Read it in the news about 1-2 days ago that NYC will start charging I think it was a $40 toll to drive a car into Lower Manhatten as an attempt to reduce street congestion...........so will this bring the transit travelers back?
Transit has held up pretty well in New York. Congestion in Manhattan has to be seen to be believed. Anybody who insists on driving into lower Manhattan is not playing with a full deck.
CSSHEGEWISCH Anybody who insists on driving into lower Manhattan is not playing with a full deck.
I have to agree (unless you're making a delivery or something).
Even sitting in a taxi it seems to take forever to go crosstown.
They're doing congestion pricing in The City of London and it seems to be working. Now, just wait until NYC puts trash containers in the streets and eliminates over 100,000 paking spaces!
If people are willing to pay $50 for a $20 fast food order to be delivered, I doubt the $40 congestion charge is going to matter much.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
CSSHEGEWISCHAnybody who insists on driving into lower Manhattan is not playing with a full deck.
Hey, in North Jersey we had that figured out 50 years ago! The rule was take the bus or the train, it's easier.
zugmannIf people are willing to pay $50 for a $20 fast food order to be delivered, I doubt the $40 congestion charge is going to matter much.
More money than they know what to do with, obviously. What happened to cooking for themselves? Didn't their mothers teach them anything?
Flintlock76 CSSHEGEWISCH Anybody who insists on driving into lower Manhattan is not playing with a full deck. Hey, in North Jersey we had that figured out 50 years ago! The rule was take the bus or the train, it's easier.
So there's some resignation to leaving the car parked someplace that can be accessed by mass transit that DOES operate late and conveniently. Back in the day this was the Port Authority lots in Leonia and Fort Lee; now it's the shuttle lots near the Lincoln Tunnel with buses that run 24/7 both ways with facilitated counterflow in rush hour.
But this begs the other question, which is how you get from points in New Jersey, say Englewood, out to points on Long Island, say East Hampton... and then move around East Hampton and Montauk where cheap transit is, shall we say, difficult to locate. Something Moses never got around to was parkways THROUGH Manhattan; they even tore down the elevated West Side Highway that used to run all the way around the tip of the island to connect with the bridges to Brooklyn and Queens, most notably the "59th Street Bridge" of song and story that goes straight into the branches of highway 25. There is already the great scam that the toll by way of the Verrazano Bridge to access Long Island is considerably greater than that involved in going through the Holland (or Lincoln) Tunnel and thence across the Queensborough.
Yes, it's possible to make relatively easy connection from any of the 'bus' or train systems from New Jersey across to the LIRR Montauk line, and off-peak pricing the last time I was there is something like $18.50 one way all the way from NYP. Which is great... until you get there. If you don't have a winter rat you'll be spending quite a bit trying to get very far around.
That assumes the place where they live has cooking faciities
The real question is how much do they charge to get OUT of Manhattan
BEAUSABREThe real question is how much do they charge to get OUT of Manhattan
When I was a kid, there were tollbooths both ways, and very short ramps. For what seemed like many years they were digging and building the arrangements for the Martha Washington deck, and that too had an outbound toll plaza (you can still see the place where it was, which used to be the access to buy commuter ticket books).
It was a misery getting out of the city on the GWB especially in summer, with long stinking jams backed up loading the bridge down on the north side. All that ended through the simple expedient of charging 'double' for inbound and nothing outbound -- common sense in action!
York1 John
So what happens to the vehicles that bring in the stuff the city uses and take out what the city wastes/effuses? Are they charged a fee?
azrailSo what happens to the vehicles that bring in the stuff the city uses and take out what the city wastes/effuses? Are they charged a fee?
Most of the 'necessary' services were and will be performed at 'off-peak' hours, when the surcharge would not apply.
On the other hand, there are many deliveries of 'convenience', or that have to be made during business hours. Those will pay the fee, and of course this will be surcharged to the customer or client who ordered or required on-peak service.
The overwhelming majority of people wouldn't ever pay $40. That's the absolute maximum for "if you don't do this, don't do that, and do it all at the highest peak of congestion" fee. The average fee would be $16.
Yep, it's hittin' the fan up there over that $40 fee.
https://patch.com/new-jersey/across-nj/nj-toll-hikes-likely-after-nyc-congestion-pricing-approved-feds
And you have the added benefit of paying New York State and City income taxes for the privilege of having a job in the City even if you live in New Jersey or Connecticut
BEAUSABREAnd you have the added benefit of paying New York State and City income taxes for the privilege of having a job in the City even if you live in New Jersey or Connecticut.
I don't know how it is elsewhere, but Illinois has agreements with several neighboring states regarding income tax on non-resident income.
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