A key MTA panel is expected to recommend a $15 congestion pricing toll for drivers who enter Manhattan below 60th Street during most hours of the day, according to three people who reviewed the plan but were not authorized to discuss it on Wednesday.
Gothamist obtained the plan, which the Traffic Mobility Review Board will present to the MTA board for approval. The MTA board is expected to approve the prices during its meeting next week โ and the agency expects to begin charging the tolls in mid-2024.
Sources described key aspects of the tolling scheme, such as:
- A $15 fee on passenger vehicles from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m.
- A 75% discount during the overnight hours, putting the after-hours toll $3.75.
- A $24 toll for smaller trucks, such as box trucks.
- A $36 toll for large trucks, like big rigs.
- Yellow and green taxis will receive an additional $1.25 surcharge.
- For-hire vehicles like Uber and Lyft will receive an additional $2.50 surcharge.
- Both taxis and app-based for-hire vehicles like Uber and Lyft are expected to pass the cost of the tolls to passengers.
An MTA spokesperson declined to comment.
The plan recommends giving passenger car drivers a $5 credit against the tolls if they already pay to cross a tunnel, including the Lincoln, Holland, Queens-Midtown or Brooklyn-Battery tunnels, into the congestion zone. That discount rises to $12 for small trucks and $20 for large trucks, though the tunnel crossing credits would not be in effect during the overnight hours, the plan says.
The plan also recommends a 50% discount for the first 10 trips taken by low-income drivers every month. And publicly-owned vehicles “specifically designed to perform public work other than general transportation” should be exempt from the tolls.
Under a 2019 state law approving the congestion pricing scheme, drivers who remain on the West Side Highway or FDR Drive will not have to pay the tolls. Drivers who earn less than $60,000 and live in the congestion zone are required to receive a tax credit against…
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