Home MTA Economics The MTA faces a $10 billion deficit. What does this mean and how can the agency close this gap?

The MTA faces a $10 billion deficit. What does this mean and how can the agency close this gap?

by Benjamin Kabak

The MTA has taken a $10 billion hit due to the ongoing pandemic.

Ten years ago, during the depths of the Great Recession, the MTA faced a budget deficit we then considered massive. At the time, the agency was staring down a hole of $900 million, and to close the gap, the MTA implemented a series of staffing reductions, contract renegotiations and service cuts. Amidst the current coronavirus crisis, as the MTA is facing a $10 billion deficit over the next 18 months, I’ve been thinking more and more about the 2010 service cuts, how costly they were for commuters and how little money they ultimately saved the MTA.

The history of the 2010 cuts is a tortured one, and I’ll spare you the back-and-forth. In broad strokes, the MTA passed a budget at the end of 2009 that required the agency to implement cuts in 2010, and the cuts ran deep. As I detailed at the time, Transit eliminated two subway lines — the V and W trains — rerouted the M, pared back the G, and instituted new load guidelines so that trains wouldn’t be considered crowded enough to warrant more service until even more riders were crammed aboard. The cuts to the city’s bus network were even worse with over 40 routes partially or fully eliminated outright and service on others reduced to bare bones. Bus ridership, which was around 2.3 million per weekday prior to these cuts, has been in a downward spiral since then, bottoming out at 1.77 million per weekday last year.

For all of the inconvenience, added crowded, slower travel and worsened bus service, the MTA saved barely any money. The subway service cuts generated $16.6 million in annual savings and the bus reductions $51.2 million. The service cuts also lead to less revenue as the most inconvenienced riders will find other way to travel. Ultimately, then, cutting — at least on the service side — yields pennies while sacrificing frequency and travel times, key drivers of the utility of transit.

A $10 billion budget hole

The MTA’s current crisis makes 2010’s budget deficit look like a walk in the park. Since March, the MTA has lost most of its riders, most of its toll-payers, much of its advertising revenue and a lot of the transit-supporting tax revenue. As the agency officials detailed in a presentation to Board members last month, the MTA faces a $3.75 billion deficit this year even after a $4 billion infusion of CARES Act cash and approximately $6.6 billion next year. Senior leadership has engaged in a media blitz, lobbying constantly for federal funding (though most of the TV appearances have been local to New York where the Congressional delegation already supports a federal transit bailout rather than national). At this point, though, one “Fox & Friends” appearance by Pat Foye would be more likely to move the right needle than ten more NY1 hits.

This week, the MTA Chair took his message to The Wall Street Journal, as Paul Berger, the paper’s transit beat writer, took a deep dive into the financial state of the MTA:

The nation’s largest transit system teeters on the edge of an unprecedented financial crisis as it emerges from the new coronavirus pandemic, leaving it with few options other than imposing major spending cuts and borrowing billions of dollars, officials say. Patrick Foye, chairman of New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority, said in a July 8 interview that the only way to stave off bleak measures is for the agency to secure $3.9 billion in federal coronavirus bailout funds in the coming weeks. Without the money, subway, bus and rail commuters could be consigned to diminishing services for years. “None of the choices are good, which is why the federal funding is essential,” he said.

The state-controlled authority, which runs New York City’s subway and bus systems as well as two commuter railroads, has almost exhausted $4 billion it received as part of the first federal coronavirus bailout in May. The Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives included a further $3.9 billion for the MTA in a new $3.5 trillion relief package passed the same month. Mr. Foye said he remains cautiously optimistic about receiving the money soon, even though the bill has languished in the Republican-controlled U.S. Senate.

Senate Republicans, who return from recess July 20, have rejected the bill and remain divided on how much to spend and what to spend it on. Standard & Poor’s on Tuesday downgraded the MTA’s credit rating to BBB+ from A-. It said the first round of bailout funds will be exhausted by August and described the authority’s hopes of receiving a next round of federal funding as fading. Even if the authority receives the money, it would last only through the end of this year.

So what comes next?

The MTA cannot cut its way out of this hole…

A Riders Alliance study paints a bleak picture of the MTA’s doomsday scenario.

