Plus: Where are the subway station bathrooms? [On The Way - from WNYC and Gothamist] Gothamist relies on your support to make local news available to all. Not yet a member? [Consider donating and join today.]( Congestion confusion: MTA struggled to answer questions about tolling program fives years in the making By [Stephen Nessen]( and [Clayton Guse]( Five years after congestion pricing was signed into law, the MTA has held more than a dozen public hearings, released a 4,000-page analysis, and fielded countless inquiries from elected officials and the press. So after hearing from numerous confused New Yorkers, we expected transit officials to easily answer a few questions about whether certain areas within the congestion zone south of 60th Street would be tolled. What followed was one of the more bizarre exchanges either of us have ever had with the MTA in our combined 10-plus years covering transit in New York City. The MTA struggled to answer whether drivers on the Brooklyn Bridge would be tolled if they went to the FDR Drive going in either direction. At one point, different MTA officials gave us different answers. The MTA’s press office also directed us to a map laying out the locations of tolling cameras in the [environmental assessment for congestion pricing](chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/, saying it would clear up our question. It didn’t. The map didn’t simply identify where a set of tolling cameras will be placed along the bridge’s many on and off ramps, which resemble a bowl of spaghetti. After two weeks of asking, [the MTA finally gave a definitive answer]( Drivers on the Brooklyn Bridge taking the FDR north won’t have to pay a toll. Drivers on the Brooklyn Bridge taking the FDR south must pass over a local street, meaning they will be tolled. That nuance seemingly conflicted with the MTA’s repeated statements that drivers on the FDR Drive would be exempt from the tolls. And the Brooklyn Bridge wasn’t the only point in the congestion zone that hadn’t been clearly explained over the last five years. The MTA also explained to us that there is one way to avoid the toll when entering Manhattan on the Queensboro Bridge. On the Manhattan-bound side of the crossing, ramps send vehicles to one of three locations. There’s one ramp that lets off between 59th and 60th Streets, another on the south side of 60th street, and a third that dumps drivers on 62nd Street, which is north of the congestion zone. The MTA said the 62nd Street exit — only accessible by a ramp on the bridge’s upper level — wouldn’t be tolled. That detail isn’t included on the MTA’s website on congestion pricing, and was buried in the environmental assessment for the program. Like the Brooklyn Bridge, that exemption seemed to fly in the face of the law approving congestion pricing. The legislation only allows for exemptions on FDR Drive, the West Side Highway, Battery Park Underpass and any surface road of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel that connects to West Street. The ramp from the Queensboro Bridge seems to start in the congestion zone, but is elevated above the street and drops riders off at 62nd Street, so an argument could be made that it didn’t appear to fit any of those exemptions. It took the MTA days to clarify why it was carved out. MTA spokesperson Aaron Donovan eventually said that while the ramp may be located south of 60th Street, it doesn’t touch down in the “terra firme” of the congestion relief zone. That terminology was not used in the 2019 law. Rachael Fauss, an analyst at the good government watchdog Reinvent Albany, credited the MTA for its ample outreach on congestion pricing — but said the 2019 law that authorized the program simply didn’t provide enough specifics as to how the tolls would function. “I think there’s a really big gap between how nitty gritty implementation happens versus the law giving really broad parameters for how these things are supposed to work,” Fauss said. Former city traffic commissioner Sam Schwartz pointed out that the FDR confusion only exists because mid-20th century road builder Robert Moses — immortalized as New York’s “Power Broker” — didn’t make good on a plan to build a ramp from the Brooklyn Bridge to the southbound side of the drive. MTA officials said they plan to launch a major education campaign to inform the public about all the details of the tolling program. And they’ll start to put up signage on the roadway informing drivers where they’ll pay, and where they won’t. But the efficacy of that campaign remains to be seen. And after our bizarre experience extracting answers on who will be tolled on the bridges that send close to 20% of traffic into the zone each day, we’re left wondering what other surprises await drivers once congestion pricing goes into effect.
