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Second Ave. Sagas

News and Views on New York City Transportation

Capital Program 2010-2014

The MTA Capital Program’s fall date with destiny

by Benjamin Kabak May 12, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 12, 2011

The MTA’s current five-year capital program, unfunded after 2011 and facing a $10-$13 billion funding gap, will live or die this fall, according to a report today by Crain’s Insider. The city’s daily newsletter reports today that Cuomo Administration will wait until the fall to attempt to usher through a political and economic compromise that will save the MTA’s ambitious capital improvement budget.

The brief report aptly sums up the state of things. “Transportation advocates are anxious but not panicked,” it says. “The Legislature rarely acts before it must, and the MTA’s capital plan is funded through 2011.” After 2011 remains a black hole of uncertainty, but Crain’s sources are cautiously optimistic with a few caveats. The report details:

Funding talks will coincide with contract negotiations with the MTA’s largest union, Transport Workers Union Local 100. That will add an extra wrinkle to discussions, perhaps creating a perception that the MTA is “getting squeezed from all sides to make ends meet,” said one transportation insider.

Binding arbitration could neutralize the contract’s politics. If Gov. Andrew Cuomo wrests concessions in a new contract with state workers, arbitrators might award the MTA a similar deal…

It remains unclear exactly how much the MTA will need to borrow, but insiders say bonding could require $750 million to $1 billion in new annual revenue starting next year. Fares have been raised for three consecutive years, and a fare hike is already scheduled for 2013, so another one in 2012 is unlikely. The Legislature will instead have to vote on new taxes or fees during a special session late in the year or early next year.

A few things: I’ve heard from a few people that the MTA’s borrowing capabilities are completely maxed out right now. Without an additional revenue source, it cannot bond out more money for the capital plan. Additionally, while Crain’s suggests binding arbitration for the MTA’s looming negotiations with the TWU, the last time the authority agreed to such a plan resulted in the 11 percent raises. The MTA is already under intense pressure not to go binding arbitration without wresting concessions from the TWU, and I’m surprised Crain’s would even suggest it.

The report notes that state Republicans may resist an effort to identify a revenue source for the MTA without an ironclad promise to fund the next state Department of Transportation capital plan as well. Such a compromise would likely lead to increased state spending, but by keeping these capital budgets funding, the state will guarantee jobs for the construction industry as well. For now, this looming political fight is on hold, but come the fall, the fight for funding will grow tense.

May 12, 2011 7 comments
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MetroCardSelf Promotion

Video: Talking MetroCard futures on NBC

by Benjamin Kabak May 12, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 12, 2011

View more videos at: http://www.nbcnewyork.com

Last night, I made an appearance on NBC New York Non-Stop’s Nightly News with Chuck Scarborough to talk about the future of MetroCards. For regular SAS readers, this is a topic well covered in recent months as the MTA gears up to phase out the MetroCard in exchange for a tap-and-go system revolving around bank cards and an MTA Card. If you missed it last night, you can check out my appearance in the video embedded above. Enjoy.

May 12, 2011 14 comments
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View from Underground

Video of the Day: Fine dining on the L

by Benjamin Kabak May 12, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 12, 2011

We know all about the folks along the L train who put on a movable feast nearly two weeks ago. The Times reported on the culinary ride underground and spoke to those who participated. As with any good media stunt, though, the organizers brought along their own videographers, and today, we have the video of the fine dining.

In the 5:45 clip, we see Michael Cirino, the event’s organizer, put on his meal. The chefs feed both suspecting and unsuspecting straphangers their meal, and of course, the crowd reactions are great. Who expects such fine dining on a Rockaway-bound L train anyway?

The folks in charge of this experience go by the name a razor, shiny knife, and they call themselves an educational, social and theatrical culinary experience. They put on themed events all over the place and have established a small website with a bunch of acknowledgments.

The MTA wasn’t originally too amused by the dinner party. “A dinner party on the L train?” Transit spokesman Charles Seaton said to The Times a few weeks ago. “No. Subway trains are for riding, not for holding parties.” I, however, find the idea amusing. I could see why someone might not want the interruptions or the hassle, but a dinner party would brighten up my usually mundane commute on the B train. Live and let live.

