A program to make some of the MTA’s buses fare-free won’t last as long as Gov. Kathy Hochul previously promised, according to budget bills published by lawmakers in Albany this week.
The legislation mandates that the MTA pick one bus route in each of the five boroughs where riders won’t have to pay. Itโs part of a pilot that the legislation says can only last six to 12 months โ shorter than the two-year pilot for free buses Hochul announced last week.
Deputy Senate Majority Leader Mike Gianaris, who backed the program, said extending the pilot longer than a year would require the MTA to complete a federal environmental review, which would have delayed the launch of the free rides.
“That will hopefully pave the way to more people getting back onto the system, which will increase the usage and the ridership as well as make it safer, which is a priority for so many of us,” Gianaris said.
The legislation requires the MTA to choose which routes will be free within two months after the budget passes. Three months after that, likely in October, the free buses will go into effect.
The free rides are also not allowed to cost the MTA more than $15 million, according to the legislation.
Last Friday, MTA Chair Janno Lieber said the bus lines the MTA will pick for the pilot canโt share street space with other bus routes. He said that would make the effects of free buses easier to study and prevent the free routes from coaxing riders away from money-making lines.
The agency has previously reported that 1 in 3 bus riders decline to pay the fare. Lieber said the MTA will take that into account when implementing the free bus pilot.
โWe want to make sure weโre not accelerating fare evasion patterns on the buses,โ Lieber said on Friday. โWe donโt want people to be confused about which bus is free and which bus is actually still charging.โ
The budget deal announced last week came as a relief to the MTA, which had projected an operating deficit of more than $600 billion…
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