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Second Ave. Sagas

News and Views on New York City Transportation

AsidesBuses

Veolia chosen for LI Bus contract

by Benjamin Kabak June 10, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 10, 2011

Veolia Transportation will take control of operations for Long Island Bus beginning in 2012, Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano announced today. The Illinois-based subsidiary of a French company bested MV Transit and First Transit in the bidding, and they have promised to “keep existing fares and levels of service through the end of 2012,” Newsday reports. After 2012, it’s anyone’s guess what Nassau County’s bus service and fare structure will look like.

The decision, of course, is not without controversy. While transit advocates and local politicians do not believe that Veolia will be able to maintain service levels and fares, the company apparently has close ties to Nassau County’s politicians. As Newsday notes, “Veolia hired D’Amato’s firm, Park Strategies, as consultant during the county bidding process. Park Strategies vice president Robert McBride, a well-known GOP lobbyist who hosted a fundraiser for Mangano in McBride ‘s home in January, headed the effort locally.”

Meanwhile, Veolia does not have a stellar safety record, and Nassau Country representatives do not believe that the company can provide the same service as the MTA without a greater subsidy from the county or higher fares. “This is going to end up costing us so much more money,” County Legislator Kevan Abrahams said. “One way or the other, we’re going to have to put money into this. And I hate to think that it’s going to come from the riders.” What a mess.

June 10, 2011 12 comments
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AsidesView from Underground

Finding the trains least air conditioned

by Benjamin Kabak June 10, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 10, 2011

Ahhhh, the first heat wave of summer. Time for a rush on air conditioners, the stench of garbage to return to the streets and, of course, articles about how hot it is in the subway system. Today’s piece comes to us from the Daily News, and it serves as a guide to the hottest and coldest trains. Pete Donohue reports that 93 percent of subway cars had temperatures “within MTA guidelines” last year. That’s defined as a temperature between 58 and 78 degrees.

While those numbers are reassuring, Donohue discovered that the worst trains for beating the heat are the above-ground Franklin Ave. Shuttle and the C train cars. Only 83 percent of the shuttle cars were properly climate-controlled while the air conditioner failed on the C’s aging R32s nine percent of the time. The L, meanwhile, had 100 percent compliance with the temperature guidelines.

For its part, the MTA is optimistic that fewer cars will be too hot this summer. A spokesman told Donohue that mechanics along the C line “replaced all of the compressors and made other fixes over the winter.” So now which New York news outlet will cover the story about how hot subway platforms get first? My money’s on this guy.

June 10, 2011 21 comments
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Public Transit Policy

A case study in being nearby

by Benjamin Kabak June 10, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 10, 2011

While discussing the suburban payroll tax revolt last night, I briefly alluded to USB’s looming decision to move back to Manhattan. I went to spend a little bit more on that story tonight as it highlights the importance of both fast transit for the suburbs and the allure of being close to it all.

The story goes a little bit something like this: In 1996, UBS garnered headlines when it became one of the first major financial institutions to move its headquarters out to Stamford, Connecticut. Thanks to some generous tax breaks by the state as well as the promise of subsidized office construction, the company parked its trading floor, the largest in the world, nearby the Stamford Metro-North stop.

Now, they want to move back. And why? Because they’re just too far away from where people live. Charles V. Bagli has more and his writing is very telling:

Now, though, UBS is having buyer’s remorse. It turns out that a suburban location has become a liability in recruiting the best and brightest young bankers, who want to live in Manhattan or Brooklyn, not in Stamford, Conn., which is about 35 miles northeast of Midtown. The firm has also discovered that it would be better to be closer to major clients in the city.

As a result, UBS is seriously considering a reverse migration that would bring its investment banking division and up to 2,000 bankers and traders back to Wall Street and a new skyscraper at the rebuilt World Trade Center, according to real estate executives and city officials.

“They just can’t hire the bankers and traders they need,” said one landlord who has spoken with UBS but requested anonymity so as not to alienate a potential tenant.

A piece in today’s Times delves even further into the employee reaction to this news. “I live in Manhattan, so I do the reverse commute,” Jon Gimpel, a UBS employe, said. “The train ride is like 45 minutes, then I ride my bike through Central Park to get home. If UBS moves back to Manhattan, I’ll save $300 a month in train fare and major aggravation. Awesome.”

