Congestion pricing is on the ropes in New York City, as President Trump appears to be making good on a promise to kill the first-in-the-nation toll. Congestion pricing was nearly 20 years in the ...
Congestion Pricing in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Revenue figures from the Manhattan tolling plan showed that the program is on track to raise billions for mass transit repairs. By Stefanos ...
“Congestion pricing” is the stuffy-sounding name of a New York policy that is, by every available metric, a resounding success. Anyone, including lapsed New Yorker President Trump, saying ...
As New York City barrels toward the end of two months of congestion pricing, and the president's looming threat to close the toll program, the MTA has shared receipts of the first month of revenue.
Last week, President Trump kept yet another promise to voters: he moved to end Manhattan’s six-week-old congestion-pricing program. If this was predictable, so was New York governor Kathy Hochul’s ...
New York’s long-awaited congestion-pricing program went into effect in early January, overcoming numerous legal challenges and an aborted planned launch last June. The program debuted to mixed ...
The MTA said the program is on track to generate $500 million this year. New York City's congestion pricing toll generated nearly $50 million in revenue in its first month, officials said Monday ...
For the latest news developments from President Donald Trump's first 100 days in office, visit our continuously updated blog at newsday.com/trump100days. The MTA ...
Congestion pricing tolls reaped nearly $49 million from Manhattan motorists during the controversial program’s first month — several millions less than the MTA had projected, transit officials ...