If the Senate fails to act in the coming weeks, the future is bleak for the MTA and for transit in New York City. The Riders Alliance determined that without federal funding, the MTA would have to generate cuts 20 times more impactful than the 2010 service reductions, and the advocacy group painted a picture of a Doomsday scenario in which half of all subway service is eliminated. Needless to say, New York City as we know cannot exist or rebound with half of its normal subway service, and the report is written to help riders conceptualize the depths of the MTA’s budget crisis. It’s not in any way, shape or form predictive of the future. Yet.

In the past, as Betsy Plum, executive director of the Riders Alliance, told The Journal, the MTA’s financial woes have worked themselves out, but this time, the deficit is simply too large for it to work itself out. “We may truly be in a moment where it cannot work itself out without dramatic injury to the people who most rely on transit,” Plum said to Berger.

Dramatic injury isn’t an outcome anyone wants. MTA leaders hope to avoid pandemic-related service cuts, and fare hikes — other than those already scheduled for 2021 — are off the table. After all, as with service cuts, a 500% fare hike would make the system unaffordable for millions of people who rode pre-pandemic and would exacerbate the city’s financial and affordability crisis. The hole is simply too deep for the MTA to use its usual set of tools to balance its budget, and we should view the MTA as a public good, required during a pandemic and vital to the city’s success all other times. It should always be funded that way.

…Which is not to say they shouldn’t try

Yet, as we well know, the MTA is not a paragon of efficiency, and the current crisis should cause the agency to do some soul-searching on its runaway cost problems. After all, if the MTA cannot reform its spending practices now, amidst the worst budget crisis in 50, if not 91, years, when can they expect to do so?

Most commentators do not seem to grasp the depths of the dollars ands have urged modest business-as-usual approaches. The Citizens Budget Commission issued a new report this week, and while they acknowledged the depths pf the crisis, their five recommendations sounded like every other CBC recommendations on transit spending we’ve heard over the last few decades. “Achieve greater efficiencies”? “Prioritize planned capital projects”? “Optimize service levels”? Borrow money? Those seem like fine suggestions for closing a $100 million budget gap but seem woefully inadequate for some 10 times that size, let alone 100 times, as the MTA currently faces.

Other ideas have more legs. While the MTA may not be able to cut $6 billion and still operate any trains or buses, the savings are there for the taking as The LIRR Today discussed last month:

There’s not $10 billion worth of things to cut, but there’s plenty of room for cost savings, and you don’t even have to look all that hard. Instituting proof of payment on the railroads and eliminating conductors will on its own save about $411 million per year. If LIRR and Metro-North were both forced to cut down their vehicle maintenance costs to the nationwide average without impacting reliability, that would save $347 million per year. Just making LIRR operate as efficiently as Metro-North (not a high standard, by any means) would save $121 million per year. Going to One Person Train Operation (OTPO) on all subway lines, a practice ubiquitous elsewhere in the world, would save about $300 million yearly. There are certainly no shortage of ways to further reign in overtime spending. And that’s just scratching the surface…

Internally, the MTA has options too. Sarah Feinberg, the interim president of NYC Transit, wants to cut spending on pricey consultants as she reorganizes the massive workforce powering subways and buses, and the MTA has outlined what it could do if the federal funding doesn’t come through. To that end, the MTA could use congestion pricing revenue (if the program is approved by the feds) to bond out operating expenses; reduce the workforce; freeze wages; borrow more; or, as a last-gasp measure, cut service and raise fares. It shouldn’t come to that end though as the city can least afford it.

In the end, the MTA will not and cannot go bankrupt. The state will backstop the debt if push ever comes to shove. But as capital and cash dry up, the feds should come to transit’s, and to cities’, rescue, and the MTA should try to explore real and substantive cost control while pushing hard for that bailout. New Yorkers can’t afford an NYC without transit and neither can the country, whether the Senate wants to admit it or not.

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18 comments

Pete July 14, 2020 - 12:00 am

I’m sure it’s not a new idea, but perhaps a way to shift the MTA’s funding is simply a transit tax for every New Yorker and person who gets paid out of the five boroughs, and in exchange everyone gets a reduced rate metrocard, or the subways and buses are free for anyone with a Taxpayer Pass. Roving groups of fare inspectors, like those in Budapest (https://www.amazon.com/Kontroll-Sandor-Csanyi/dp/B0009UZGDW), verify the user has a farecard. All others pay the current fare. CUrrently, farebox revenue was about $6 billion in 2019, if I understood the MTA’s statements. Not sure how many people would be taxable or how much they’d have to pay a month, but it might be cheaper for most of us than buying a Metrocard

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Theorem Ox July 15, 2020 - 1:36 pm

Sales Tax – Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District surcharge of 0.375%

Payroll/Income Tax – Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Mobility Tax of 0.11% to 0.34% depending on a company’s total payroll. It becomes an income tax if you’re self-employed

Fees – Surcharges for riding cabs, a hefty surcharge for driver licenses, insurance, etc.