May 12, 2011 5 comments
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AsidesSelf Promotion

Talking MetroCards on NBC New York Nonstop

by Benjamin Kabak May 11, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 11, 2011

As the MTA moves its long-standing plans to replace the MetroCard into gear, the city’s media outlets are starting to take notice. Will we see a debit/credit card-based system? Proof-of-payment expansion? A proprietary card? Or perhaps a combination of all four? Tonight, as part of NBC New York’s Nightly News with Chuck Scarborough, I’ll be on NBC Non-Stop’s 7 p.m. show. I’m not sure what specific time my segment will air, but it’s will likely be between 7:15 and 8 p.m. For channel listings, check out this page. Be sure to tune in, and for those who miss it, I’ll try to post a video tomorrow.

May 11, 2011 0 comment
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Public Transit Policy

The federal rail debate as seen through Gov. Christie

by Benjamin Kabak May 11, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 11, 2011

When northeastern politicians gathered at Penn Station on Monday to accept Florida’s high-speed rail dollars, a handful of New Jersey’s representatives to Washington, D.C. made their appearances while New York’s Governor issued a perfunctory station. Conspicuous in his absence and silence was New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. For more than six months now, Christie and the federal Department of Transportation have squared off over the New Jersey governor’s decision to torpedo the ARC Tunnel without first searching for a better funding solution. Now, as high speed rail plans inch slowly forward, Christie and his actions have come to represent one side of the great divide.

Writing in the Wall Street Journal today, Lisa Fleisher and Andrew Grossman explore how Christie’s position is representative of one line of political thinking on public infrastructure spending. It is newsworthy, and obviously so, to highlight how the redistribution of Florida’s HSR money intentionally omitted funding for New Jersey Transit projects. They write:

As spending on infrastructure projects becomes increasingly controversial, two camps of public officials have emerged. One is represented by Mr. Christie and some other Republican governors who have turned down federal money for rail projects because they’re worried about their states bearing the burden of cost overruns. The other is represented by the coterie of congressmen and officials from New York and New Jersey who surrounded Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood as he declared that he’s willing to open his wallet to “reliable partners” who will also open theirs.

Federal officials were reluctant to fund the Portal Bridge project in part because they were wary of starting another major project with Mr. Christie, whom they viewed as unreliable because of his decision last year to cancel a trans-Hudson rail tunnel that was partially federally funded, according to people familiar with the matter. The calculation was a practical consideration, rather than spiteful or political one, these people said.

A spokesman for Mr. Christie said the governor is committed to rail projects. “The governor has been pretty clear that he recognizes the need for infrastructure investment and particularly increased trans-Hudson rail capacity,” a spokesman for Mr. Christie, Kevin Roberts, said. “That being said, the governor was obviously clear when it came to the [trans-Hudson tunnel] project specifically that it wasn’t an equitable deal for New Jersey.”

Whether or not the deal was an equitable one for New Jersey is still a point of contention. Proponents allege that the ARC Tunnel, despite potential cost overruns, would have led to markedly faster commutes and a corresponding increase in property values throughout the Garden State. They also claim that Gov. Christie did not attempt to figure out how to keep cost overruns from spiraling out of control. The DOT assessment issued last year said costs could have ranged from $1-$5 billion over budget, and while Christie has latched onto the higher figure, he didn’t even try to address the overruns while the project was still largely an idea on paper.

Opponents, though, see the federal government as cutting a good deal and then running away. Dangling federal dollars but no promises of future funding partnerships, the feds can convince states to shoulder the burden for expensive infrastructure upgrades. It’s a valid concern, but we haven’t seen those concerns play out in real life. Will the feds leave states high and dry or will Washington representatives find a way to forge better funding partnerships?

Ultimately, though, the words of Frank Lautenberg, a Senator from New Jersey who is embroiled in the battle over $271 million in ARC funding, ring true. “We learned something in New Jersey,” he said on Monday. “We learned that if you reject federal money, you gain nothing. You gain nothing. And you pay a heck of a price for it.”

May 11, 2011 43 comments
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Second Avenue Subway

Report: Bike lane added to Second Ave. Subway

by Benjamin Kabak May 11, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 11, 2011

The new Second Ave. Subway will come equipped with a bike lane, according to a report in the satirical final edition of The New York Times. The online parody, produced by a group of comedians, offers up a rather comical take on the state of transportation dialogue in New York City right now.

“Jerome Bosch” writes:

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s pro-bicycle agenda reached a new high water mark today with the announcement that a cyclists-only lane is being added to the long-under-construction Second Avenue Subway. The memo, authored by Deputy Mayor for Communications Howard Wolfson, makes the case that creating the city’s first subterranean bike-lane will reduce bicycle accidents by up to 15 percent, while costing a mere $1.4 billion dollars and delaying the opening of the Second Avenue line by only ten to twenty years.

