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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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The original World Trade Center took two and a half decades before it became breaking even on rent. But it was part of an iconic skyline that helped drive tourism in lower Manhattan; it was a driving force in other private development in lower Manhattan; it served as a broadcast tower for television and radio; it eventually did start generating profits.

Large scale capital investments like the World Trade Center redevelopment are not going to return dividends overnight. But with this development a great number of good things will happen. Lower Manhattan's transit will be better connected than ever before, linking Fulton Street, Courtland Street, Chambers Street, PATH and the World Financial center underground. The 9/11 memorial museum is projected to bring 4,000,000 million tourists to the city in the first year alone. The first tower will hold tens of thousands of jobs, all easily accessible by the PATH.

Certainly some mistakes have been made. Its over budget, in part to keep it on schedule. Its screwed up the weekend PATH schedules, which has a lot to do with poor management. But to condemn the project overall is inaccurate. Besides that, increasing tolls into Manhattan is simply good public policy. It reduces traffic congestion while generating revenue for projects like the ARC tunnel and PATH capital programs. If you're really upset, be angry with Christie first for canceling the tunnel, then lying about the reasons.

Manhattan will have congestion pricing sooner or later, and the bridge and tunnel tolls have long been part of that scheme. A little over a century ago the first subways were dug; now we couldn't imagine a major metropolitan city anywhere in the world without them. As cities become denser, congestion tolls in some form will become ever more pervasive.

Posted on: 2012/4/30 18:42
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Then consider it your contribution to the memory of the 9-11 tragedy. I wish they could have made Twin Towers again.

Posted on: 2012/4/30 18:34
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Big loving article in NYTimes about 1 WTC

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/30/nyr ... html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper

Nowhere does it say the damn thing will never make a dime, that it's just a giant penis waving in the sky, not unlike the Apollo rockets but without the technology byproducts. There should be a neon sign on it that says "brought to you by the commuters of NJ".

Posted on: 2012/4/30 16:56
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Sneaky...

PANYNJ quietly expanded the time that they charge cash prices to EZPass customers.

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011 ... _shrink_d.html#incart_hbx

Posted on: 2011/9/20 14:34
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AAA to feds: Stop NY-NJ bridge, tunnel toll hike
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AAA to feds: Stop NY-NJ bridge, tunnel toll hike

Friday, September 16, 2011

NEW YORK -- The AAA motorists' group is asking the U.S. Department of Transportation to block this weekend's toll increase of as much as 50 percent on bridges and tunnels owned by the Port Authority.

The AAA says the increase violates a federal law that requires that tolls be reasonable.

Cash tolls on the George Washington Bridge, Holland Tunnel, Lincoln Tunnel, Goethals Bridge, Bayonne Bridge and Outerbridge Crossing are scheduled to rise from $8 to $12 at 3 a.m. on Sunday.

By December 2015 cash tolls would increase gradually to $15 under a plan approved Aug. 19 by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Peak-hour tolls for E-ZPass users would rise gradually to $12.50.

Peak-hour tolls for users of the E-ZPass electronic payment system will go from $8 to $9.50.

In addition to the bridge toll increases, the fare on the Port Authority Trans-Hudson subway line will rise from $1.75 to $2 on Sunday. By 2015 it is scheduled to increase to $2.75.

The AAA says the increases are unreasonable because much of the money will go toward building the new World Trade Center. It says that project has nothing to do with the Port Authority's original transportation mission.

"One of our primary missions is to make sure that any tolls and revenue and any user fees go back into transportation," said Marta Genovese, vice president of legal affairs for AAA. "But in this case it's going into a speculative office development."

The group said the increase violates a federal law that requires bridge tolls to be "just and reasonable," and it sent a letter to Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood asking him to act.

"It's an egregious example of the motorists getting ripped off," AAA New York spokesman Robert Sinclair said.

The AAA claims the increases violate a 1987 U.S. law regulating bridge tolls. The law applies to bridges that carry interstate commerce over "any of the navigable waters of the United States."

The Department of Transportation said LaHood would respond directly to the AAA. It gave no immediate comment.

