The clock is ticking on New York City's congestion pricing program, which the Trump administration says must end April 20, ...
The $9 toll has brought in another almost $52 million in the past four weeks, $3.3 million more than the first month that ...
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and the MTA are facing down a new federal deadline to end congestion pricing in NYC.
Their latest move to stop congestion pricing is an unprecedented and baseless reversal that ignores the facts, threatens construction jobs and billions in infrastructure investment, and disrupts a ...
The MTA is on pace to bring in $500 million by the end of the year, unless the Trump administration can end it.
Congestion Pricing in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Revenue figures from the Manhattan tolling plan showed that the program is on track to raise billions for mass transit repairs. By Stefanos ...
For the latest news developments from President Donald Trump's first 100 days in office, visit our continuously updated blog at newsday.com/trump100days. The MTA ...
NEW YORK -- Congestion pricing is still in effect in New York City, despite President Trump's attempt to kill the controversial toll. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and the MTA are facing a new ...
The toll — which charges most drivers $9 per day to drive on surface streets in Midtown and lower Manhattan — generated $51.9 ...
Congestion pricing tolls reaped nearly $49 million from Manhattan motorists during the controversial program’s first month — several millions less than the MTA had projected, transit officials ...
As New York City barrels toward the end of two months of congestion pricing, and the president's looming threat to close the toll program, the MTA has shared receipts of the first month of revenue.