Free rides are coming to five city bus routes by Sept. 24, the MTA said on Monday.
MTA officials said during a committee meeting that fares wonโt be collected on one route in each of the five boroughs for at least six months as part of a program mandated by the state.
- The B60, which runs in Brooklyn between Williams and Flatlands Avenue, in Canarsie, and Williamsburg Bridge Plaza.
- The M116, which operates across Manhattan, primarily along 116th Street, Manhattan Avenue and W 106 Street.
- The Q4 LCL/LTD, which runs in southeast Queens between Cambria Heights and Jamaica Center.
- The S46/96, which runs in Staten Island between the St. George Ferry Terminal and West Shore Plaza.
- The BX18 A/B, which runs in a loop in the western Bronx between Undercliff Avenue or Sedgwick Avenue and Grand Concourse
โThat is a great thing that the bus will be free, hallelujah,โ said Mattie Smith, a senior citizen from Harlem who rides the M116 bus two to three times a week. โWe have so much we have to do with our little funds.โ
MTA officials said the free routes serve about 44,000 of the agency’s 1.3 million weekday bus riders, and are slated to run as a pilot program for at least six months but no longer than a year.
Gov. Kathy Hochul and the state legislature required the MTA to launch the program as part of the state budget, which was approved in May.
The legislation came after transit advocates lobbied for free bus service as a way to make mass transit more accessible for low-income New Yorkers.
โPeople have said that theyโve had to choose between a meal and a MetroCard, between medicine and a MetroCard,โ said Riders Alliance spokesperson Danny Pearlstein.
Buses on the five free routes will be branded with โFare Freeโ signs, officials said. And the MTA plans to add green and black designs to bus stop signs on the free routes that tell riders they wonโt have to pay.
MTA officials said they expect there will be crowding issues as more people learn about the fare-free…
Read the full article here
Leave a Reply