The Associated Press left a message for a port authority representative. Its board members have said the fare increases will pay for construction that is fueling the region's economy.

It also says it needs more money to replace the cables on the George Washington Bridge, rehabilitate the corkscrew-shaped ramp into the Lincoln Tunnel and take on other maintenance projects. The authority receives no tax money and supports itself through tolls, fares, fees and rent paid by businesses at its ports, airports and other properties.

The AAA said it may also sue the authority to try to block the increase.

Genovese said the group has not asked a court for a temporary restraining order because it is still trying to obtain a revised capital spending plan from the agency.

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?sec ... ources/traffic&id=8355716

Posted on: 2011/9/16 15:14
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Re: Question about the fare hike
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I'm not a fan of the increases, but that is more because I don't like the existence of the PATH monopoly than anything else.

What I will say is that the PATH train fares NJ to NY, stack up pretty well against comparable private sector fares on NY Waterway. In 10 years NY Waterway have increased their fares from around $1 to over $5. PATH have probably made a similar increase on their bridges and tunnels, but they have held their mass transit charges much lower. That's good imo.

Posted on: 2011/9/14 10:03
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Re: Question about the fare hike
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pols wrote:
Hey,

So next week, the PATH fare is increasing from $1.30 per ride to $1.50 per ride when purchasing 10 or more rides. I still have a bunch of rides on my SmartLink. When the fare hike goes into effect, will $1.30 or $1.50 be deducted off my card each time I pass through a turnstile?

The reason I ask is because the PATH currently deducts a ride each time I swipe my card, while the MTA deducts the fare amount (which can be quite annoying if there's an uneven balance).

Thanks for your help.


No, with the PATH SmartLink, you buy trips, not fares. If you are using a pay per ride metrocard, you will see the increase immediately.

You can actually purchase packs of trips at the current rate and save them. I believe you can purchase up to two sets of each "product." A product refers to 40 trips, 20 trips or 10 trips. If you can afford to, refill your card now.

Posted on: 2011/9/14 4:34
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Question about the fare hike
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Hey,

So next week, the PATH fare is increasing from $1.30 per ride to $1.50 per ride when purchasing 10 or more rides. I still have a bunch of rides on my SmartLink. When the fare hike goes into effect, will $1.30 or $1.50 be deducted off my card each time I pass through a turnstile?

The reason I ask is because the PATH currently deducts a ride each time I swipe my card, while the MTA deducts the fare amount (which can be quite annoying if there's an uneven balance).

Thanks for your help.

Posted on: 2011/9/14 1:18
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Many of the current problems with regional transit funding can be traced back to Sheldon Silver, the New York legislator who killed the congestion pricing planned for Manhattan. Had the system been installed -- paid for almost entirely with federal dollars -- the true cost of driving into Manhattan would finally have been reconciled with what drivers actually pay. More importantly, congestion pricing would have bolstered the MTA capital budget while also removing control of the cost of driving into the city from the Port Authority.

The problem with the toll collection system right now is the Port Authority's interest in raising tolls is abated by their suburban constituencies; they need money, but suburban voters will complain to their respective governors. Had congestion pricing passed, been installed, and the authority given to the city of New York, the governors of the states could saber rattle all they without consequence.

With congestion pricing, there would be more pressure on New Jersey to improve rail access to the city, more money available to invest in infrastructure, and less of a burden on the Port Authority to divy of funding for projects like the ARC tunnel. 7 Train extension to Secaucus? No problem when the MTA could have been raking in millions from congestion pricing.

That said, once the ARC tunnel was cancelled, the $3 billion pledged by the Port Authority to the project should have been freed up and spent on their other projects. On the other hand, had ARC moved forward, the Port Authority's PATH trains would be under less pressure once the tunnel opened -- many of the trains terminating in Hoboken (and thus filling the PATH with passengers) would be diverted directly to Penn Station.

The bottom line is, as a state, a region and a nation we need to be investing more in mass transit. Driving costs money and the true cost has been artificially subsidized by taxpayers for years.

Posted on: 2011/9/9 0:28
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Re: Big Reason PATH fares are going up...
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It means that if you protest in America you risk getting arrested, if you protest in other countries you risk getting shot.

