
The two final proposed replacements for the Tappan Zee Bridge.
New York State has put forward an ambitious $16-billion plan to replace the Tappan Zee with a multi-modal bridge. The new structure will feature rail and bus lanes and will improve transportation in between northern New Jersey, upstate New York and the metropolitan region. The state, however, has not allocated funding for the project in its next five-year capital plan, and Gov. David Paterson, in the waning days of his time in Albany, is searching for a funding solution.
To that end, Paterson floated the idea of folding the Tappan Zee into the Port Authority. The newly-rich PA could spend some of its ARC allocation on the bridge replacement, and New York and New Jersey would split the toll proceeds. Even though the bridge does not go into New Jersey and advocates feared it would be, in the words of the RPA’s Neysa Pranger, “a tough sell,” Paterson’s people believed that the bridge’s importance to the region would be a compelling enough reason to move forward.
“The ball’s in their court right now. But if they’re ready, I’m ready,” Paterson said of New Jersey. “And if they’d like to do it with the next governor, that’s fine, too.”
And guess what Gov. Chris Christie said? Well, he said no no no. “I can’t make this any clearer to New York than this: Stop screwing with us, OK?” he said. “You’re not going to come and pick our pockets. New Jersey’s not going to permit it anymore.”
He went on: “Gov. Rockefeller, may he rest in peace, decided that he wanted to keep all that money to himself. Well you want to keep all the money to yourself? Then you pay for the repairs by yourself. Unlike the George Washington Bridge, unlike the Holland and Lincoln tunnels, where we share the toll revenue and we share the cost of maintenance — like the airports.”
Christie appears to be ignoring the part of Paterson’s proposal where New Jersey gets to keep the toll money, but it’s not a surprise that he shot this idea down. What is surprising is his reaction. It’s tough to find anyone who thinks New York is “screwing” with New Jersey or picking the state’s pockets. New York provides jobs for workers in the region who take home their earnings to spend in New Jersey. We don’t capture revenue through a commuter tax any longer, and we’ve put up with increased congestion due to the influx of cars from across the Hudson River.
At some point, New Jersey and New York are going to have to work together to solve the transportation problem. If Christie and Paterson can’t, maybe Christie and Cuomo can. If not, we’ll just have to wait out these obstinate politicians. The traffic and transportation problems will remain long after Christie out of office.