This column originally appeared in On The Way, our transit newsletter covering everything you need to know about NYC transportation. Sign up to get the full version in your inbox every Thursday.
Gov. Kathy Hochul is getting a hard lesson on the MTA as she pushes her plan for a light rail Interborough Express between Bay Ridge, Brooklyn and Jackson Heights, Queens.
During an open house meeting on the project last week, the deputy chief of staff for the MTA’s construction department let slip a sobering reality:
“The MTA can’t in good conscience invest in new infrastructure without making sure that we have the funding in place to secure our existing system.”
MTA officials later tried to downplay the comment, saying the IBX remained a top priority of the agency.
But promising new train lines only to divert the money to maintenance is a tale as old as the MTA. The agency’s first chair, William Ronan, in 1968 promised he’d build 50 miles of new subways to make up for “30 years of do‐nothingness.” Ronan vowed to build the Second Avenue subway, new train connections in Queens and major extensions to Brooklyn’s subways along Nostrand and Utica avenues.
Fewer than 15 of those miles were ever built. By the mid-1970s, the city’s financial crisis forced the MTA to redirect money for expansion projects to repairs.
A half-century later, MTA officials are still warning that big expansion plans could suffer a similar fate. A report released by the agency last month laid out a laundry list of high-priority upgrades to protect the mass transit system from the effects of climate change.
We got an inside look into one of the more pressing upgrades last week.
MTA workers are continuing to repair one of four tracks along Metro-North’s Hudson River line, which remains buried more than two weeks after a major mudslide during a rainstorm.
In one section, 80 feet of track were ripped right out of the ground.
Because the Hudson Line sits right next to the river, riders…
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