The point is that Americans rarely protest and they should because the governemnt is spending out of control and we all pay for it. Govenemnt says they wont increase taxes but when tolls go up we all pay a "tax".

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/20/opi ... -911s-white-elephant.html

Posted on: 2011/9/6 16:01
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Re: Big Reason PATH fares are going up...
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12345 wrote: When people protest in America they can get arrested but not shot. Its sad that people in other countries risk getting shot by their government every day while Americans dont lift a finger to demand the govenment do the right thing.
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THIS MEANS

Posted on: 2011/9/6 15:29
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Re: Big Reason PATH fares are going up...
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When people protest in America they can get arrested but not shot. Its sad that people in other countries risk getting shot by their government every day while Americans dont lift a finger to demand the govenment do the right thing.

Posted on: 2011/9/2 4:31
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Re: Big Reason PATH fares are going up...
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JC_Man wrote:
Idiots.


Worse than idiots. They walked into a casino, gambled with OUR money, lost, are now hitting us with the bill and have the audacity to claim its saving and creating jobs. I think that borders on criminal negligence.

"Robert Brooks, a finance professor at the University of Alabama and author of a book on swaps, said the PA was essentially gambling with the public?s money and lost."

Posted on: 2011/8/31 3:31
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Re: Big Reason PATH fares are going up...
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Idiots.

Posted on: 2011/8/31 1:27
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Big Reason PATH fares are going up...
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Port Authority geniuses surprisingly on the losing of a series of swap deals with various Wall Street derivative peddlers...

http://www.politickerny.com/2011/08/2 ... ions-on-swaps/?show=print

Posted on: 2011/8/31 0:13
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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ianmac47 wrote:Quote:
Quote:

What they have in common is a willingness to mug their neighbors for a paycheck. To those orange shirts at the meeting we were nothing but cows to be milked.


That's not all that different then expecting taxpayers without cars to pay for the road improvements required to ease traffic congestion. The failure here is that mass transit fares increased, not that the bridge and tunnel tolls went up. The broader failure is that Christie cancelled the ARC tunnel that would have eased mass transit commutes into the region's job center and would have eased the burden of suburban commuters crowding PATH Trains in Hoboken and Newark. The broader failure is allowing NJ Transit to hike fares and reduce service 18 months ago.


I always think of these things in terms of how wide is the net cast to spread the pain of what we decide is a public good. Statewide, there's relatively few taxpayers without cars. Sorry, but it's true, and supposedly the gas tax is to pay for roadwork. If it's not enough, then raising the gas tax is a no brainer.

But asking NJ commuters of both types to foot the bill for the WTC, something being done not for our benefit but for NYC and USA, is simply mugging the guy you've already got in chains. We can't get away. The hypocrisy from Christy is ginormous, since this is nothing but a tax rise on a selected population. The fiction of a "fee for service" is particularly thin on the tolls, a small fraction of that is for the upkeep of the crossings, the rest is simply a half billion dollars yearly tax.

Posted on: 2011/8/23 2:30
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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LIUNA is not a public sector union. It represents laborers employed by private contractors. There is a public sector department. Most of the jobs at issue, however, are part of the long term capital improvement plans of PANYNJ and large scale construction is almost always contracted out to private contractors.

Posted on: 2011/8/22 18:30
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Hmmm...I'm trying to remember what group was referenced in the article as endorsing the hikes so the ill gotten proceeds could flow into their pockets. I know it was mentioned somewhere. Oh there it is...the meeting hall was packed with union members begging for the PA to stick me up because they can make better use of my money than I can.

Not much interested in the millionaires don't pay their fair share argument when 49% don't pay anything and get to vote themselves even more. If that statement doesn't make it clear...I make enough in MY OWN business that I don't have to concern myself with taking from others.

Oh and blah blah blah...yes I'm a cold hearted, ungiving conservative and fine that way...blah blah blah

Posted on: 2011/8/22 17:37
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Quote:

bryanc99 wrote:
No wonder people are leaving NY & NJ in droves. I fully plan to be out of here by the time the PATH monthly passes cost $89/month.