And that’s the truth of it. Right now, people — especially younger people — want to be close to the city. They want to be able to commute to work with one fare card or walk or bike. They don’t the aggravation of a long train ride to and from work every day. They want, in a nutshell, the pinnacle of transit-oriented development.

Now don’t get me wrong; for some people, the Connecticut suburbs are a few place to live. One of my friends found himself working for a financial institution up there around four or five years ago, and he made it work. But the nightlife was very limited, and the restaurants varied from overpriced to mediocre. And transit-oriented development can work in the suburbs if the jobs draw from the resident base. Here, though, the jobs drew from Manhattan, and that doesn’t work.

I doubt UBS’ actions are going to signal some grand trend of big companies repatrioting to urban areas, but it’s worth dwelling on development priorities. The ‘burbs might be willing to grant the tax break, but the people want an urban life, transit and all. Once-an-hour commuter rail just doesn’t cut it.

June 10, 2011 35 comments
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AsidesBuses

LI Bus fate to be determined tomorrow

by Benjamin Kabak June 9, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 9, 2011

As the MTA has already voted to withdraw funding from Long Island Bus by the end of the year, Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano is moving forward with a plan no one thinks will succeed. According to Newsday, Mangano will unveil the private company picked to operate the popular Nassau County bus service. The winning bidder will be Veolia Transportation, MV Transit or First Transit and will have to be approved by the county legislature before it can begin to operate the buses next year.

The MTA and Mangano have been at odds over Long Island Bus funding for a while. Despite funding agreements fund the transit network, Nassau County contributes just $9.1 million to the bus system’s operations, and the MTA has asked for upwards of $26 million more. Mangano has refused to do so and has insisted that a private company acting without increased subsidies and turning a profit will be able to offer the same service for the same fares.

Transit advocates are rightly skeptical, but the county executive is moving forward with the plan anyway. “Financially, it doesn’t make sense,” Kate Slevin of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign said. “They’ll have to contribute a lot more money if they want it to function even remotely like it does now.” For more on this long-simmering dispute, check out my archives. I don’t think Nassau Country commuters are going to think too highly of the entity that emerges from this move.

June 9, 2011 16 comments
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Subway Security

MTA going to the dogs

by Benjamin Kabak June 9, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 9, 2011

The award-winning canine and its handler. (Photo via MTA/Patrick Cashin)

If you smell something, bark at something. That could be the newest MTA slogan after their K-9 unit took him first place at the U.S. Police Canine Association 2011 trials for explosives detection. The authority announced that Officer Kevin Pimpinelli and his pup Mullen won the crown last month. The trials tested human/canine enforcement teams on the speed and accuracy with which they can locate explosives while “adhering to accepted searching practices and procedures.” The team beat out 28 others at regionals and seven pairs in the finals.

Pimpinelli spoke glowing off his dog. “I’ve been working with him for five years, and right from day one he’s had an excellent temperament for a police canine,” he said. “I could bring him into a classroom full of kindergarteners and he’d be the gentlest dog you can imagine. And then if I gave the command, he’d instantly be searching for explosives.”

The MTA, meanwhile, praised its K-9 unit overall. “Canines are invaluable partners with capabilities that no human or machine can duplicate” Douglas Zeigler, MTA Director of Security, said. “This national honor helps to confirm that the efforts we have made since 9/11 to create a strong anti-terror canine force have been effective. But the real confirmation can be seen every day on the front lines, where our canines help to keep our railroad customers and employees safe and secure.” So there you go.

June 9, 2011 3 comments
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MTA Economics

Musings on footing the bill for transit service

by Benjamin Kabak June 9, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 9, 2011

Despite the fact that the State’s legislative year ends in just 11 days, Senators Lee Zeldin and Jack Martins aren’t going to give up on their attempts at repealing the state’s payroll mobility tax. Doing so would rob the MTA of $1.3-$1.5 billion annually that it needs to meet its budget mandate, and while these State Senators seem to think the MTA can just make these cuts materialize without further impacting fares or service, they are also quite content to shift more of the funding burden onto the backs of New York City residents. It just doesn’t make sense.

So what have Zeldin and Martins done? With the help of a bipartisan group of Senators and Assembly representatives, they have introduced a bill that would gradually repeal the payroll tax in the suburban counties while lessening the percentage but keeping it in place for New York City residents. If you care to read the memo or the full text of the bill, you can check it out right here.

