M.T.A. Warns of Doomsday Subway Cuts Without $12 Billion in Federal Aid - The New York Times


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Financial Crisis at MTA

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) faces a $16.2 billion deficit through 2024 due to the significant drop in ridership caused by the coronavirus pandemic. This revenue loss comes from fares, tolls, and subsidies.

Proposed Service Cuts

Without $12 billion in federal aid, the MTA plans to implement drastic service cuts. This includes a 40% reduction in subway and bus service, leading to increased wait times (eight minutes for subways and 15 minutes for buses). Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North trains would also experience significantly longer intervals between trains. Planned upgrades to subway signal systems, which are a major source of delays, would be canceled.

Federal Aid Stalemate

The MTA has requested $12 billion in aid to cover operating losses through 2021, but negotiations for a federal stimulus package have stalled, leaving the future of the proposed cuts uncertain.

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Facing a staggering financial crisis and a stalemate in Washington, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority threatened on Wednesday to adopt a doomsday plan if it did not receive as much as $12 billion in federal aid, including slashing subway and bus service in New York City by 40 percent.

The plan paints a bleak picture for riders: Wait times would increase by eight minutes on the subway and 15 minutes on buses; Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North trains would run at 60- or 120-minute intervals. Upgrades to the subway’s signal systems, which have been the source of many delays, would be scrapped.

The agency is facing a staggering $16.2 billion deficit through 2024, after the coronavirus pandemic wiped out its operating revenue — which comes from fares, tolls and subsidies — virtually overnight. Ridership on the subway, which plummeted by 90 percent in April, has only reached a quarter of usual levels, even as more and more New Yorkers return to work.

The state-run transit agency has requested $12 billion in aid to cover its operating losses through 2021. But after negotiations over the next stimulus package stalled this month, immediate federal support did not appear to be forthcoming.

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