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Trump to Halt NY Congestion Pricing by Terminating Approval
Trump to Halt NY Congestion Pricing by Terminating Approval · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- The Trump administration is moving to block New York City’s congestion pricing program, reversing a federal approval granted last year and setting up a legal showdown over the tolling initiative.

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The Federal Highway Administration plans to withdraw its agreement with the state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which allowed the agency to impose tolls on drivers entering some of Manhattan’s busiest streets, US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a statement on Wednesday. The decision will likely halt the program, which began operating just last month.

“New York State’s congestion pricing plan is a slap in the face to working class Americans and small business owners,” Duffy said in a statement. “Every American should be able to access New York City regardless of their economic means. It shouldn’t be reserved for an elite few.”

The decision quickly sparked a legal challenge by the MTA, which sued the Trump administration in federal court on Wednesday, saying efforts to halt the program are illegal and seeking a judicial order declaring them “null and void.” The MTA said that the FHWA doesn’t have the legal authority to terminate an agreement that’s already been approved and implemented.

“Today, the MTA filed papers in federal court to ensure that the highly successful program – which has already dramatically reduced congestion, bringing reduced traffic and faster travel times, while increasing speeds for buses and emergency vehicles – will continue,” Janno Lieber, the MTA’s chief executive officer, said in a statement.

Lieber said the tolling program would remain in effect until there is a court decision on the matter.

The new charge of $9 for most drivers appears to be cutting traffic. There were 1.2 million fewer vehicles south of 60th street between Jan. 5 and Jan. 31, a 7.5% drop, according to the MTA. The travel time for the Holland Tunnel, which connects New Jersey to lower Manhattan, has been cut by nearly half.

Congestion pricing is expected to raise $15 billion to modernize subway signals from the 1930s, make more stations accessible and extend the Second Avenue subway to Harlem. Without that new revenue, the MTA and state lawmakers will need to find an alternative funding source or postpone vital infrastructure projects meant to improve mass-transit service and attract more riders.