What gives the PA and the states of NJ & NY the right to pick my pocket and hand the illicit proceeds to the union members. The unions talk incessantly about a middle class lifestyle while demanding that everyone else subsidize it even to our economic detriment. Public unions and their members are leaches on society and need to be excised!

This is a great area and I have lived in downtown JC for 11 years but the real income earners and businesses will continue to flee the insane FEES and taxes required to maintain this fiscal house of cards.


Blah blah blah... unions are bad... blah blah..

The MTA is going to raise raise at the same rate too. You can't have the treasury continually rely on quantitative easing without inflation eventually catching up with costs.

The real problem here is that you have millionaire governors giving tax handouts to millionaire friends and families instead of investing in public infrastructure.

Posted on: 2011/8/22 15:10
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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No wonder people are leaving NY & NJ in droves. I fully plan to be out of here by the time the PATH monthly passes cost $89/month.

What gives the PA and the states of NJ & NY the right to pick my pocket and hand the illicit proceeds to the union members. The unions talk incessantly about a middle class lifestyle while demanding that everyone else subsidize it even to our economic detriment. Public unions and their members are leaches on society and need to be excised!

This is a great area and I have lived in downtown JC for 11 years but the real income earners and businesses will continue to flee the insane FEES and taxes required to maintain this fiscal house of cards.

Posted on: 2011/8/22 13:56
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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This is the video of the public hearingin Jersey City at 6:00 PM.

http://vimeo.com/27948697

Posted on: 2011/8/21 14:56
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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brewster wrote:
Finally, a pundit calls it like I see it. NJ commuters are going to pay for a ridiculously expensive NYC office building in which they have little economic interest.

August 19, 2011
9/11?s White Elephant
By JOE NOCERA

There is nothing wrong ? and much that is right ? with building a national monument to memorialize the nearly 3,000 people killed in the 9/11 attacks a decade ago. The awful events of that day traumatized the country ? and changed it. The dead deserve to be remembered. Far be it from me to suggest otherwise.

What I do want to suggest, though, is that what?s being built in the name of 9/11 ? a staggering $11 billion worth of government-sponsored construction on the 16 acres we now call ground zero ? is an example of just about everything wrong with modern government. When the World Trade Center site is finally completed, it will include a state-of-the-art train station whose cost overruns have surpassed $1 billion. The 9/11 memorial itself, which covers the footprint of the former twin towers, was so far behind schedule that it is now being hastily constructed, out of sequence, so that it will be ready by the 10th anniversary of the tragedy.

And then there?s 1 World Trade Center, scheduled to be completed in 2013, which will add 2.6 million square feet of office space in a city that doesn?t need it, at a cost so high that it will be a cash drain for decades to come. Where?s the Tea Party when you need them?

Last year, I wrote about 1 World Trade Center, pointing out that its $3.3 billion price tag made it, by far, the most expensive office building ever constructed in America. At the time, Richard Gladstone, the project manager for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which is in charge of rebuilding ground zero, told me point-blank that despite its costs, the new skyscraper would not affect the commuters who pay the tolls to cross the six bridges and tunnels the agency operates.

But, on Friday, that statement was shown to be ? how to put this nicely? ? untrue. The Port Authority, with the complicity of Andrew Cuomo and Chris Christie, the governors of New York and New Jersey, who oversee the agency, approved a series of toll increases so onerous that by 2015, a typical commuter who uses the George Washington Bridge will have to pay $62.50 a week to get to work.

What has been especially galling has been the cynicism surrounding the efforts to get the toll increases. First, the Port Authority said that unless it could increase the tolls, it would have to ?slow or stop? the construction of 1 World Trade Center. Though this scenario was highly unlikely, it got the construction unions duly aroused, as it was intended to do. They began calling in favors among the politicians.

The Port Authority was originally going to propose two increases of $2, spaced a few years apart. But the politicos in both Cuomo?s and Christie?s offices suggested that the agency come forth with a much higher initial toll increase ? thus allowing the two governors to look like heroes when they ?persuaded? the Port Authority to lower the increases. The governors also railed on about waste and fraud at the Port Authority, while knowing full well the real problem was the fact that $3.3 billion ? money that could have been spent on needed infrastructure improvements ? was instead diverted to a white elephant at ground zero.

