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MTA Fare Hikes: Pay More, Get Less

Updated 8:09 AM EDT, Fri, Nov 21, 2008

Not only can commuters expect to pay $2.50, but they can expect longer waits and more crowded trains.
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Not only can commuters expect to pay $2.50 a ride, but they'll have to wait longer and brave even more crowded trains.

 

The cost of commuting by bus or train in New York City would skyrocket next year under a plan unveiled Thursday by the nation's largest public transit system.

Significant Cuts Slated Throughout MTA Operations

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The budget plan calls for simultaneously significantly raising fares and tolls and severely gutting service across the system.

Brace Yourselves, MTA Riders

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The billion-dollar budget deficit could mean major service cuts and higher fares for mass transit riders.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority said it needs to raise fare revenue by 23 percent by June in order to plug a yawning budget gap worsened by the global financial crisis.

The details of just which fares will rise, and by how much, are still being worked out, but if applied across the board they would raise the cost of a single bus or subway ride to nearly $2.50. A monthly pass would cost nearly $100.

Adding insult to injury, the authority simultaneously proposed service cuts that include the elimination of bus and subway lines in areas where there is either low ridership or a duplication of services.

While none of the changes would cut off neighborhoods entirely, they will mean longer travel times, more waiting around on the platform, and stuffing more people into subways that are already overcrowded.

MTA Executive Director Elliot Sander said he anticipates "an emotional reaction" from New Yorkers upset with the changes, but said the authority has no choice. It is required by law to balance its budget.

If the system doesn't take action, it would face an estimated $1.4 billion deficit in its operating budget next year and a $3 billion deficit by 2012, Sander said. The MTA plans to eliminate 2,700 jobs next year to cut costs.

"None of us wants to see a return to the kind of transit system that defined New York in the 1970s," he said.

The cuts and fare hikes still need to be approved by the MTA's board before they take effect. That vote is expected in December, following a round of public hearings.

There is also a chance that a commission appointed by New York's governor to examine the MTA's finances and structure could make alternative recommendations next month.

The MTA's ability to slash costs is limited, in part, by massive debt taken on as the agency rebuilt itself after decades of neglect. It now owes $27 billion and shells out $1.5 billion a year in interest and principal payments.
  Gene Russianoff, a spokesman for the Straphangers Campaign, a rider advocacy group, assailed the agency's plans. With the economy souring and growing numbers of people counting on affordable public transit, now is no time for a "whopping fare hike," he said.

"It's crazy to be talking about service cuts," he said.

Roger Toussaint, president of the union that represents most MTA workers, said the authority should streamline administration "before considering even a single service cut."

Some of the specific changes proposed by the MTA during a board meeting Thursday include a hike in the express bus fare from $5 to $7.50, as well as a major increase in fares for paratransit services.

On the subway system, the Z train, which links parts of Brooklyn and Queens to downtown Manhattan, would disappear and have its stops taken over by the J train, which already covers the same route. The W train, which runs from Manhattan to Queens, would also vanish and have its stops taken over by other trains.

Copyright Associated Press / NBC New York

Comments (52)

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  • freddy Wednesday, Jun 17 at 11:22 AM FLAG COMMENT I am geting ready to move back to NY City, I have lived in toms river and paid a cost i can longer afford, and now I hear there will be hikes in NYc metro /and mta not fair , not at all, with this economy , I cannot understand this are they all insane?
  • Gino Friday, Nov 21 at 10:15 AM FLAG COMMENT Has anyone looked into the MTA's crazy East Side Access program to join Penn Station and Grand Central Stations. The cost is in the billions and is underway. A ridiculous scheme and an enormous waste of money particulary in this economic time.
  • Sowhat Friday, Nov 21 at 1:15 AM FLAG COMMENT Next year around this time, they'll say they need to increase the fare to balance out what the law requires..So what? we'll have $120 of unlimited card? What really funny about them is they always have such a brilliant excuse. When there was inflation, they needed to increase cuz less people commuted to work, but they needed to maintain their budget according to what they said. Of course, u need more moeny to maintain same ser ... MORE >
  • Linda Weiss Friday, Nov 21 at 12:33 AM FLAG COMMENT Why is the Second Ave. subway being built when there is no money for the current subways?
  • nymgoodman Thursday, Nov 20 at 11:49 PM FLAG COMMENT The last fare increase was to enable a lot of improvements that have yet to be seen, and to help finance construction of a billion-dollar-plus station near the Javits Center. How about rechanneling those funds and eliminating this deficit without inconveniencing anyone? If service to the west 30's is so important, it can be achieved by remapping the bus routes to cover the few extra blocks without major disruption or cost. ... MORE >

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