One MTA bus route will be free in each New York City borough starting Sunday.
Riders will notice digital displays on the front and sides of the buses indicating they are free.
The free buses are on these routes:
- The B60, which runs in Brooklyn from Canarsie to Williamsburg Bridge Plaza.
- The M116, a crosstown bus in Manhattan traveling primarily on 116th Street.
- The Q4, which runs in southeast Queens between Cambria Heights and Jamaica Center.
- The S46 and S96, which count as one route in Staten Island running between St. George Ferry Terminal and West Shore Plaza.
- The BX18, which runs in a loop in the western Bronx between Undercliff Avenue or Sedgwick Avenue and Grand Concourse.
The free buses are part of the state budget deal lawmakers struck with Gov. Kathy Hochul in exchange for new taxes and more funding for the MTA.
The transit agency will study the results of the free bus pilot over the course of a period lasting no longer than a year.
โGetting more New Yorkers on to public transit must be at the forefront of our plan for a greener NY, and making a bus route free in each of the five boroughs of our city begins our journey of doing just that.โ Queens Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani wrote in a statement.
The MTA didn’t charge bus fares for nearly half a year during the pandemic.
Bus ridership remains down by nearly 40% most days, compared to pre-pandemic levels. The MTA says actual ridership is likely higher than the official numbers due to rampant fare evasion.
New York City Transit President Richard Davey said he wasnโt worried about the five free buses being overcrowded.
โWe welcome the ridership, we have a lot of room on those vehicles, but weโll monitor if we need to add service,โ New York City Transit President Richard Davey said at Wednesday’s MTA board meeting.
The routes serve about 44,000 of the agency’s 1.3 million weekday bus riders.
Last week, the MTA launched a new fare evasion crackdown campaign on local buses, although the agency wouldnโt say…
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