(Picture by Selcuk Acar/Anadolu through Getty Photos)
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Queens Council Members Robert Holden, Joann Ariola and Vickie Paladino have referred to as on the MTA to pause congestion pricing till various ongoing lawsuits are resolved.
The Queens council members belong to the New York Metropolis Council’s Frequent Sense Caucus, which issued a joint assertion on Monday following a ruling from federal Decide Leo Gordon.
The Frequent Sense Caucus, co-chaired by Holden and Joseph Borelli, consists of Kristy Marmorato, Vickie Paladino, Joann Ariola, Susan Zhuang, Kalman Yeger, Inna Vernikov and David Carr. The group focuses on advocating for sensible insurance policies and addressing quality-of-life points affecting New Yorkers throughout town.
Decide Gordon issued a 72-page ruling rejecting most of New Jersey State’s complaints about congestion pricing, which is scheduled to enter impact on Jan. 5.
Gordon, nonetheless, did rule that a few of the potential impacts of congestion pricing on New Jersey communities required additional research, particularly considerations over how the toll would affect air high quality in New Jersey.
Gordon set a deadline of Jan. 17 for New York and the Federal Freeway Administration (FHWA) to reply to considerations over the environmental impacts of congestion pricing, with the toll scheduled to enter impact on Sunday.
New York lawmakers and the MTA have insisted that they will transfer forward with the Jan. 5 begin date regardless of Gordon’s ruling, however the Frequent Sense Caucus, co-chaired by Holden, has referred to as for the MTA board to pause the plan whereas authorized challenges stay ongoing.
“With several legal cases and injunctions still pending, moving forward with congestion pricing on January 5th would be reckless and presents significant complications for the state, including potential court-mandated refunds,” the Frequent Sense Caucus mentioned in a joint assertion. “We urge the MTA Board to convene immediately and vote to pause congestion pricing before further damage is done.”
In his ruling, Gordon ordered federal and MTA officers to elucidate why that they had allotted extra money to mitigate the affect of further visitors brought on by congestion pricing within the Bronx than that they had in New Jersey. He additionally requested extra particulars about mitigation plans for extra visitors.
Randy Mastro, an legal professional representing New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, mentioned Gordon’s ruling signifies that congestion pricing can not go forward as scheduled on Jan. 5.
He mentioned the ruling confirmed that the FHWA acted “arbitrarily and capriciously” in approving the MTA’s plan and that the FHWA resolution supplied no rational clarification of mitigation commitments.
Mastro additional contended that New York modified its tolling scheme considerably after it gained federal approval and that extra consideration is required earlier than the present congestion pricing proposal could take impact.
“New Jersey remains firmly opposed to any attempt to force through a congestion pricing proposal in the final weeks of the Biden Administration,” Mastro mentioned in a press release. “There could not be a worse time to impose a new $9 toll, escalating over time to $15, on individuals who are traveling into downtown Manhattan for work, school, or leisure.”
Mastro argued that Gordon’s ruling has prohibited the MTA from shifting forward with the Jan. 5 begin date by successfully rescinding federal approvals. Mastro has filed a movement searching for clarification from Gordon over the ruling, which didn’t explicitly state whether or not the plan may transfer ahead on Jan. 5 or not. He has additionally filed a movement searching for a short lived restraining order on congestion pricing.
Gordon is ready to host a listening to on the problems on Friday afternoon.
Nonetheless, MTA CEO Janno Lieber mentioned Gordon’s ruling doesn’t intrude with the MTA’s plan to implement congestion pricing on Jan. 5, stating that the decide agreed with New York on “virtually every issue.”
“Most importantly, the decision does not interfere with the program’s scheduled implementation this coming Sunday, Jan. 5,” Lieber mentioned in a press release.
Lieber added that the MTA is assured that the FHWA has taken enough motion to handle Gordon’s considerations over mitigation in New Jersey.
“We’re confident that the subsequent Federal actions, including the approval of the revised, reduced toll rates, did put those issues to rest,” Lieber mentioned.
Gov. Kathy Hochul additionally welcomed Gordon’s ruling, stating that it enabled congestion pricing to take impact on Jan. 5 as scheduled.
“Despite the best efforts of the State of New Jersey trying to thwart New York’s ability to reduce congestion on our streets while making long-overdue investments in public transit, our position has prevailed in court on nearly every issue. This is a massive win for commuters in both New York and New Jersey,” Hochul mentioned in a press release.
“Commuters deserve a world-class transit system that’s safe, efficient and modern. Local residents deserve clean air and safe streets. Drivers deserve less congestion and reduced traffic. This is what we will begin to achieve — at a lower cost to drivers — when congestion pricing begins in January.”