The Second Avenue Subway bike lane is the latest pro-biking measure proposed by transportation commissioner Jeanette Sadik-Khan. Since becoming Mayor, Bloomberg has closed much of Broadway to automobiles and has overseen the addition of 225 miles of bike lanes, many of them physically separated from the main flow of traffic. This has led to some backlash, most prominently regarding a dedicated bike lane on Prospect Park West which critics say prevents only a small number of deaths, compared to how much harder it is for Senator Charles Schumer’s wife to receive deliveries at her Prospect Park West apartment from FreshDirect, Crate and Barrel, Sherry-Lehman and Interflora.

Sounds about right to me.

May 11, 2011 9 comments
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View from Underground

Photo of the Day: The beauty of waiting for the train

by Benjamin Kabak May 11, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 11, 2011

wisteria, subway station, ditmas park by flatbushnelson on Flickr

Just a short piece tonight because I was hit with an Internet outage just as I was about to start writing, and now I’d like to go to bed. I wanted though to share this photo posted late on Tuesday on Brownstoner. It is a truly gorgeous shot of the wisteria plants Beverly Rd. along the BMT Brighton Line, and it perfectly encapsulates waiting for the subway.

The photographer framed the shot in such a way that it highlights the intricacies of the trench along the Q and the B lines as well as the small platform spaces at many of the stations. The three people on the platform — all facing south to peer down the tracks for a looming train — have barely enough space in the sheltered station alcove to wait. The plants, meanwhile, are inching into the station as they begin to bloom, and for a few minutes, the station and subway trench, both in need of a good scrubbing and a fresh coat of paint, look absolutely timeless.

Despite our complaints and the shoddiness found in many stations, it’s still possible to find beauty in the architecture of the subway and a certain New York-ness to it all. It’s all right here for anyone to see.

May 11, 2011 9 comments
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AsidesMTA Absurdity

This post is delayed by Internet traffic ahead of us

by Benjamin Kabak May 11, 2011
written by Benjamin Kabak on May 11, 2011

Time Warner problems struck just as I was settling in to write this evening’s post. Barring a miraculous resurrection of my Internet within the next hour, I won’t have new content up until the morning. In the meantime, Gawker has a video of a racist naked guy on the 6 train. Only in New York, folks. Only in New York.

May 11, 2011 5 comments
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AsidesMTA Economics

APTA: NYers save $14K annually by taking the subway

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

New Yorkers who eschew daily driving in exchange for a subway ride can save almost $15,000 a year, the American Public Transportation Association announced today. In its monthly “Transit Savings Report,” the group says that spiking gas prices and high parking rates lead to a monetary drain on the average commuter’s wallet. “Americans need relief from current high gas prices and increasing transportation costs,” William Millar, APTA’s president, said, “And riding public transit is a sure way to lower costs without sacrificing mobility or access.”

The current results are available right here, and New York, with its high gas prices and extensive public transit network, leads the pack. To reach the savings, APTA compares the cost of a monthly transit pass — now $104 in New York — with the 2011 AAA average cost of driving formula. This formula includes variable costs such as gas, maintenance and tires as well as fixed costs such as insurance, license registration, depreciation and finance charges. The formula also assumes that the average person would drive 15,000 miles a year or 41 miles per day.

I have to believe these numbers are slightly inflated for New Yorkers. It doesn’t seem to consider the fact that many daily subway riders are still car-owners, and it seems to overestimate mileage totals. A trip from Bergen Beach to Midtown, for instance, is only 13 miles one way, and someone driving from Riverdale to Lower Manhattan would put less than 30 miles on their car. Still, the cost savings from public transit are tremendous compared to the costs of owning a car. For those New Yorkers who don’t own a car, this report can help take some of the sting out of the city’s high rent rates and general cost of living.

May 10, 2011 29 comments
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AsidesMTA

‘She’s got a ticket to marry…’

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

In frivolous MTA news, board member Nancy Shevell and her long-term beau Paul McCartney are getting married, Christine Haughney of The Times reported this week. Shevell, who cut her transportation teeth in the freight and shipping industries, has made headlines in the past for her relationship with the former Beatle and for skipping out on MTA Board meetings. She was appointed to the board in 2001 by then Gov. George Pataki, and her appointment expires at the end of June. It’s unclear if Andrew Cuomo will reappoint her or use the first vacancy on the MTA Board during his term to appoint someone he knows with more rail experience.

May 10, 2011 3 comments
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