On Sunday, the cost of subway, bus and commuter train rides will go up for the first time in four years.
During the pandemic, the MTA paused its regular schedule of fare hikes every two years. But the agency says budget constraints mean the reprieve is over.
Single subway or bus rides will go up by 15 cents, from $2.75 to $2.90, a 5% increase.
For riders who use a MetroCard and purchase a seven-day or 30-day unlimited pass, the overall costs will increase as well. A 30-day pass will increase from $127 to $132, and the seven-day unlimited pass will increase by $1 to $34 total.
Commuter railroad fares will rise by about 4%.
Gov. Kathy Hochul and the state Legislature tossed the MTA a lifeline this year by increasing the payroll mobility tax on New York City businesses and agreeing to a one-time $300 million payment. All of that goes to funding the operating budget, which is still reeling from a pandemic-era drop in ridership.
Still, riders arenโt happy about the fare hike, particularly at a time when prices for everything seem to be increasing, yet incomes for many remain flat.
โMy salary. Yeah, it’s not going to go up, believe me,” said Lila McGushin, a commuter from Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. โSure, we’re not happy.โ
โIt’s terrible, man. It just keeps on going up,โ said 19-year-old Queens resident Chris Matthew. โGonna keep on swiping or jumping [the turnstile].โ
Santana, a 70-year old Crown Heights resident who goes only by his last name, said he wouldnโt mind paying the fare, but noted that the MTA also complains that it loses $700 million a year to fare evasion. He said if the MTA reduced that first, maybe heโd be OK with a fare hike.
โIt bothers me only because their excuse that they’re giving for that is fare evasion,โ he said.
The MTA reports it loses $315 million a year on buses, $285 million on subways, $46 million on tolls at the bridges and tunnels, and $44 million on the Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North.
Still, not everyone opposes the…
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