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Metropolitan Transportation Authority

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is a public benefit corporation responsible for public transportation in the New York City metropolitan area of the U.S. state of New York. The MTA is the largest public transit authority in North America, serving 12 counties in Downstate New York, along with two counties in southwestern Connecticut under contract to the Connecticut Department of Transportation, carrying over 11 million passengers on an average weekday systemwide, and over 850,000 vehicles on its seven toll bridges and two tunnels per weekday.

Metropolitan Transportation Authority
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) provides local and express bus, subway, and commuter rail service in Greater New York, and operates multiple toll bridges and tunnels in New York City.
Overview
OwnerState of New York
LocaleNew York City
Long Island
Lower Hudson Valley
Coastal Connecticut
Lower Housatonic Valley
Lower Naugatuck River Valley
Transit typeCommuter rail, local and express bus, subway, bus rapid transit
Number of lines
  • 19 commuter rail routes
    • 8 Metro-North routes
    • 11 LIRR routes
  • 26 rapid transit routes
    • 25 subway routes
    • 1 Staten Island Railway route
  • 325 bus routes
Daily ridership8.6 million (2017 weekday average)[1]
Annual ridership2.658 billion (2017)[1]
Key peopleJanno Lieber, Chairman & CEO[2]
Headquarters2 Broadway, Manhattan, New York City
Websitenew.mta.info
Operation
Began operationJune 1, 1965[3]
Operator(s)
Number of vehicles2,429 commuter rail cars
6,418 subway cars
61 SIR cars
5,725 buses[1]

History edit

Founding edit

In February 1965, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller suggested that the New York State Legislature create an authority to purchase, operate, and modernize the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR). The LIRR, then a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), had been operating under bankruptcy protection since 1949. The proposed authority would also have the power to make contracts or arrangements with other commuter railroad operators in the New York City area.[4] On June 1, 1965, the legislature chartered the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Authority (MCTA) to take over the operations of the LIRR.[3][5][6] Governor Rockefeller appointed his top aide, Dr. William J. Ronan, as chairman and chief executive officer of the MCTA.[7] In June 1965, the state finalized an agreement to buy the LIRR from the PRR for $65 million.[8] The MCTA made a down payment of $10 million for the LIRR in December 1965,[9] and it completed the rest of the payment the next month.[10]

In February 1965, Rockefeller and Connecticut Governor John N. Dempsey jointly suggested that operations of the New Haven Line, the New Haven Railroad's struggling commuter rail operation, be transferred to the New York Central Railroad as part of a plan to prevent the New Haven Railroad from going bankrupt. If the operational merger occurred, the proposed MCTA and the existing Connecticut Transportation Authority would contract with New York Central to operate the New Haven Line to Grand Central Terminal.[11] A September 1965 joint report from both agencies, recommended that the line be leased to New York Central for 99 years, with the MCTA and CTA acting as agents for both states.[12]

In October 1965, the MCTA found that the New Haven Line's stations and infrastructure were even more decrepit than those of the LIRR.[13] The New Haven Railroad's trustees initially opposed New York Central's takeover of the New Haven Line, as they felt that the $140 million offer for the New Haven Line was too low.[14] After some discussion, the trustees decided to continue operating the New Haven Line until June 1967.[15]

In January 1966, New York City Mayor John Lindsay proposed merging the New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA), which operated buses and subways in New York City, and the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority (TBTA), which operated toll bridges and tunnels within the city.[16] Rockefeller offered his "complete support" for Lindsay's proposed unified transit agency,[17] while longtime city planner and TBTA chair Robert Moses called the proposed merger "absurd" and "grotesque" for its unwieldiness.[18] In June 1966, Rockefeller announced his plans to expand the MCTA's scope to create a new regional transit authority. The new authority would encompass the existing MCTA, as well as the NYCTA and TBTA.[19] Lindsay disagreed, saying that the state and city should have operationally separate transit authorities that worked in tandem.[20]

In May 1967, Rockefeller signed a bill that allowed the MCTA to oversee the mass transit policies of New York City-area transit systems. The unification agreement took place the following March, with the MCTA taking over the operations of the LIRR, NYCTA, TBTA, New Haven commuter services, New York Central commuter services, and the Staten Island Rapid Transit Railway.[21] Initially, the TBTA was resistant to the MCTA's efforts to acquire it.[22] Moses was afraid that the enlarged MCTA would "undermine, destroy or tarnish" the integrity of the TBTA,[23] One source of contention was Rockefeller's proposal to use TBTA tolls in order to subsidize the cheap fares of the NYCTA, since Moses strongly opposed any use of TBTA tolls by outside agencies.[24] In February 1968, Moses acquiesced to the MCTA's merger proposal.[22] New York Central and the PRR merged in February 1968, forming the Penn Central Transportation Company.[25]

In February 1968, the MCTA published a 56-page report for Governor Rockefeller, proposing several subway and railroad improvements under the name "Metropolitan Transportation, a Program for Action"[26][27][28][29] alternatively called the "Grand Design".[30] The city had already intended to build subway extensions in all four boroughs, so that most riders would need at most one transfer to get to their destination.[31] The Program for Action also called for upgrades to the Penn Central railroads and area airports.[26] The Program for Action was put forward simultaneously with other development and transportation plans under the administration of Mayor Lindsay. This included Lindsay's Linear City plan for housing and educational facilities, and the projected construction of several Interstate Highways, many of which had originally been proposed by Robert Moses.[32][33]

Expanded preview edit

On March 1, 1968, the day after the release of the Program for Action, the MCTA dropped the word "Commuter" from its name and became the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA). The MTA took over the operations of the other New York City-area transit systems.[34][35] Moses was let go from his job as chairman of the TBTA, although he was retained as a consultant.[35] The construction of two proposed bridges over the Long Island Sound was put under the jurisdiction of the MTA.[36] Moses stated that TBTA construction projects would reduce the MTA's budget surplus through to 1970.[37] Chairman Ronan pushed for the MTA to pursue the Program for Action, saying, "We're making up for 30 years of do-nothingism".[38]

Ronan proposed that the MTA take over the Staten Island Rapid Transit Railway Company from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and start a $25 million modernization project on the railway.[39] The city's Board of Estimate approved this purchase in December 1969.[40] The MTA took ownership of the Staten Island Rapid Transit in January 1971.[41]

The agency entered into a long-term lease of Penn Central's Hudson, Harlem, and New Haven Lines.[34] Before 1968, the Hudson and Harlem Lines had been operated by the New York Central Railroad, while the New Haven Line had been part of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad. Penn Central continued to operate the lines under contract to the MTA. In April 1970, Rockefeller proposed that the state take over the Hudson and Harlem Lines.[42] The next month, he signed a bond issue that provided $44.4 million in funding to these lines.[43] Penn Central's operations were folded into Conrail in 1976. The MTA took over full operations in 1983, and merged the lines into the Metro-North Commuter Railroad.[34] In 1994, the MTA rebranded its five subsidiaries with simpler names to convey that the different agencies were part of one agency.[44]

