Fight the Hike!

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- by Joseph P. Addabbo, Jr. - Councilman, 32nd District

The MTA apparently has a time machine.

Last month the authority announced that it wants to make history for the second time since the 1980’s by raising the fare yet again for a second consecutive year in a row. The announcement tops off what has been a year of outrageous forays into transportation proposals paid for on the backs of the middle class.

The MTA has a widening budget gap of nearly $900 million and it expects transit riders to pay the bill. But I am not convinced that service has improved since March even when the MTA raised the monthly Metrocard rate, a move that targeted commuters rather than tourists, yet the MTA expects the middle class to shell out further for the shortfall. We heard a similar theme in March when the mayor introduced congestion pricing as a way to funnel federal tax dollars to the subway system, which would’ve placed an undue financial burden on Queens residents, many of whom live in areas ill-served by public transportation.

Queens is the fastest growing borough in the city, but we have disproportionately fewer subway lines, the majority of which, run along the central arteries of the borough. Residents in South East Queens and even in areas such as Middle Village and Ridgewood, are not privileged with a great number of subway stops and rely overwhelmingly on surface transit. Neither of these two proposals, neither the fare hike or congestion pricing, are right for Queens, which is why I oppose them both.

I’m starting a campaign to Fight the Hike in order to make our voices heard. Join me at www.fightthehike08.com to register your opposition and find out what you can do to keep the subway affordable. Look for me at various Queens subway stops where I’ll be out talking to commuters and collecting signatures, so we can let the MTA know that Queens says “no” to any future fare hikes.

IBO - Inside the Budget (MTA)


MTA Wants More Public Subsidies, But How Much Does It Get Now?

PRESS COVERAGE OF THE METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY’S
(MTA) plan for addressing its budget shortfalls has focused on public reaction to the proposal to raise bus and subway fares. Less attention has been paid to the responses of the Mayor and Governor to the MTA’s request for more city and state aid. Both Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Governor David Paterson have said that the city and state already provide the MTA with ample subsidies and that City Hall and Albany face their own fiscal difficulties...