering and scores of legal challenges. That includes an unsuccessful 11th-hour attempt to block its implementation by neighboring New Jersey.

“We are disappointed that the courts are allowing congestion pricing to take effect tomorrow,” Natalie Hamilton, a spokesperson for New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, said in an emailed statement after the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit denied the state’s appeal. “We will continue fighting against this unfair and unpopular scheme.”

The Federal Highway Administration faces a Jan. 17 deadline to file additional information on efforts to mitigate the tolling plan’s potential effects on traffic and pollution in the Garden State.

A change in administrations in Washington three days later on Jan. 20 also looms large over the tolling plan. In November, President-elect Donald Trump called the charge a “regressive tax” and said it would be “virtually impossible” for New York City to come back if congestion pricing is in effect. Trump may seek a longer environmental review of the program through a legal suit or find a way to stop the tolling through administrative action, according to Brad Lander, New York City’s Comptroller.