An Accident Waiting To Happen
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With the conclusion of this year’s legislative session in Albany, I am hopeful that New Yorkers will not be forced to suffer a head-on collision with a congestion tax that could cost them as much as $2,000 a year. The damage would be even worse for small businesses that employ trucks to ship their products into Manhattan, as the suggested fee for them would be set at more than $5,000 a year.
Regardless of what argument you hear out of the administration about the necessity of implementing a congestion pricing scheme, it is a tax; and it is a tax being levied on those who can least afford it during a time when the city is enjoying a $5 billion surplus. Traffic congestion is a problem that needs to be addressed, but other alternatives should be studied before we punish commuters who live in the outer-boroughs.
Commuters, small businesses, and working class families, as well as other outer-borough neighborhoods who have very limited access to public transportation and have to rely on their cars to get into Manhattan, would unfairly suffer from a congestion tax.
Many neighborhoods outside of Manhattan will be devastated by a congestion tax because it will leave people with the unenviable choice of either paying more money to get to work, or traveling long distances to reach the few crowded forms of mass transit that are available to them. Working class people who cannot afford the excessive fee will be bumped off the streets and crowded onto illequipped buses and subways to free up the streets for the privileged few who can afford to pay the tax.
What I find equally disingenuous about the proposal is the argument that congestion pricing would be good for the environment. In fact, it does nothing to address the prevalence of background pollutants found with greater frequency in areas such as Long Island City, East Harlem, Bed Stuy, the South Bronx, and Jamaica. Residents of these areas, particularly younger children, endure high rates of asthma, yet would see no relief from the proposed congestion pricing plan.
Even by estimates from administration officials, the amount of traffic that actually would be reduced is a negligible amount. They see congestion pricing as a revenue generator; in other words, just another tax.
No one can ignore the fact that we do have a congestion problem but the idea of taxing commuters, small businesses, and working class families as the only means of reducing traffic is short-sighted.
Traffic mitigation alternatives include more vigorous enforcement of existing traffic and parking rules, like cracking down on double and triple parked cars, preventing trucks from parking in loading zones once they have completed their deliveries, and stopping taxis from middle of the street pick-ups and drop-offs. Improving traffic management, offering incentives to motorists and businesses to use mass transit, and improving the public transportation system, especially in the outer boroughs, will also reduce traffic without having to impose another tax.
Initiating a congestion traffic tax now is tantamount to putting the cart before the horse. Improvements to our mass transit system and exploring other avenues of relief are a necessary first step.
The fact remains that no one disputes the need to reduce congestion in both Manhattan and the rest of the City, but there is nothing innovative about a congestion pricing scheme because it is just another unfair tax with which we are all too familiar.
Mr. Weprin is the finance chairman of the City Council.