Responsibilities and service area edit

The MTA has the responsibility for developing and implementing a unified mass transportation policy for the New York metropolitan area, including all five boroughs of New York City and the suburban counties of Dutchess, Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Suffolk and Westchester. This twelve-county area make up the "Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District" (MCTD), within which the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance levies a "metropolitan commuter transportation mobility tax".[45] On April 1, 2019, Patrick J. Foye was appointed chairman and CEO.[46]

The MTA's immediate past chairpersons were. William J. Ronan (1965–1974), David Yunich (1974–1975), Harold L. Fisher (1975–1979), Richard Ravitch (1979–1983), Robert Kiley (1983–1991), Peter Stangl (1991–1995), Virgil Conway (1995–2001), Peter S. Kalikow (2001–2007), H. Dale Hemmerdinger (2007–2009), Jay Walder (2009–2011), Joseph Lhota (2012), Thomas F. Prendergast (2013–2017), and Joseph Lhota (2017–2018).[47] Lhota was re-appointed in 2017[48][49] and resigned on November 9, 2018.[50]

The MTA considers itself to be the largest regional public transportation provider in the Western Hemisphere. As of 2018, its agencies serve a region of approximately 15.3 million people spread over 5,000 square miles (13,000 km2) in 12 counties in New York and two in Connecticut. MTA agencies now move about 8.6 million customers per day (translating to 2.65 billion rail and bus customers a year) and employ about 74,000 people.[51][52] The MTA's systems carry over 11 million passengers on an average weekday systemwide, and over 850,000 vehicles on its seven toll bridges and two tunnels per weekday.[53]

Subsidiaries and affiliates edit

MTA carries out these planning and other responsibilities both directly and through its subsidiaries and affiliates, and provides oversight to these subordinate agencies, known collectively as "The Related Entities".[54] The Related Entities represent a number of previously existing agencies which have come under the MTA umbrella. These previously existing agencies were, with the exception of MTA Bridges and Tunnels, MTA Construction and Development & MTA Grand Central Madison Concourse, successors to the property of private companies that provided substantially the same services.

In 1994, the MTA spent $3 million rebranding its five subsidiaries with simpler names to convey that the different agencies were part of one agency. Surveys found that a majority of riders did not know that the MTA owned the Long Island Rail Road or the Metro-North Railroad. As part of the changes, the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority was renamed MTA Bridges and Tunnels; Staten Island Rapid Transit was renamed MTA Staten Island Railway; Metropolitan Suburban Bus Authority was renamed MTA Long Island Bus. The New York City Transit Authority was renamed MTA New York City Transit to seem less authoritarian, Metro–North Commuter Railroad was renamed MTA Metro-North Railroad to recognize the increase in non-commuter ridership.[55]

The MTA logo was changed from a two-toned "M" logo, to a blue circle with the MTA initials written in perspective, like they were rushing by like a train. The large "M" logos on trains and buses were replaced with decals that state MTA New York City Bus, MTA New York City Subway or MTA Staten Island Railway, eliminating inconsistencies in signage.[55] Today, the older "M" logos survive on existing cube-shaped lamps on station lampposts dating to the 1980s, though such lamps have been updated with more modern spherical lamps over time.

Today, each of these Related Entities has a popular name and in some cases, a former legal name.[56][57] Since 1994, the legal name has only been used for legal documents, such as contracts, and have not been used publicly.[55] Since the mid-2000s, the popular name has also been used for legal documents related to contract procurements where the legal name was used heretofore. Both are listed below.

Subsidiary agencies edit

Affiliate agencies edit

  • MTA Bridges and Tunnels (MTA B&T)
    (legal name, no longer used publicly: Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority)[56][57]
  • MTA New York City Transit (NYCT)
    (legal name, no longer used publicly: New York City Transit Authority and its subsidiary, the Manhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority (MaBSTOA))
    The Bus division is now managed under Regional Bus.[56]

Former subsidiaries edit

MTA Inspector General edit

The Office of the MTA Inspector General (OIG), founded in 1983, is the independent Office of Inspector General specific to the MTA that is responsible for conducting monitoring and oversight of MTA activities, programs, and employees.[59]

Governance edit

 
MTA headquarters, 2 Broadway

The MTA is governed by a 21-member board representing the 5 boroughs of New York City, each of the counties in its New York State service area, and worker and rider interest groups.[60] Of these, there are 14 voting members, broken down into 13 board members who cast individual votes, 4 board members who cast a single collective vote, and 6 group representatives who do not vote.[61]

Four members as well as the chairman/CEO are directly nominated by the Governor of New York, while four are recommended by New York City's mayor. The county executives of Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester counties nominate one member each. Each of these members has one vote.[61][62] The county executives of Dutchess, Orange, Rockland, and Putnam counties also nominate one member each,[62] but these members cast one collective vote.[61] The Board has six rotating nonvoting seats held by representatives of MTA employee organized labor and the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee, which represent customers of MTA transit and commuter facilities.[62] Board members are confirmed by the New York State Senate.[62]

In 2017, the MTA had operating expenses of $16.85 billion, an outstanding debt of $38.083 billion, and a level of staffing of 79,832 people (staff compensation totaled $6.762 billion).[63] It collects revenue from passenger fees and from a Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Mobility Tax, a payroll tax levied on employers in the 12-county area served by the MTA.[64]

Board Chair position edit

Historically, some but not all chairmen of the MTA Board have also held the chief executive officer role, with the chairman providing an advisory and policy role and the Executive Director running day-to-day operations.[65][66] The roles were combined in 2009 following the recommendation a commission to study capital spending.[67][68] The commission was appointed by then-Governor David Paterson and run by former chairman Richard Ravitch[65][69] However, following Thomas Prendergast's retirement in 2017, they were split back again.[65][70][71] The positions were merged back into one position in 2019 when Pat Foye was appointed Chairman & Chief Executive Officer. The current chairman, Janno Lieber, holds both positions.