As Martins explained, the proposal basically boils down to three topline actions:

  • Small businesses and non-profits with 25 employees or less and schools would be completely exempt from the MTA payroll tax as of Jan. 1, 2012.
  • Starting on Jan. 1, 2012, the remaining MTA payroll tax for Nassau and Suffolk Counties would begin a gradual reduction, resulting in a $35.4 million in savings to Nassau County taxpayers in that first year alone.
  • This would lead to the complete elimination of this onerous tax by 2014. The resulting savings to Nassau and Suffolk county taxpayers is projected to be $220 million per year. That’s $220 million back in our local economy.

As NewsLI.com noted, “within New York City’s five boroughs, the tax would be reduced to .28% on January 1, 2013 and .21% beginning on January 1, 2014. The payroll tax would remain in effect at the .21% rate for New York City’s five boroughs.” We’ll return to this tax discrepancy in a second.

The argument these representatives are making are identical to the ones I discussed in this post back on June 1. Basically, after speaking with MTA officials and examining the agency’s budget documents, these state officials think the authority can somehow cut over 10 percent of its costs. The proposals Zeldin has put forward are laughably inadequate and would, as I noted, generate tens of millions of dollars of savings and not $1.3 billion. Without a replacement funding solution — a more equitable tax, bridge tolls, congestion pricing, higher fares, less service — the MTA simply cannot afford to lose the payroll tax.

That’s an old story, though, and I want to take a quick look at a new story. Essentially, because they campaigned on the issue, these state representatives are proposing something fairly outrageous: They want to eliminate the tax in suburban counties while New York City folk continue to prop up the transit system to a great and substantial degree. They want us to pay more than we already do.

Right now, New York City Transit riders are shouldering more of the funding burden than anyone else. New York City Transit’s farebox operating ratio is clocking in at 64 percent while Metro-North and the LIRR are seeing figures of 58.7 percent and 48.6 percent, respectively. Already, dollars spent in New York City are subsidizing transit trips. By eliminating the tax outside of the suburbs and keeping it in place in the city, our dollars will further subsidize commuter rail travel. Maybe we should ask Zeldin and Martins to guarantee that any payroll mobility tax generated in New York City be siphoned only to Transit operations. We’ll see how long commuter constituents last as service degrades and fares climb.

In laying out an argument for repealing the tax, Martins further claims that the MTA “has the luxury of approximately $1.3 billion in cash reserves from which they can draw if for some reason they are unable to balance their budget through cost savings measures alone.” This though is a claim not backed up by evidence. The MTA’s latest budget projects show a reserve fund of $100 million in the adopted 2011 budget. If the MTA has that much of a cash reserve, they would risk defaulting on debts if they started using it to pare down the operating deficit, but I see no evidence that it exists in the first place.

Eventually, suburban politicians will have to come to terms with a tradeoff. They can claim that the payroll mobility tax is a “job stifling” “iniquitous” one as Martins contends, but they have to recognize that worse or more expensive transit service will also have a calamitous effect on jobs. Just ask UBS how they feel off the beaten track of reliable transit. Without a source of replacement funds, the payroll tax, for better or worse, simply cannot be eliminated, and suburban representatives cannot eat their transit cake without footing the bill.

June 9, 2011 18 comments
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AsidesMTA

Public Finance lawyer named to MTA board

by Benjamin Kabak June 8, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 8, 2011

Jonathan Ballon, a public finance lawyer, is the newest MTA Board member. The New York State Senate confirmed Ballon yesterday to a six-year term. He was appointed to the board by Gov. Andrew Cuomo at the suggestion of Robert P. Astorino, the county executive of Westchester, and is likely replacing Donald Cecil, a holdover appointee whose term had expired in 2009.

A Business Wire piece has a bit more on Ballon’s background: “Mr. Ballan is a Member of the law firm of Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. and heads the firm’s New York Public Finance practice group. He has served for many years in a number of significant appointed governmental positions, including as Chairman of the Municipal Assistance Corporation for the City of New York, Chairman of the New York State Public Asset Fund, and Board Member and Chairman of the Capital Committee of the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation.”

Ballon reported has “broad experience developing innovative legal structures for financings for numerous state and local governments.” At a time when the MTA’s finances are on a shaky foundation, his expertise could come in handy.