Plus a few more obscure (for many of us) taxes and fees: https://new.mta.info/budget/dedicated-taxes

Then there’s the push for “Congestion Surcharge” that ostensibly benefits largely residents of a borough that knew the characteristics of where they are living. And that would ultimately raise the cost of doing business and cost of living for the remaining four boroughs and likely the rest of Long Island as well. (Read: Businesses WILL pass along the extra cost they incur for transportation directly or indirectly and as it cascades down the chain, we will all pay for it)

Where would you draw the line for an “public-benefit corporation” that is increasingly seeing fit to benefitting from the public for its continued existence? The corporation that keeps cutting back on service (often obfuscated via “robbing Peter to pay Paul” but ultimately cuts if observed from a longer timeframe) and saddling us with insane amounts of debt with little to show for it (e.g.: overly inflated construction and maintenance bills for shoddy work)?

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Jack Fuller July 14, 2020 - 2:00 am

Absent additional revenue, from such sources as @PETE suggests above, a reduction in train headway seems preferable to closing entire lines. While the comparisons aren’t accurate, it is headway reduction that BART has used to deal with the same percentage decline as NYCT has experienced.

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Asher July 14, 2020 - 7:37 am

Here’s a crazy idea:
Let the MTA declare bankruptcy and file in court for protection. The State and Feds (as well as New York) make restructuring and renegotiating contracts part of the deal for aid. Make it clear that these changes are not optional.

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AMH July 14, 2020 - 5:45 pm

You’re talking about a headway increase (service reduction).

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Jack Fuller July 14, 2020 - 7:26 pm

Yes, the headway should increase. The frequency decreases. BART pre-covid ran 15-minute off peak, and 5-7 minute peak service. Now it runs 15-minute peak, and 30-minute off-peak.

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Phil Atio July 14, 2020 - 8:04 pm

Maybe if the farebeating wasn’t so out of control and things done to prevent it they would have additional funds and those tbta officers that they moved over are useless as two breasts on a horse they fare beat in front of them and yet they do nothing especially on staten island and also the bronx the oversaturation of upper mgmt as well as incompetence is mindboggling people who never drove a bus or train but can tell you like they know it is quite hysterical thank god someone in their families had a hook and the others were the crappiest at their positions and that also goes for their school rooms too how can a cleaner who never did anything else talk to bus operators motormen and conductors as if they can teach you a thing or two it’s a company of waste also on their capital projects they hire the cheapest so you know how the jobs gonna be I’ve been to a depot that’s had nothing but leaks everywhere and even messed up the new a/c install so nothing new this company needs a big overhaul and it too will be half assed to look good for the public and media and it still will be a mess

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Larry Penner July 14, 2020 - 7:37 am

The MTA claim that they will run out of $3.8 CARE COVID-19 emergency money by August and need a second $3.9 billion infusion overlooks other options already available. There is no indication that the MTA has ever taken advantage of the Federal Transit Administration expanded eligibility of federal assistance available under FTA’s Emergency Relief Program to help transit agencies respond to COVID-19. This includes allowing transit providers to use previous federal formula funds for emergency-related capital and operating expenses. It also raises the federal share of those expenses from 80% to 100%. How much available funding within $12 billion in existing FTA grants could be used under this option? Has the MTA taken advantage of this funding opportunity? There is also $1.4 billion in federal fiscal year 2020 funds that could be programmed to cover unanticipated COVID-19 costs.

The approved state budget a provision amended the MTA’s $15 billion Congestion Toll Mitigation Revenue “Lock Box.” This provision was originally included to insure that all proceeds would be used to help fund the MTAs 51 billion Capital Plan. These funds can be used against deficits to the MTA’s annual $17 billion operating expense budget. Additional language allows $10 billion in real estate mansion and internet sales tax revenue to be used for operating rather than capital expenses

(Larry Penner — transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously worked for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York Office)


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Nathanael August 10, 2020 - 1:20 am

The MTA could, to save money stop running up its legal bills losing ADA cases.