What New York is reading this week [subway station]( Getty Images [Announcements, maps and signs: Manhattan BP presses MTA to improve restroom accessibility]( - Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine — who praised the renovations to nine bathrooms in subway stations that reopened last year — is urging the MTA to put up more signage indicating where those bathrooms are located. [Read more](.
- Police arrested a 62-year-old man who allegedly struck and killed a 10-year-old girl with his SUV in Williamsburg on Tuesday. [Read more](.
- New York City officials are moving ahead with a plan to convert a defunct newsstand outside City Hall into an e-bike charging hub for delivery workers — despite protests from the local community board over the kiosk’s aesthetic. [Read more](.
- The NYPD said a Bronx man died earlier this month after being struck by an e-bike rider at an intersection in East Harlem in late March. [Read more](.
- The MTA estimates that turnstile number 602 at the Grand Central–42nd Street subway station rotates about 3 million times a year, making it the “hardest-working turnstile” in the entire subway system. ([Curbed](
- Honking when there’s no “imminent danger” is illegal in New York City, please stop doing it. ([The New York Times](
Curious commuter “Will congestion pricing lower the number of government employees who congest lower Manhattan streets by parking free of charge? Or are they exempt from congestion pricing?” - Lew Perin, Brooklyn What Clayton says: Very few government employees will be exempt from the new tolls, but some government vehicles conducting official city business will not be charged. Transit workers, police officers and teachers driving in their personal vehicles to work [will all have to pay](. The program, however, doesn’t solve the widespread problem of placard abuse. The enforcement of that problem lies on city agencies and the NYPD — but [a report from the city Department of Investigation earlier this month]( found drivers abusing parking privileges rarely receive summonses for their infractions. Have a question? Follow [@Gothamist on Instagram]( for special opportunities and prompts to submit questions. If you're not on Instagram, email [cguse@wnyc.org](mailto:cguse@wnyc.org ?subject=Curious%20Commuter) or [snessen@wnyc.org](mailto:snessen@wnyc.org?subject=Curious%20Commuter) with the subject line "Curious Commuter question." You must provide your first name + borough (or city if outside of NYC) to have your question considered. Service Tips - Friday night through early Monday morning:
- Uptown 1 trains will skip Franklin St, Canal St, Houston St, Christopher St-Sheridan Sq, 79 St and 86 St.
- Downtown 1 trains will skip 137 St-City College, 125 St, 116 St-Columbia University, Cathedral Pkwy (110 St) and 103 St.
- Uptown 6 trains will skip 51 St, 68 St-Hunter College, 77 St, 96 St, 103 St, 110 St and 116 St.
- Flushing-bound 7 trains will skip 82 St-Jackson Hts, 90 St-Elmhurst Av, 103 St-Corona Plaza and 111 St.
- L trains won't run between Lorimer St, Brooklyn and 8 Av, Manhattan.
- Coney Island-bound N trains will skip 8 Av, Fort Hamilton Pkwy, New Utrecht Av, 18 Av, 20 Av and Bay Pkwy.
- Bay Ridge-bound R trains will skip Union St, 4 Av-9 St, Prospect Av and 25 St. - Every borough currently has one free bus route. [Find yours](.
This week in NYC transit history [a cyclist in 1990] Barbara Alper/Getty Images City inspectors turn to bikes This week 23 years ago, the city Department of Transportation decided to move some of its workers out of cars and onto bikes. Back in April 1991, the DOT announced a pilot program where five of its inspectors would be deployed on two wheels instead of four. Those inspectors checked in on street construction to ensure contractors did their work as required. Officials said the change would save money and cut down on pollution. Traffic inspector Pia Simpson told the Daily News “we have to be alert” because of the danger of cycling in the city. More than two decades later, DOT inspectors are still deployed on e-bikes and city bikes, said agency spokesperson Vin Barone. And lo and behold, the initiative is now run by Simpson. [Instagram]( [Instagram](
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