The following is a list of chairmen of the authority:

Name Also CEO? Tenure[72] Appointed by
1 William Ronan March 1, 1968 – April 26, 1974 Nelson Rockefeller
2 David L. Yunich May 2, 1974 – January 21, 1977 Malcolm Wilson
3 Harold L. Fisher January 22, 1977 – November 16, 1979 Hugh Carey
4 Richard Ravitch Yes[73] November 17, 1979 – October 31, 1983
5 Bob Kiley Yes[73] November 16, 1983 – January 2, 1991 Mario Cuomo
6 Peter E. Stangl Yes[73] April 21, 1991 – May 17, 1995
7 E. Virgil Conway No May 18, 1995 – March 9, 2001 George Pataki
8 Peter Kalikow No March 13, 2001 – October 22, 2007
9 H. Dale Hemmerdinger No[66] October 23, 2007 – September 10, 2009 Eliot Spitzer
10 Jay Walder Yes October 5, 2009 – October 21, 2011 David Paterson
11 Joe Lhota Yes January 9, 2012 – December 31, 2012 Andrew Cuomo
12 Thomas F. Prendergast Yes June 20, 2013 – January 31, 2017
13 Joe Lhota Noa June 21, 2017 – November 8, 2018
14 Pat Foye Yes April 1, 2019 – July 29, 2021[2]
15 Janno Lieberb Yes January 20, 2022 – present Kathy Hochul
Notes

a Lhota did not serve as CEO in his second stint as chairman, as CEO responsibilities were carried out by Executive Director Ronnie Hakim.[74]

b Lieber served as Chair and CEO in an acting capacity from July 30, 2021 to January 19, 2022.[75]

List of board members edit

The following is a list of members of the MTA Board.

Name[61] Appointed Recommended by[61]
Janno Lieber, Chair January 20, 2022[76] Governor (Kathy Hochul)
Jamey Barbas June 10, 2020[77] Governor (Andrew Cuomo)
Haeda B. Mihaltses April 10, 2019[78] Governor (Andrew Cuomo)
Lisa Sorin June 3, 2022[79][80] Governor (Kathy Hochul)
VACANT Governor (Kathy Hochul)
David R. Jones June 17, 2016[81][62] Mayor (Bill de Blasio)
Frankie Miranda June 3, 2022[79][80] Mayor (Eric Adams)
VACANT Mayor (Eric Adams)
Midori Valdivia June 3, 2022[79][80] Mayor (Eric Adams)
David S. Mack 2019[79] Nassau County Executive (Laura Curran)
Samuel Chu June 3, 2022[79][80] Suffolk County Executive (Steve Bellone)
Blanca P. López June 3, 2022[79][80] Westchester County Executive (George Latimer)
Michael Fleischer June 10, 2020[77] Dutchess County Executive (Marc Molinaro)
Harold Porr[82] June 2021[79][80] Orange County Executive (Steve Neuhaus)
Frank Borelli June 10, 2020[77][79][80] Rockland County Executive (Ed Day)
Neal Zuckerman July 9, 2016[83] Putnam County Executive (MaryEllen Odell)
Andrew Albert June 2002[84] New York City Transit Riders Council
Gerard Bringmann LIRR Commuters Council
Randolph Glucksman Metro-North Commuter Council
John Samuelsen June 17, 2016[62] Transport Workers Union Local 100
Vincent Tessitore, Jr. June 30, 2007[85] SMART Union

Apps edit

 
MTA Bus Time app on an iPhone.

The MTA has developed several official web and mobile apps for its subway and bus services,[86][87][88][89] and also provides data to private app developers to create their own unofficial MTA apps.[90] In 2012, the MTA officially released the Subway Time app, which uses subway countdown clock data to determine the next-train arrival times on seven services.[91] Real-time station information for the "mainline" A Division (numbered routes), comprising all numbered services except the 7 train, was made available to third-party developers via an API. This was achieved through both the Subway Time mobile app and as open data.[92] In early 2014, data for the L train were also given to developers.[93] When Bluetooth-enabled countdown clocks were installed in the B Division (lettered services) in 2016 and 2017, they were also configured to feed data to the Subway Time app as well as in an open-data format.[86][94]

MTA's Bus Time app originated as a pilot program to install bus countdown clocks along the M16 and M34 routes in August 2009.[95][96][97] At the same time, many new buses were retrofitted with GPS-enabled automatic vehicle location systems.[97][98] In October 2010, the developers of the buses' GPS devices implemented the MTA system's first bus-tracking app, which monitored buses along the M16 and M34 routes.[99][100][101] This evolved into the current web app, which originally tracked buses along the B63 route in Brooklyn when it started in February 2011.[102][103][104] By January 2012, every local and express bus in Staten Island was equipped with the system.[105][102][103] The M34 corridor began using the system on April 6, 2012[101] with nearly every Bronx bus route using the system by the end of 2012.[106] All five boroughs of the city used the system by March 2014, and a mobile app was released in 2015.[107][87]

In 2011, the MTA began to look at ways of displaying service disruptions due to weekend engineering works in a visual format. On September 16, 2011, the MTA introduced a Vignelli-style interactive subway map, "The Weekender",[108] to its website.[109] The web app provided a way for riders to get information about any planned work, from late Friday night to early Monday morning, that is going on either on a service(s) or station(s) of the subway during the weekends.[110][111][112] On June 11, 2012, the MTA duplicated "The Weekender" site as a free mobile app download for iOS.[113][88] On November 29, 2012, an Android version of the app was released.[89]

The MTA announced plans to integrate all three apps in 2017. The combined app, which was scheduled for release in 2018, would include real-time arrival information for all subway and bus routes, as well as weekend service changes and travel planners.[114] In April 2018, the MTA started testing MYmta, which provides arrival information for MTA railroad, subway, and bus routes; escalator and elevator outage information; and real-time service changes. The app also includes an improved version of the MTA's Trip Planner; whereas the existing Trip Planner can only plan trips along MTA-operated modes of transportation, MYmta's Trip Planner can also suggest routes via other operators such as the Staten Island Ferry, NYC Ferry, PATH, and NJ Transit.[115] A beta version of MYmta was released to the general public in July of that year.[116][117] In future versions of the MYmta app, the MTA planned to integrate the eTix functionality, as well as make it easier for Access-A-Ride customers to view when their vehicle will arrive at a certain point.[118]

In October 2020, the MTA unveiled a new digital map providing real-time arrival estimates and service updates. It was developed pro bono by technology and design company Work & Co.[119]

Fare collection edit

The subway, buses, and Staten Island Railway charge a single flat fare for each trip, regardless of time or distance traveled. From the MTA's inception until 2003, the agency collected subway and bus fares via a series of small metal tokens. The MTA cycled through several series of tokens throughout the late 20th century.[120][121] In 1993, MTA started testing the MetroCard, a magnetic stripe card that would replace the tokens used to pay fares.[122] By 1997, the entire bus and subway system accepted MetroCard,[123] and tokens were no longer accepted for fare payment in 2003.[120][121]

A different fare payment system is used on the LIRR and Metro-North. Both railroads sell tickets based on geographical "zones" and time of day, charging peak and off-peak fares. Tickets may be bought from a ticket office at stations, ticket vending machines (TVMs), online through the "WebTicket" program, or through apps for iOS and Android devices.[124]

 
OMNY Payment System for Subway Trains

In 2017 it was announced that the MetroCard would be phased out and replaced by OMNY, a contactless fare payment system, with fare payment being made using Apple Pay, Google Wallet, debit/credit cards with near-field communication enabled, or radio-frequency identification cards.[125][126] As of December 31, 2020, the entire bus and subway system is OMNY-enabled. However, support of the MetroCard is slated to remain until 2023.[126] MTA also plans to use OMNY in the LIRR and Metro-North.[127]

Issues edit

Expenses edit

Budget gaps edit

The budget deficit of the MTA is a growing crisis for the organization as well as for New York City and State residents and governments. The MTA held $31 billion in debt in 2010 and it also suffered from a $900 million gap in its operating budget for 2011.[128] The capital budget, which covers repairs, technological upgrades, new trains, and expansions, is currently $15 billion short of what the MTA states it needs. If this is not funded, the MTA will fund the repairs with debt and raise fares to cover repayments.