I understand that it?s hard, even for a blunt-talking fiscal conservative like Christie, to openly criticize 1 World Trade Center. For many people, its rebuilding has enormous symbolic importance. George Pataki, the former New York governor, who pushed hardest for the rebuilding, originally named the building Freedom Tower. Recent editorials in the New York tabloids objecting to the toll increases nevertheless tiptoed gingerly around the outrageous costs of 1 World Trade Center.

But despite the shroud of patriotism that its supporters have always cloaked it in, it?s really just a big, fancy office building. An office building with such poor economics that it will soak New Jersey and New York commuters for decades to come. An office building only the government could love.

Lately, supporters of the project have begun saying that its economics have improved. They point to the fact that Cond? Nast, the publishing giant, has agreed to be the anchor tenant. What they fail to point out is that Cond? Nast?s rent is less than half the break-even cost of the 1 million square feet it will occupy. In other words, a company that publishes high-end magazines aimed at rich people will be getting an enormous government subsidy for the foreseeable future.

And who will be paying for that subsidy? The mailroom attendants who use the Lincoln Tunnel to get to work. The middle-class New Jersey-ites who use the George Washington Bridge. The firefighters and police officers who live in Staten Island. Thus, in the name of 9/11, does New York and New Jersey place another economic burden on the already overburdened middle class. How sad.


+1000

Posted on: 2011/8/21 11:41
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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expanding the context of playing politics, NJ has among the lowest gasoline tax in the county (around 25 cents less than NY) and the governor killed a huge infrastructure project, the ARC (access to the regions core) Tunnel.

Posted on: 2011/8/20 19:49
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Finally, a pundit calls it like I see it. NJ commuters are going to pay for a ridiculously expensive NYC office building in which they have little economic interest.

August 19, 2011
9/11?s White Elephant
By JOE NOCERA

There is nothing wrong ? and much that is right ? with building a national monument to memorialize the nearly 3,000 people killed in the 9/11 attacks a decade ago. The awful events of that day traumatized the country ? and changed it. The dead deserve to be remembered. Far be it from me to suggest otherwise.

What I do want to suggest, though, is that what?s being built in the name of 9/11 ? a staggering $11 billion worth of government-sponsored construction on the 16 acres we now call ground zero ? is an example of just about everything wrong with modern government. When the World Trade Center site is finally completed, it will include a state-of-the-art train station whose cost overruns have surpassed $1 billion. The 9/11 memorial itself, which covers the footprint of the former twin towers, was so far behind schedule that it is now being hastily constructed, out of sequence, so that it will be ready by the 10th anniversary of the tragedy.

And then there?s 1 World Trade Center, scheduled to be completed in 2013, which will add 2.6 million square feet of office space in a city that doesn?t need it, at a cost so high that it will be a cash drain for decades to come. Where?s the Tea Party when you need them?

Last year, I wrote about 1 World Trade Center, pointing out that its $3.3 billion price tag made it, by far, the most expensive office building ever constructed in America. At the time, Richard Gladstone, the project manager for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which is in charge of rebuilding ground zero, told me point-blank that despite its costs, the new skyscraper would not affect the commuters who pay the tolls to cross the six bridges and tunnels the agency operates.

But, on Friday, that statement was shown to be ? how to put this nicely? ? untrue. The Port Authority, with the complicity of Andrew Cuomo and Chris Christie, the governors of New York and New Jersey, who oversee the agency, approved a series of toll increases so onerous that by 2015, a typical commuter who uses the George Washington Bridge will have to pay $62.50 a week to get to work.

What has been especially galling has been the cynicism surrounding the efforts to get the toll increases. First, the Port Authority said that unless it could increase the tolls, it would have to ?slow or stop? the construction of 1 World Trade Center. Though this scenario was highly unlikely, it got the construction unions duly aroused, as it was intended to do. They began calling in favors among the politicians.