June 8, 2011 1 comment
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New Jersey Transit

NJ Transit seeking station naming deals

by Benjamin Kabak June 8, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 8, 2011

The never-ending push to generate excitement and, more importantly, revenue from transit naming rights deals has spread across the Hudson. New Jersey Transit is engaged in an effort to sell the naming rights to stations and advertising space on trains, and the bidding procedure has sparked a controversy.

Mike Frassinelli of The Star-Ledger reports:

In the not-too-distant future, a commuter going from Newark to Hamilton might board a Minute Maid express train and take it to Sprite Platform at Coca-Cola Transit Center. Such an itinerary could result from NJ Transit’s intention to sell advertising rights to its stations, terminal facilities and locomotives.

This planned sale of naming and product-advertising rights has set off a frenzy among companies trying to pay NJ Transit tens of millions of dollars to broker the potentially lucrative sales. It also has led to a formal protest from one bidder, who contends the transit agency would leave almost $12 million on the table by renewing with the advertising company that now holds the contract.

Craig Heard, president and CEO of Gateway Outdoor Advertising in Hackettstown, said NJ Transit did not allow his company into the final round of bidding even though Gateway’s $65 million offer of guaranteed revenue was nearly 20 percent more than the $53.3 million guaranteed by the current contractor, the Titan Outdoor advertising agency.

Over the past few years, I’ve followed transit naming rights deals closely, and I’ve come to the conclusion that they are mostly smoke and mirrors. Transit authorities speak glowingly of them as potential revenue sources while advertisers sound excited for a few months. When the bidding process begins though, dollars at all but the most trafficked of stations fall far short of expectations.

In New Jersey, I can see a few things happening: First, the deal to sell ad space on the outside of trains will be far more popular and lucrative than the station naming rights deals. Perhaps NJ Transit can realize some dollars for Newark Penn Station or Trenton, but beyond that, it won’t sell many station names. Second, New Jersey Transit is sacrificing some dollars by putting its eggs in the Titan basket. This company, after all, was recently dumped by the MTA for failure to make payments.

Anyway, with money short, New Jersey Transit seems to be joining a long list of transit authorities who think they can strike gold when all they’ve found is nothing.

June 8, 2011 8 comments
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New York City Transit

The Way We Ride: By the Numbers

by Benjamin Kabak June 8, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 8, 2011

When the MTA releases their annual breakdown of subway ridership by station, I tend to spend far too much time playing with these numbers. The new figures came out yesterday and are available here on the MTA’s website and here as a sortable Excel file. It is the stuff of what data dreams are made of.

We begin with the system’s most popular stations, and we see a newcomer in our midst. With construction impacting Fulton St., it slips to 11, and a Queens station — the Flushing-Main St. terminal along the 7 — enters the top ten. Considering how only one train services Flushing, that it cracks the top ten speaks volumes of that area’s growth. As good as the soup dumplings are, I don’t think 18.6 million folks are heading home from Joe’s Shanghai.

  2009 2010 Change
Times Sq-42 St/42 St 58099313 58422597 0.60%
Grand Central-42 St 42002971 41903210 -0.20%
34 St-Herald Square 36945680 37769752 2.20%
14 St-Union Sq 34245245 34730692 1.40%
34 St-Penn Station 27196195 26892243 -1.10%
34 St-Penn Station 24182097 24265016 0.30%
59 St-Columbus Circle 20418815 20711058 1.40%
Lexington Av/59 St 18924005 19553597 3.30%
86 St 18891890 19147021 1.40%
Flushing-Main St 18287069 18630490 1.90%

The least popular stations too don’t often change that much. More people pass through Times Square in a day than visit the Aqueduct Racetrack all year, and the stations in the Rockaways don’t see much traffic in good times. That many were closed for renovations last year depresses ridership even further. Whitlock Ave. and East 143rd Sts. crack the list because they too were shuttered for renovations for much of 2010.

Not listed here is 21st St. on the G train. It wasn’t closed for construction last year and was just the 11th least used station in all four boroughs. Fewer than 320,000 straphangers passed through the station that is clearly visible from the G’s northern terminus at Court Square.