The MTA has consistently run on a deficit, but increased spending in 2000–04 coupled with the economic downturn led to a severe increase in the financial burden that the MTA bore. The budget problems stem from multiple sources. The MTA cannot be supported solely by rider fares and road tolls. In the preliminary 2011 budget, MTA forecasted operating revenue totaled at $6.5 billion, amount to only 50% of the $13 billion operating expenses.[129] Therefore, the MTA must rely on other sources of funding to remain operational. Revenue collected from real estate taxes for transportation purposes helped to contain the deficit. However, due to the weak economy and unstable real estate market, money from these taxes severely decreased; in 2010, tax revenue fell at least 20% short of the projected value.[130] Beyond this, steadily reducing support from city and state governments led to borrowing money by issuing bonds, which contributed heavily to the debt.[131]

This budget deficit has resulted in various problems, mainly concentrated in New York City. New York City Subway fares have been increased four times since 2008, with the most recent occurring August 20, 2023, raising single-ride fares from $2.75 to $2.90, express service from $6.75 to $7.00 and the monthly MetroCard fare from $116 to $132.[132][133]Each fare raise was met with increasing resistance by MTA customers, and many are beginning to find the fare increases prohibitive. 2010 also saw heavy service cuts for many MTA subsidiaries.[134] Fewer trains spaced farther between resulted in heavy overcrowding beyond normal rush hours, leading to frustration for many subway and bus riders.[135][136][137] In 2013, the subway had the highest ridership since 1947.[138] MTA employees also suffered due to the budget issues. By mid-July 2010, MTA layoffs had reached over 1,000, and many of those affected were low-level employees who made less than $55,000 annually.[139]

As of 2015, the MTA was running a $15 billion deficit in its $32 billion 2015–2019 Capital Plan.[140] Without extra funding, many necessary construction and renovation projects would not be performed.[141] In October 2015, the MTA passed the $29 billion 2015–2019 Capital Plan,[142] the largest capital plan in MTA's history; it will be funded by federal, state and city government as well as riders' fares and tolls.[143] Three months later, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and MTA chairman Thomas Prendergast unveiled their plan to spend $26 billion to modernize the subway network, which includes adding Wi-Fi and cellphone services throughout all 278 underground stations by the end of 2016. Other plans call for making extensive renovations to 30 subway stations, allowing mobile ticketing by cellphone or bank cards, and adding security cameras on buses, charging stations for electronics, and more countdown clocks. Roughly $3 billion will be spent to improve bridges and tunnels.[144][145]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, following a 50% to 90% drop in ridership on all of the MTA's systems, the agency requested $4 billion in federal funds, since the decreased fare revenue left the already-struggling agency in a financially tenuous position.[146] After the subway was temporarily shuttered at night starting in May 2020,[147] trains and stations were cleaned more than usual.[148][149] Over 132 employees died of COVID-19 as of June 2020.[150]

On February 1, 2023, as part of her Executive Budget proposal to the New York State Legislature, Governor Kathy Hochul proposed raising the MTA payroll tax, a move projected to increase revenue by $800 million, and also giving the MTA some of the money from casinos expected at present to be licensed soon for business in Manhattan.[151]

Reasons for high costs edit

On November 18, 2017, The New York Times published an investigation into the problems underlying the MTA. It found that politicians from both the Democratic and Republican parties, at the mayoral and gubernatorial levels, had gradually removed $1.5 billion of MTA funding. Other actions by city and state politicians, according to the Times, included overspending; overpaying unions and interest groups; advertising superficial improvement projects while ignoring more important infrastructure; and agreeing to high-interest loans that would have been unnecessary without their other interventions.[152] The Times stressed that no single event directly caused the crisis; rather, it was an accumulation of small cutbacks and maintenance deferments.[153] The MTA funds were described as a "piggy bank" for the state, with the issuance of MTA bonds benefiting the state at the MTA's expense.[152] By 2017, a sixth of the MTA's budget was allocated to paying off debt, a threefold increase from the proportion in 1997. The city's $250 million annual contribution to the MTA budget in 2017 was a quarter of the contribution in 1990. David L. Gunn, who helped end a transit crisis when he led the NYCTA in the mid-1980s, described the 2017 crisis as "heartbreaking".[152]

In December of the same year, the Times reported that the $12 billion East Side Access project, which would extend the LIRR to Grand Central Terminal upon its completion, was the most expensive of its kind in the world, with a projected price of $3.5 billion per mile of track. Over the years, the projected cost of East Side Access had risen by billions of dollars due to unnecessary expenses. In addition to overpaying workers and overspending, politicians and trade unions had forced the MTA to hire more workers than was needed. In 2010, an accountant found that the project was hiring 200 extra workers, at a cost of $1,000 per worker per day, for no apparent reason. The bidding process for MTA construction contracts also raised costs because, in some cases, only one or two contractors would bid on a project. Similar construction projects in New York City, such as the Second Avenue Subway and 7 Subway Extension, had been more expensive than comparable projects elsewhere for the same reasons, even though other cities' transit systems faced similar, or greater, problems compared to the MTA.[154] In March 2018, the federal Government Accountability Office ordered an audit of the United States' transit costs, which were generally higher than in any other developed country in the world. The GAO planned to devote special attention to the MTA's transit costs.[155]

The MTA has long struggled to control costs due to contracting fraud and corruption. In 2012, MTA executive Mario Guerra attempted to secure a job with train manufacturer Bombardier while evaluating their bid for a $600 million project.[156] Paresh Patel, an MTA manager responsible for the oversight of repair contracts in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, created and awarded contracts to his own engineering firm staffed with friends with few formal qualifications in engineering. After deleting thousands of company emails, Patel pleaded guilty to obstructing federal bid rigging and fraud investigations in March 2020.[157] In 2022, construction manager Ramnarace Mahabir was found to have provided jobs for family members through the routing of $18 million in bus depot contracts.[158] At one 2018 board meeting, an MTA executive explicitly noted the sentiment that the authority is willing to assign jobs to contractors with prior histories of corruption.[159]

edit

The MTA collected $707 million from advertising on its trains and buses in 2018.[160] In June 1992, the MTA banned tobacco advertising on subways, buses and commuter rail, costing the agency $4.5 million in annual advertising revenue. The tobacco advertisements were removed once the advertising contracts expired. They were removed from subways, buses, and bus shelters by the start of 1993, from the commuter rail lines by the start of 1994, and from Long Island Bus vehicles by the start of 1997.[161][162]