The Port Authority was originally going to propose two increases of $2, spaced a few years apart. But the politicos in both Cuomo?s and Christie?s offices suggested that the agency come forth with a much higher initial toll increase ? thus allowing the two governors to look like heroes when they ?persuaded? the Port Authority to lower the increases. The governors also railed on about waste and fraud at the Port Authority, while knowing full well the real problem was the fact that $3.3 billion ? money that could have been spent on needed infrastructure improvements ? was instead diverted to a white elephant at ground zero.

I understand that it?s hard, even for a blunt-talking fiscal conservative like Christie, to openly criticize 1 World Trade Center. For many people, its rebuilding has enormous symbolic importance. George Pataki, the former New York governor, who pushed hardest for the rebuilding, originally named the building Freedom Tower. Recent editorials in the New York tabloids objecting to the toll increases nevertheless tiptoed gingerly around the outrageous costs of 1 World Trade Center.

But despite the shroud of patriotism that its supporters have always cloaked it in, it?s really just a big, fancy office building. An office building with such poor economics that it will soak New Jersey and New York commuters for decades to come. An office building only the government could love.

Lately, supporters of the project have begun saying that its economics have improved. They point to the fact that Cond? Nast, the publishing giant, has agreed to be the anchor tenant. What they fail to point out is that Cond? Nast?s rent is less than half the break-even cost of the 1 million square feet it will occupy. In other words, a company that publishes high-end magazines aimed at rich people will be getting an enormous government subsidy for the foreseeable future.

And who will be paying for that subsidy? The mailroom attendants who use the Lincoln Tunnel to get to work. The middle-class New Jersey-ites who use the George Washington Bridge. The firefighters and police officers who live in Staten Island. Thus, in the name of 9/11, does New York and New Jersey place another economic burden on the already overburdened middle class. How sad.

Posted on: 2011/8/20 16:36
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Screw it. I'm moving to NY.

Posted on: 2011/8/20 1:48
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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So, it looks like everyone who takes the PATH or the tunnels are about to get screwed, unless of course you're one of the union members that collect that fat overtime check.

For the PATH, a 25 cent increase over four years is still a $2 increase one way. Add that up and it's $10 a week round trip or $40 every four weeks.

The whole sudden increase and one day meetings at inconvenient locations is purely a sham. the unions, busing in their members and painting them up in orange shirts and black caps with LIUNA! on them is also a very sad.

I understand that the unions are protecting their workers and they have every right to. However, I question how many of these workers will take the PATH or a tunnel or bridge to work each day?

One union worker, speaking on Channel 2 said that the increase would create jobs and keep food on his table for years to come. While that may be true, I question the amount of overtime these people are raking in. Not every worker is doing so, but after seeing the recent Port Authority audit reporting some union workers are raking in more than $100,000 a grand per year in overtime makes them all a bunch of Hippocrates.

The Port Authority itself also played this very dirty and they know it. Really, only one day of meetings? The spokesman said that if you couldn't attend a meeting, there was an online meeting as well. But, they failed to mention that you had to register the day before to speak. Again, only giving short notice that these meetings ere going to take place. That's not right at all. It's called operating in the shadows, rushing these meetings through to do this by the book, to get what you want in the end.

These steep hikes are going to hit the local residents in the wallets hard. I work in NYC and live in Jersey City and absolutely love the area. But with this and then the MTA fares going up, why live here with sky high rent and cost to get to work?

This whole situation seems to be the Port Authority for themselves and each and every union member for themselves. While they all rake in the cash, I stand at the checkout in Shop-Rite figuring out if I have enough cash to put groceries on the table and what I have to remove from my cart. I hope they all remember that as they sit down with their family at the table and know the food came off the backs of the local residents. When the construction is done and they are gone, we will all still pay.

Maybe we should get a union of commuters who don't want to pay. But wait, we couldn't afford the toll and fares to bus us all in.

And to Governor Christie. Thanks for not helping us out here. The residents of the area aren't going to forget this, especially each and every morning when we go through the turnsyle and toll plaza. So know this -- whoever runs against you in the next election -- we're voting for them!