The capital budget will have to be rewritten in any case — the MTA has 33 subway stations they have to add elevators to *regardless of the cost* and *as soon as possible* because of illegal renovations in the past. They basically have to stop all future station renovation plans until they catch up, though stuff like signal upgrades might continue.

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jseliger July 14, 2020 - 12:50 pm

“Yet, as we well know, the MTA is not a paragon of efficiency, and the current crisis should cause the agency to do some soul-searching on its runaway cost problems. After all, if the MTA cannot reform its spending practices now, amidst the worst budget crisis in 50, if not 91, years, when can they expect to do so?”

It seems telling that eliminating the MTA’s problem unions is not on the table: while that alone wouldn’t be sufficient, perhaps that should be a condition of a bailout.

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Rob July 14, 2020 - 1:36 pm

Lower the fair so as to be a better incentive for more ridership. Trim the top heavy position.

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Christopher Stephens July 14, 2020 - 1:50 pm

Local politicians (De Blasio, Cuomo, Schumer) are all demanding federal bailout money. If only they hadn’t spent the past four years hurling every insult imaginable at the White House, to the applause of most NYC voters, maybe they would have a chance at getting some assistance. Instead, we’re left with a financial hole that we can never climb out of. If the transit system collapses, New Yorkers will have gotten what we deserve.

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SEAN July 14, 2020 - 4:58 pm

The democrats did exactly what one should do when faced with a sociopathic president, push his buttons & let them self destruct in front of the nation. If you think that NYC would have received anything from Washington by playing nice with this administration, then you don’t understand what we as a nation are dealing with.

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Al D July 15, 2020 - 9:18 am

There is also a “bureaucracy premium”, I’m going to guess between 25-40% built into Contractors’ pricing to cover the “cost of doing business” with the MTA. What is the MTA’s overall contract spend? Take that number, fix antiquated contracting rules and procedures, fix bidding requirements, pay Contractors on time, and prices will drop.

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Rob July 20, 2020 - 8:19 am

needs [another] federal bailout? never learned not to bite the hand that feeds you?

lirr today correct. of course.

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Matthew July 29, 2020 - 3:42 pm

The fact that the MTA has not yet started implementing any of the suggestions for cost savings covered in the LIRR Today article and which could add up to $2.3 billion in savings over a two year period really shows that our leadership has not yet become serious about resolving this issue. They are still trying to trim small expenses from around the edges without really doing anything. The MTA needs to start taking steps today to reform instead of waiting for a bailout. When you find yourself at the bottom of a hole with no way out the first thing you need to do is stop digging. I am sure that many people would be a lot more supportive of a bailout if the MTA could show some honest and significant efforts at reforming the agency so the public know the money isn’t just being thrown away. Without reform, I am not sure there is a strong reason for another bail-out the MTA because their current course is unsustainable in the long term so it would only be delaying the inevitable.

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Robert Sieger December 11, 2020 - 12:36 pm

The MTAs debts and deficits are almost entirely due to exorbitant labor costs (compensation, health care, and pensions), and have been since 1966 when the wildcat strike forced the city to agree to Mike Quill’s extortion and other city unions then demanded the same, all of which led to NYC’s de facto bankruptcy in the 1970s.

The MTA has nowhere to cut and its unions (and the politicians and media handmaidens in the unions’ pockets) refuse to acknowledge this reality. Until it does, nothing will change for the better, no matter how much money, good after bad, is flushed down the toilet of spoils and patronage. Any monies the MTA gets are already earmarked for the under-funded labor costs referenced above.

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Robert Sieger December 11, 2020 - 12:41 pm

UPDATED/CLARIFIED:

Aside from the current COVID crisis, the MTA’s debts and deficits have been almost entirely due to exorbitant labor costs (compensation, health care, and pensions), and have been since 1966 when the wildcat strike forced the city to agree to Mike Quill’s extortion and other city unions then demanded the same, all of which led to NYC’s de facto bankruptcy in the 1970s. LIRR employees are particularly abusive both as employees and claiming undeserved disability retirements, which they keep doing no matter who gets arrested for it or how much media exposure it gets.

The MTA has nowhere to cut and its unions (and the politicians and media handmaidens in the unions’ pockets) refuse to acknowledge this reality. Until this reality is acknowledged (John Samuelsen or no John Samuelsen), nothing will change for the better, no matter how much money, good after bad, is flushed down the toilet of spoils and patronage. Any monies the MTA gets are already earmarked for the under-funded labor costs referenced above.

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