The MTA refused to display an ad in the New York City Subway system in 2012, which read: "In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel. Defeat Jihad."[163] The authority's decision was overturned in July 2012 when Judge Paul A. Engelmayer of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled that the ad of the American Freedom Defense Initiative is protected speech under the First Amendment, and that the MTA's actions were unconstitutional.[163][164][165] The judge held in a 35-page opinion that the rejected ad was "not only protected speech — it is core political speech ... [which as such] is afforded the highest level of protection under the First Amendment."[165][166] The MTA had received $116.4 million in revenue in 2011 from advertising sold throughout its subway, commuter rail, and bus systems.[166]

In April 2015, another ad became the subject of controversy when the MTA refused to display it, the refusal was again challenged in court, and the MTA again lost in court and was ordered by a federal judge to display the ad.[167] The ad, paid for by the American Freedom Defense Initiative, showed a man with a scarf covering his face, with the caption "Killing Jews is Worship that draws us close to Allah", which was attributed to "Hamas MTV," and then stated: "That's His Jihad. What's yours?"[167] The ad included a disclaimer that the display of the ad did not reflect the opinion of the MTA.[167] U.S. District Judge John Koeltl of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan said the ad was protected speech under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, and rejected the MTA's argument that the ad might endorse terrorism or violence.[167] Pamela Geller, president of the group that sued the MTA in order to run the ads, lauded the decision, and a lawyer for the organization said the same decision had been made in Washington and Philadelphia.[168]

A week afterward, the MTA's board in a 9–2 vote banned all political, religious, and opinion advertisements on subways and buses, limiting any ads to commercial ones.[169][170] Specifically, it banned advertisements that "prominently or predominately advocate or express a political message" about "disputed economic, political, moral, religious or social issues," and any ad that "promotes or opposes" a political party, ballot referendum, and "the election of any candidate".[140] The board estimated that the ads that the board was banning made up less than $1 million of the MTA's advertising revenue of $138 million in 2014.[140] Nevertheless, lawyers for the American Freedom Defense Initiative called the MTA's action a "disingenuous attempt to circumvent" the judge's order.[169]

Another controversy regarding MTA ads arose in 2018. After initially rejecting proposed advertisements from Unbound, a sex-toy retailer, the MTA allowed the ads. Previous advertisement proposals from companies, such as female-hygiene retailer Thinx's ad proposal in 2015, had been rejected and later approved due to "dissemination of indecent material to minors" and "public display[s] of offensive sexual material."[171][172]

2017—2021 transit crisis edit

 
An MTA employee performs maintenance on a B Train bound for Brighton Beach after a brake malfunction, October 2021.

In June 2017, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a state of emergency for the MTA due to ongoing reliability and crowding problems. This order applied particularly to the New York City Subway, which was the most severely affected by dilapidated infrastructure, causing overcrowding and delays. With many parts of the system approaching or exceeding 100 years of age, general deterioration could be seen in many subway stations.[173] By 2017, only 65% of weekday trains reached their destinations on time, the lowest rate since a transit crisis in the 1970s.[174] A corresponding bus crisis was not covered as heavily in the media, but in November 2017, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer identified several causes for the bus system's unreliability.[175][176] The average speeds of New York City buses were found to be 7 to 8 miles per hour (11 to 13 km/h),[175] the slowest of any major bus system nationwide.[176]

Campaigns edit

Safety campaign edit

 
Stairs in the Times Square–42nd Street station painted with the slogan, "If you see something, say something."

In 2002, following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the MTA introduced the slogan "If you see something, say something."[177][178] The campaign, which was based from a theme created by Korey Kay & Partners, consisted of public safety announcements, posted on advertisement boards in stations, subway, buses, and trains, urging people to report suspicious activity. Allen Kay, CEO of Korey Kay and Partners, stated in 2007 that the company had to do a lot of research to ensure that consumers understood the message correctly.[177] Since 2002 the campaign has evolved from simple print ads to television spots, and reports of suspicious packages in the system rose over 40-fold, from 814 in 2002 to over 37,000 in 2003.[179]

The MTA moved to trademark the slogan in 2005.[178] The slogan was used by more than 30 other "transport and governmental" organizations by 2007.[177] That year, the MTA spent $3 million to run 4,000 television ads and 84 newspaper ads in 11 total papers, over a span of more than four months.[179] The idea gained traction, and in 2010, the domestic-security branch of the United States federal government, the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS), started its own "see something, say something" campaign.[180] Kevin Ortiz, a spokesman for the MTA, described the slogan as having "engaged the public in serving as the eyes and ears of our system."[180]

Meanwhile, the DHS's campaign had attracted at least 215 partners in the private, public, and nonprofit sectors by 2014, which one writer called "a true smart practice."[181] However, the MTA program has not been universally well-received; in 2012, sociologists from New York University and the Illinois Institute of Technology noted that the campaign had not netted any thwarted terrorist plots, and that the sheer volume of calls to the MTA hotline resulted in MTA workers possibly not being able to identify genuine threats.[182][183][184]

In 2016, MTA updated the campaign, renaming it "New Yorkers Keep New York Safe." As before, the campaign features public service announcements in advertisement spaces. However, this new campaign now features the pictures, names, and quotes of New Yorkers who called to report suspicious people or things on the MTA's system.[185][186] The rebooted campaign also shows 15- to 30-second videos of these New Yorkers who speak about their experiences. The two-year "New Yorkers Keep New York Safe" campaign received $2 million of funding from the DHS.[185][186] The MTA still owns the trademark for "If you see something, say something."[186]

Courtesy campaigns edit

In MTA buses, there are stickers plastered on the frontmost seats. The front seats are priority seating, and the stickers state "Won't you please give up your seat to the disabled or elderly" with the "o" in "Won't" replaced with a heart symbol. In 2009, it was codified into an enforceable policy that could be punished with a fine.[187]

Since 2014, the MTA has had a "Courtesy Counts" campaign consisting of posters that show colored stick figures having either correct or incorrect etiquette. Green stick figures show what riders should do, such as taking off their backpacks, while red stick figures show what riders should not do, such as manspreading.[188][189] All of the posters have the tagline “Courtesy Counts: Manners Make a Better Ride.”[190] Starting in January 2015, these posters were installed in subway cars, with the posters coming to commuter rail and buses the following month.[189]