Posted on: 2011/8/20 0:23
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Quote:

ianmac47 wrote:
In typical fashion the governors of the states have "rescued" us all with a "revised" proposal:

http://www.scribd.com/doc/62606597/Ne ... -Letter-to-Port-Authority

Strangely enough, there is no mention of an increase on the unlimited cards.
it's not even #OOPS#ing revised it's the same exact god damn hikes, just spread out over 4 years instead of in 2 increments. What utter bullshit I can not believe that there was no reduction in the fees at all.

Posted on: 2011/8/19 18:05
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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I love that the audit is happening after the toll hike is in place.

I would say they shouldn't be able to get away with this. But I know the MTA is going to do the exact same thing.

What are the odds that the new Freedom Tower gets built without another fare adjustment?

Posted on: 2011/8/19 12:49
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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Govs. Christie, Cuomo announce $1.50 Port Authority toll hike

Thursday, August 18, 2011, 10:12 PM
By Steve Strunsky/The Star-Ledger

NEW YORK ? Commuters using E-ZPass will pay an additional $1.50 to cross the bridges and tunnels between New York and New Jersey starting next month, followed by additional increases of 75 cents per year from 2012 through 2015, for a total increase of $4.50 over five years, the governors of the two states announced.

Cash payers would pay an additional $2 dollars throughout the term of the increase, the governors said.

One-way PATH fares would rise by 25 cents per year for four years, for a $1 total, the governors said.

The announcement, which came in the form of a letter to the Port Authority chairman and vice chairman released by the bistate agency, softens a proposal by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to raise tolls by an initial $4 for E-ZPass users, followed by a $2 increase in 2014. Cash payers had faced a $3 surcharge initially on top of the initial toll increase, followed by a $5 surcharge in 2014 on top of the additional $2 toll hike.

The Port Authority Board of Commissioners is scheduled to vote on the proposal Friday morning.

The governors? agreement on the increase caps a stormy two weeks of sticker shock at the initial proposal; an outpouring of support from labor unions and industry groups that would benefit from projects financed by the toll hikes; condemnation by mainly Democratic elected officials; and a series of public hearings on Tuesday crowded with supporters and opponents of the proposed hikes.

?We did not want to see any toll increase,? the governors said in the letter. But, the letter added, ?given the crisis facing the Port Authority and its finances, and the potential safety and economic risks to commuters and businesses, an increase cannot be avoided.?

The letter also said the governor?s approval of today?s amended increase is contingent on the Port Authority board approving an audit of the agency?s finances, following two reports this summer by the New York State comptroller?s office criticizing the Port Authority for wasting millions of dollars on staff overtime and consultants contracts.

U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) called for an audit last week, followed by a similar call from State Assemblywoman Valerie Vainierie Huttle of Bergen County, a fellow Democrat, earlier today.

Both governors were critical of the size of the proposed increase following its announcement by the Port Authority on Aug. 5. The governors have veto power over Port Authority decisions, and the agency?s chairman, David Samson, and its deputy executive director, Bill Baroni, are both Christie appointees and confidantes.

Some observers suggested the announcement and the governors? responses, including today?s agreement, were all part of an orchestrated scheme intended to provide the governors with political cover from commuters? anger over the increase, while still providing additional revenues to the Port Authority to help pay for projects the governors support.

Assemblyman John McKeon, an Essex Democrat who serves as deputy speaker, said the toll hikes do little to alleviate New Jerseyans? congested commute. McKeon seized on the occasion to revive criticism of Christie for canceling a trans-Hudson commuter rail tunnel last fall over cost concerns.

"All this does,? McKeon said of the new toll hikes, ?is give Jersey commuters the same-old same-old for more money.?
Staff writer Ginger Gibson contributed to this report.

Posted on: 2011/8/19 6:06
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Re: Massive PATH and Hudson River Crossings Toll Increase
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In typical fashion the governors of the states have "rescued" us all with a "revised" proposal:

http://www.scribd.com/doc/62606597/Ne ... -Letter-to-Port-Authority

Strangely enough, there is no mention of an increase on the unlimited cards.

Posted on: 2011/8/19 3:41
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