  2009 2010 Change
Aqueduct Racetrack 27004 29644 9.80%
Beach 105 St 58588 65802 12.30%
Broad Channel 93087 92523 -0.60%
Beach 44 St 176647 143788 -18.60%
Whitlock Av 480146 163461 -66.00%
Beach 98 St 259501 215474 -17.00%
Aqueduct-North Conduit Av 249341 238119 -4.50%
East 143 St 239458 256277 7.00%
Rockaway Park-Beach116 St 267902 268625 0.30%
21 St 333612 319984 -4.10%

While pure numbers validate our belief that one station is crowded while another is less so, the percentages are more interesting to explore. Has one station become more popular than another? If so, why? By and large, the ones listed in the top 10 became more popular because those nearby were closed. That’s why a bunch of stations along the 6 in the Bronx, the A in the Rockaways and the Brighton Line in Brooklyn saw big increases in ridership last year.

Only one station along the L line — Morgan Ave. with 20 percent growth — made the top ten cut, but the rest of the L train stations throughout Williamsburg and east into Bushwick showed strong across-the-board growth. Michael Grynbaum speculated that gentrification is the cause of the uptick in ridership. Bedford Ave. is now the 46th most popular station around. Of note too was the West 8th St./New York Aquarium stop which saw an increase in straphangers of over 11 percent.

  2009 2010 Change
Elder Av 2050983 2864031 39.6%
Roosevelt Island 1875228 2580003 37.6%
St Lawrence Av 1284770 1655340 28.8%
Beach 36 St 263693 326592 23.9%
Lexington Av-63 St 3989743 4889704 22.6%
Beverley Rd 889066 1070872 20.4%
Morgan Av 1684084 2021162 20.0%
Parkside Av 1777758 2050518 15.3%
Castle Hill Av 2036025 2345255 15.2%
Dyckman St 1681370 1931287 14.9%

And finally, we arrive at the losers. Below are the top ten stations that saw major declines in ridership. For this chart, I omitted most of the shuttered stations along the 6 and A because the declines were drastic. Whitlock Ave. was closed for most of 2010, and it saw ridership drop by 66 percent. If the turnstiles aren’t on and the trains aren’t stopping, it’s going to be hard for passengers to find their ways on board.

The remaining declines paint an interesting picture of a train in trouble. Many of the G train stations are bleeding passengers, and it’s hard to explain why. Broadway, for instance, saw a 10 percent dip in ridership. Maybe more straphangers who would have ridden the G to Court Square to transfer to the E simply find it convenient to take the M into Midtown. Myrtle-Willoughby and Nassau Ave. too though are losing passengers at a brisk rate.

Other stations can trace their declining numbers to the service cuts. With M trains no longer heading throughLower Manhattan and along 4th Ave. in Brooklyn, Broad St. saw its ridership decline. I do wonder why the JFK stop at Howard Beach saw a seven percent dip in traffic as well.

  2009 2010 Change
Broadway 1047629 941243 -10.2%
East 180 St 2049824 1852836 -9.6%
Myrtle-Willoughby Avs 1346184 1223378 -9.1%
Broad St 1795906 1636627 -8.9%
Nassau Av 2321809 2126804 -8.4%
215 St 635361 582955 -8.2%
Rector St 2662135 2463933 -7.4%
Dyckman St 2406407 2237661 -7.0%
Howard Beach-JFK Airport 976481 908576 -7.0%
Church Av 4966209 4654613 -6.3%

Anyway, that’s your peek at the way we rode in 2010. Make of it as you will. It’s certainly one way to analyze the ever-changing demographics of New York City.

June 8, 2011 39 comments
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AsidesPANYNJ

The PATH stinks

by Benjamin Kabak June 7, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on June 7, 2011

While we know full well that the New York City Transit subway system can, at various points and places, smell pretty bad — 2nd Ave. on the F, anyone? — the city’s other subway ain’t exactly wine and roses. The PATH trains might not exude human waste quite as frequently as our city’s system does, but they have a certain odor to them. Today, Christine Haughney of The Times tries to get to the bottom of the odor, and the culprit seems to be mold or mildew.

Haughney spoke with PATH officials and rode the trains with Larry Sunshine, a so-called odor mitigation specialist, to determine the source of the smell. PATH representatives say the aroma is one of new cars, but I’m skeptical. New subway cars smell great while the PATH has an earthy nose to it. Sunshine believes the aroma is one of mildew and plastic chemicals and the general smell of a subway system all wrapped up into one. I sure am glad The Times got to the bottom of this underground mystery.

June 7, 2011 17 comments
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