In May 2017, the MTA started a three-month pilot program to encourage riders to give up their seats for the pregnant, disabled, or elderly. It created a website where pregnant women, the disabled, and the elderly could request specialized buttons.[191] There are two designs: a "Baby on Board" button for pregnant mothers and a more generic "Please offer me a seat" button.[192] This idea stemmed from the "Baby on Board" buttons that were given out across the London Underground in 2013 after the Duchess of Cambridge, Kate Middleton, wore such a button there.[191]

The MTA launched the "Hate Has No Place in Our Transportation System" campaign in January 2020.[193][194] This involved placing notices on several thousand subway and bus screens.[195]

2021 onsite COVID-19 vaccinations edit

In May 2021, the MTA operated eight walk-up COVID-19 vaccination sites in subway, Metro-North and Long Island Rail Road stations as part of a five-day pilot project.[196] This pilot project was subsequently extended another week at two stations.[197][198] Over 11,000 people received the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine as part of the program.[199]

See also edit

Other transportation authorities operating in New York state:

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External links edit

Official links:

  • Official website
  • Metropolitan Transportation Authority's channel on YouTube

Other links:

  • Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the MTA
  • NYPIRG Straphangers' Campaign, a transit rider's advocacy group
  • Metropolitan Transportation Authority in the New York Codes, Rules and Regulations

