NYLCV: Congestion pricing answer to traffic woes
Congestion
pricing answer to traffic woes
Queens Courier, NY – January 24 2008
OPINION PRO: At the end of this month, a state commission of
transportation and environmental experts and government officials will issue a
report on how to solve New York City’s traffic crisis. Never before has New York
undertaken such a comprehensive effort to determine what can and should be done
about the congestion choking our streets and our residents. But from the
commission’s interim report, released two weeks ago (January 10), it is already
clear that congestion pricing is the answer to the city’s traffic woes, and that
other plans for traffic mitigation fall short.
Congestion pricing - which
would charge drivers entering parts of Manhattan on weekdays between 6 a.m. and
6 p.m. - has been successfully chosen by major cities such as London, Milan and
Stockholm to reduce traffic and encourage commuters to use more environmentally
friendly mass transit. This month, 61 percent of Queens residents polled agreed,
saying they would support the proposal if its revenue went to improving the
transit system as planned.
If we are truly going to fix our traffic
problem, there must be three essential elements of any solution. The plan must:
1) reduce traffic significantly; 2) earn the revenue we need to improve our
buses and subways; and 3) balance the cost of reducing congestion fairly so that
the plan helps - and does not hurt - working families. According to the
commission’s exhaustive research, only congestion pricing would achieve all
three goals.
Queens would be one of the biggest beneficiaries of
congestion pricing, since there would be fewer cars on the road. Western Queens
alone would see up to 39 percent less traffic congestion and the borough as a
whole would see a 9 percent drop. Meanwhile, congestion pricing will generate
hundreds of millions of dollars a year to improve mass transit - paid for by
suburban commuters who currently get a free ride and pollute Queens’ air on the
way into the city.
Other options researched by the commission include East River
bridge tolls, a license plate rationing scheme and various taxes and charges
that could be combined to limit traffic and earn enough revenue to sustain and
improve mass transit. These proposals have variously been rejected by the
public, the federal government, the business community and labor unions. Most
importantly, not one of these plans reduces traffic significantly and earns
revenue for mass transit while distributing the burden of the cost fairly. Only
congestion pricing passes the test.
Some have asserted - such as members
of an anti-congestion pricing lobbying group funded by the American Automobile
Association and parking garage companies, and the politicians that are funded by
them - that congestion pricing is unfair to Queens’ working families. That could
not be further from the truth. Less than FIVE percent of Queens residents drive
to work in Manhattan’s central business district. If congestion pricing is
approved, the other 95 percent - who cannot afford the car payments, gas and
insurance to drive into Manhattan every day - will benefit. Best of all,
congestion pricing means more trains, buses and better service in areas that are
poorly served now, like Bayside, College Point and Southeast
Queens.
After the public hearings wrap up this week, the commission
should endorse congestion if it follows the logic of its own research. Then, the
city council and state legislature will have to weigh in, and decide how to
solve our congestion crisis. They, too, should endorse congestion pricing if we
are going to solve our traffic problem the right way - by saving working
families time and money in a way that is fair to all.
Marcia Bystryn
is the Executive Director for the New York League of Conservation Voters
- a non-partisan, policy making and political action organization that works to
make environmental protection a top priority with elected officials,
decision-makers and the voters.

