New York’s controversial congestion pricing program is no longer paused after Gov. Kathy Hochul announced a modified plan.
The program, which would charge drivers a fee for entering Manhattan south of 60th St., aims to ease traffic in central ...
New York's congestion charge, initially planned at $15, will now be $9 starting January, per Governor Kathy Hochul. Aimed at improving environmental conditions and transit financing, the charge ...
The goal of the plan is to fund the New York subway and reduce congestion, and Hochul said it being revived after an ...
Van Ritshie, the iconic voiceover actor of customer announcements on the LIRR and Metro North, passed away at 80 back on Nov.
The new $9 toll would need to be approved by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Board at ... U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration. “New York project sponsors ...
Congestion pricing is coming back — but it will cost drivers a little less to enter lower Manhattan than originally proposed.
New York announced that most cars will now have to pay to enter the city at peak hours, a hotly debated move intended to reduce traffic.
Ritshie’s voice was heard by millions of New Yorkers as he delivered announcements on LIRR and Metro-North trains.
The partnership between the state of West Virginia, CRW and Breeze Airways began in March of last year. In addition to Newark ...
Public transit and environmental advocates howled with protest last May when Hochul “paused” the congestion pricing system ...