metropolitan, transportation, authority, this, article, about, york, other, similarly, named, entities, metropolitan, transit, authority, disambiguation, public, benefit, corporation, responsible, public, transportation, york, city, metropolitan, area, state, . This article is about the Metropolitan Transportation Authority in New York For other similarly named entities see Metropolitan Transit Authority and MTA disambiguation The Metropolitan Transportation Authority MTA is a public benefit corporation responsible for public transportation in the New York City metropolitan area of the U S state of New York The MTA is the largest public transit authority in North America serving 12 counties in Downstate New York along with two counties in southwestern Connecticut under contract to the Connecticut Department of Transportation carrying over 11 million passengers on an average weekday systemwide and over 850 000 vehicles on its seven toll bridges and two tunnels per weekday Metropolitan Transportation AuthorityThe Metropolitan Transportation Authority MTA provides local and express bus subway and commuter rail service in Greater New York and operates multiple toll bridges and tunnels in New York City OverviewOwnerState of New YorkLocaleNew York CityLong IslandLower Hudson ValleyCoastal ConnecticutLower Housatonic ValleyLower Naugatuck River ValleyTransit typeCommuter rail local and express bus subway bus rapid transitNumber of lines19 commuter rail routes 8 Metro North routes 11 LIRR routes 26 rapid transit routes 25 subway routes 1 Staten Island Railway route 325 bus routes 234 local routes 71 express routes 20 Select Bus Service routesDaily ridership8 6 million 2017 weekday average 1 Annual ridership2 658 billion 2017 1 Key peopleJanno Lieber Chairman amp CEO 2 Headquarters2 Broadway Manhattan New York CityWebsitenew wbr mta wbr infoOperationBegan operationJune 1 1965 3 Operator s MTA Long Island Rail Road MTA Metro North Railroad MTA New York City Subway MTA Regional Bus Operations MTA Staten Island RailwayNumber of vehicles2 429 commuter rail cars6 418 subway cars61 SIR cars5 725 buses 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Expanded preview 2 Responsibilities and service area 3 Subsidiaries and affiliates 3 1 Subsidiary agencies 3 2 Affiliate agencies 3 3 Former subsidiaries 4 MTA Inspector General 5 Governance 5 1 Board Chair position 5 2 List of board members 6 Apps 7 Fare collection 8 Issues 8 1 Expenses 8 1 1 Budget gaps 8 1 2 Reasons for high costs 8 2 Advertisement bans 8 3 2017 2021 transit crisis 9 Campaigns 9 1 Safety campaign 9 2 Courtesy campaigns 9 3 2021 onsite COVID 19 vaccinations 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editFounding edit In February 1965 New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller suggested that the New York State Legislature create an authority to purchase operate and modernize the Long Island Rail Road LIRR The LIRR then a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad PRR had been operating under bankruptcy protection since 1949 The proposed authority would also have the power to make contracts or arrangements with other commuter railroad operators in the New York City area 4 On June 1 1965 the legislature chartered the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Authority MCTA to take over the operations of the LIRR 3 5 6 Governor Rockefeller appointed his top aide Dr William J Ronan as chairman and chief executive officer of the MCTA 7 In June 1965 the state finalized an agreement to buy the LIRR from the PRR for 65 million 8 The MCTA made a down payment of 10 million for the LIRR in December 1965 9 and it completed the rest of the payment the next month 10 In February 1965 Rockefeller and Connecticut Governor John N Dempsey jointly suggested that operations of the New Haven Line the New Haven Railroad s struggling commuter rail operation be transferred to the New York Central Railroad as part of a plan to prevent the New Haven Railroad from going bankrupt If the operational merger occurred the proposed MCTA and the existing Connecticut Transportation Authority would contract with New York Central to operate the New Haven Line to Grand Central Terminal 11 A September 1965 joint report from both agencies recommended that the line be leased to New York Central for 99 years with the MCTA and CTA acting as agents for both states 12 In October 1965 the MCTA found that the New Haven Line s stations and infrastructure were even more decrepit than those of the LIRR 13 The New Haven Railroad s trustees initially opposed New York Central s takeover of the New Haven Line as they felt that the 140 million offer for the New Haven Line was too low 14 After some discussion the trustees decided to continue operating the New Haven Line until June 1967 15 In January 1966 New York City Mayor John Lindsay proposed merging the New York City Transit Authority NYCTA which operated buses and subways in New York City and the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority TBTA which operated toll bridges and tunnels within the city 16 Rockefeller offered his complete support for Lindsay s proposed unified transit agency 17 while longtime city planner and TBTA chair Robert Moses called the proposed merger absurd and grotesque for its unwieldiness 18 In June 1966 Rockefeller announced his plans to expand the MCTA s scope to create a new regional transit authority The new authority would encompass the existing MCTA as well as the NYCTA and TBTA 19 Lindsay disagreed saying that the state and city should have operationally separate transit authorities that worked in tandem 20 In May 1967 Rockefeller signed a bill that allowed the MCTA to oversee the mass transit policies of New York City area transit systems The unification agreement took place the following March with the MCTA taking over the operations of the LIRR NYCTA TBTA New Haven commuter services New York Central commuter services and the Staten Island Rapid Transit Railway 21 Initially the TBTA was resistant to the MCTA s efforts to acquire it 22 Moses was afraid that the enlarged MCTA would undermine destroy or tarnish the integrity of the TBTA 23 One source of contention was Rockefeller s proposal to use TBTA tolls in order to subsidize the cheap fares of the NYCTA since Moses strongly opposed any use of TBTA tolls by outside agencies 24 In February 1968 Moses acquiesced to the MCTA s merger proposal 22 New York Central and the PRR merged in February 1968 forming the Penn Central Transportation Company 25 In February 1968 the MCTA published a 56 page report for Governor Rockefeller proposing several subway and railroad improvements under the name Metropolitan Transportation a Program for Action 26 27 28 29 alternatively called the Grand Design 30 The city had already intended to build subway extensions in all four boroughs so that most riders would need at most one transfer to get to their destination 31 The Program for Action also called for upgrades to the Penn Central railroads and area airports 26 The Program for Action was put forward simultaneously with other development and transportation plans under the administration of Mayor Lindsay This included Lindsay s Linear City plan for housing and educational facilities and the projected construction of several Interstate Highways many of which had originally been proposed by Robert Moses 32 33 Expanded preview edit On March 1 1968 the day after the release of the Program for Action the MCTA dropped the word Commuter from its name and became the Metropolitan Transportation Authority MTA The MTA took over the operations of the other New York City area transit systems 34 35 Moses was let go from his job as chairman of the TBTA although he was retained as a consultant 35 The construction of two proposed bridges over the Long Island Sound was put under the jurisdiction of the MTA 36 Moses stated that TBTA construction projects would reduce the MTA s budget surplus through to 1970 37 Chairman Ronan pushed for the MTA to pursue the Program for Action saying We re making up for 30 years of do nothingism 38 Ronan proposed that the MTA take over the Staten Island Rapid Transit Railway Company from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and start a 25 million modernization project on the railway 39 The city s Board of Estimate approved this purchase in December 1969 40 The MTA took ownership of the Staten Island Rapid Transit in January 1971 41 The agency entered into a long term lease of Penn Central s Hudson Harlem and New Haven Lines 34 Before 1968 the Hudson and Harlem Lines had been operated by the New York Central Railroad while the New Haven Line had been part of the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad Penn Central continued to operate the lines under contract to the MTA In April 1970 Rockefeller proposed that the state take over the Hudson and Harlem Lines 42 The next month he signed a bond issue that provided 44 4 million in funding to these lines 43 Penn Central s operations were folded into Conrail in 1976 The MTA took over full operations in 1983 and merged the lines into the Metro North Commuter Railroad 34 In 1994 the MTA rebranded its five subsidiaries with simpler names to convey that the different agencies were part of one agency 44 Responsibilities and service area editThe MTA has the responsibility for developing and implementing a unified mass transportation policy for the New York metropolitan area including all five boroughs of New York City and the suburban counties of Dutchess Nassau Orange Putnam Rockland Suffolk and Westchester This twelve county area make up the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District MCTD within which the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance levies a metropolitan commuter transportation mobility tax 45 On April 1 2019 Patrick J Foye was appointed chairman and CEO 46 The MTA s immediate past chairpersons were William J Ronan 1965 1974 David Yunich 1974 1975 Harold L Fisher 1975 1979 Richard Ravitch 1979 1983 Robert Kiley 1983 1991 Peter Stangl 1991 1995 Virgil Conway 1995 2001 Peter S Kalikow 2001 2007 H Dale Hemmerdinger 2007 2009 Jay Walder 2009 2011 Joseph Lhota 2012 Thomas F Prendergast 2013 2017 and Joseph Lhota 2017 2018 47 Lhota was re appointed in 2017 48 49 and resigned on November 9 2018 50 The MTA considers itself to be the largest regional public transportation provider in the Western Hemisphere As of 2018 update its agencies serve a region of approximately 15 3 million people spread over 5 000 square miles 13 000 km2 in 12 counties in New York and two in Connecticut MTA agencies now move about 8 6 million customers per day translating to 2 65 billion rail and bus customers a year and employ about 74 000 people 51 52 The MTA s systems carry over 11 million passengers on an average weekday systemwide and over 850 000 vehicles on its seven toll bridges and two tunnels per weekday 53 Subsidiaries and affiliates editMTA carries out these planning and other responsibilities both directly and through its subsidiaries and affiliates and provides oversight to these subordinate agencies known collectively as The Related Entities 54 The Related Entities represent a number of previously existing agencies which have come under the MTA umbrella These previously existing agencies were with the exception of MTA Bridges and Tunnels MTA Construction and Development amp MTA Grand Central Madison Concourse successors to the property of private companies that provided substantially the same services In 1994 the MTA spent 3 million rebranding its five subsidiaries with simpler names to convey that the different agencies were part of one agency Surveys found that a majority of riders did not know that the MTA owned the Long Island Rail Road or the Metro North Railroad As part of the changes the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority was renamed MTA Bridges and Tunnels Staten Island Rapid Transit was renamed MTA Staten Island Railway Metropolitan Suburban Bus Authority was renamed MTA Long Island Bus The New York City Transit Authority was renamed MTA New York City Transit to seem less authoritarian Metro North Commuter Railroad was renamed MTA Metro North Railroad to recognize the increase in non commuter ridership 55 The MTA logo was changed from a two toned M logo to a blue circle with the MTA initials written in perspective like they were rushing by like a train The large M logos on trains and buses were replaced with decals that state MTA New York City Bus MTA New York City Subway or MTA Staten Island Railway eliminating inconsistencies in signage 55 Today the older M logos survive on existing cube shaped lamps on station lampposts dating to the 1980s though such lamps have been updated with more modern spherical lamps over time Today each of these Related Entities has a popular name and in some cases a former legal name 56 57 Since 1994 the legal name has only been used for legal documents such as contracts and have not been used publicly 55 Since the mid 2000s the popular name has also been used for legal documents related to contract procurements where the legal name was used heretofore Both are listed below Subsidiary agencies edit MTA Long Island Rail Road LIRR legal name no longer used publicly The Long Island Rail Road Company 56 57 MTA Metro North Railroad MNR legal name no longer used publicly Metro North Commuter Railroad Company 56 57 MTA Grand Central Madison Concourse GCMC legal name not used publicly MTA Grand Central Madison Concourse Operating Company 57 MTA Staten Island Railway SIR legal name no longer used publicly Staten Island Rapid Transit Operating Authority 56 57 MTA Construction and Development MTAC amp D legal name not used publicly MTA Construction and Development Company 57 MTA Regional Bus Operations legal name not used publicly but rather trading as MTA Bus legal name sometimes used publicly MTA Bus Company 56 MTA New York City Bus 56 First Mutual Transportation Assurance Company legal name not used publicly no public name 57 Affiliate agencies edit MTA Bridges and Tunnels MTA B amp T legal name no longer used publicly Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority 56 57 MTA New York City Transit NYCT legal name no longer used publicly New York City Transit Authority and its subsidiary the Manhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority MaBSTOA The Bus division is now managed under Regional Bus 56 Former subsidiaries edit MTA Long Island Bus legal name no longer used Metropolitan Suburban Bus Authority 56 From January 1 2012 this division was operated by Veolia Transport now Transdev Inc as Nassau Inter County Express 58 MTA Inspector General editThe Office of the MTA Inspector General OIG founded in 1983 is the independent Office of Inspector General specific to the MTA that is responsible for conducting monitoring and oversight of MTA activities programs and employees 59 Governance edit nbsp MTA headquarters 2 BroadwayThe MTA is governed by a 21 member board representing the 5 boroughs of New York City each of the counties in its New York State service area and worker and rider interest groups 60 Of these there are 14 voting members broken down into 13 board members who cast individual votes 4 board members who cast a single collective vote and 6 group representatives who do not vote 61 Four members as well as the chairman CEO are directly nominated by the Governor of New York while four are recommended by New York City s mayor The county executives of Nassau Suffolk and Westchester counties nominate one member each Each of these members has one vote 61 62 The county executives of Dutchess Orange Rockland and Putnam counties also nominate one member each 62 but these members cast one collective vote 61 The Board has six rotating nonvoting seats held by representatives of MTA employee organized labor and the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee which represent customers of MTA transit and commuter facilities 62 Board members are confirmed by the New York State Senate 62 In 2017 the MTA had operating expenses of 16 85 billion an outstanding debt of 38 083 billion and a level of staffing of 79 832 people staff compensation totaled 6 762 billion 63 It collects revenue from passenger fees and from a Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Mobility Tax a payroll tax levied on employers in the 12 county area served by the MTA 64 Board Chair position edit Historically some but not all chairmen of the MTA Board have also held the chief executive officer role with the chairman providing an advisory and policy role and the Executive Director running day to day operations 65 66 The roles were combined in 2009 following the recommendation a commission to study capital spending 67 68 The commission was appointed by then Governor David Paterson and run by former chairman Richard Ravitch 65 69 However following Thomas Prendergast s retirement in 2017 they were split back again 65 70 71 The positions were merged back into one position in 2019 when Pat Foye was appointed Chairman amp Chief Executive Officer The current chairman Janno Lieber holds both positions The following is a list of chairmen of the authority Name Also CEO Tenure 72 Appointed by1 William Ronan March 1 1968 April 26 1974 Nelson Rockefeller2 David L Yunich May 2 1974 January 21 1977 Malcolm Wilson3 Harold L Fisher January 22 1977 November 16 1979 Hugh Carey4 Richard Ravitch Yes 73 November 17 1979 October 31 19835 Bob Kiley Yes 73 November 16 1983 January 2 1991 Mario Cuomo6 Peter E Stangl Yes 73 April 21 1991 May 17 19957 E Virgil Conway No May 18 1995 March 9 2001 George Pataki8 Peter Kalikow No March 13 2001 October 22 20079 H Dale Hemmerdinger No 66 October 23 2007 September 10 2009 Eliot Spitzer10 Jay Walder Yes October 5 2009 October 21 2011 David Paterson11 Joe Lhota Yes January 9 2012 December 31 2012 Andrew Cuomo12 Thomas F Prendergast Yes June 20 2013 January 31 201713 Joe Lhota Noa June 21 2017 November 8 201814 Pat Foye Yes April 1 2019 July 29 2021 2 15 Janno Lieberb Yes January 20 2022 present Kathy HochulNotesa Lhota did not serve as CEO in his second stint as chairman as CEO responsibilities were carried out by Executive Director Ronnie Hakim 74 b Lieber served as Chair and CEO in an acting capacity from July 30 2021 to January 19 2022 75 List of board members edit The following is a list of members of the MTA Board Name 61 Appointed Recommended by 61 Janno Lieber Chair January 20 2022 76 Governor Kathy Hochul Jamey Barbas June 10 2020 77 Governor Andrew Cuomo Haeda B Mihaltses April 10 2019 78 Governor Andrew Cuomo Lisa Sorin June 3 2022 79 80 Governor Kathy Hochul VACANT Governor Kathy Hochul David R Jones June 17 2016 81 62 Mayor Bill de Blasio Frankie Miranda June 3 2022 79 80 Mayor Eric Adams VACANT Mayor Eric Adams Midori Valdivia June 3 2022 79 80 Mayor Eric Adams David S Mack 2019 79 Nassau County Executive Laura Curran Samuel Chu June 3 2022 79 80 Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone Blanca P Lopez June 3 2022 79 80 Westchester County Executive George Latimer Michael Fleischer June 10 2020 77 Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro Harold Porr 82 June 2021 79 80 Orange County Executive Steve Neuhaus Frank Borelli June 10 2020 77 79 80 Rockland County Executive Ed Day Neal Zuckerman July 9 2016 83 Putnam County Executive MaryEllen Odell Andrew Albert June 2002 84 New York City Transit Riders CouncilGerard Bringmann LIRR Commuters CouncilRandolph Glucksman Metro North Commuter CouncilJohn Samuelsen June 17 2016 62 Transport Workers Union Local 100Vincent Tessitore Jr June 30 2007 85 SMART UnionApps edit nbsp MTA Bus Time app on an iPhone The MTA has developed several official web and mobile apps for its subway and bus services 86 87 88 89 and also provides data to private app developers to create their own unofficial MTA apps 90 In 2012 the MTA officially released the Subway Time app which uses subway countdown clock data to determine the next train arrival times on seven services 91 Real time station information for the mainline A Division numbered routes comprising all numbered services except the 7 train was made available to third party developers via an API This was achieved through both the Subway Time mobile app and as open data 92 In early 2014 data for the L train were also given to developers 93 When Bluetooth enabled countdown clocks were installed in the B Division lettered services in 2016 and 2017 they were also configured to feed data to the Subway Time app as well as in an open data format 86 94 MTA s Bus Time app originated as a pilot program to install bus countdown clocks along the M16 and M34 routes in August 2009 95 96 97 At the same time many new buses were retrofitted with GPS enabled automatic vehicle location systems 97 98 In October 2010 the developers of the buses GPS devices implemented the MTA system s first bus tracking app which monitored buses along the M16 and M34 routes 99 100 101 This evolved into the current web app which originally tracked buses along the B63 route in Brooklyn when it started in February 2011 102 103 104 By January 2012 every local and express bus in Staten Island was equipped with the system 105 102 103 The M34 corridor began using the system on April 6 2012 101 with nearly every Bronx bus route using the system by the end of 2012 106 All five boroughs of the city used the system by March 2014 and a mobile app was released in 2015 107 87 In 2011 the MTA began to look at ways of displaying service disruptions due to weekend engineering works in a visual format On September 16 2011 the MTA introduced a Vignelli style interactive subway map The Weekender 108 to its website 109 The web app provided a way for riders to get information about any planned work from late Friday night to early Monday morning that is going on either on a service s or station s of the subway during the weekends 110 111 112 On June 11 2012 the MTA duplicated The Weekender site as a free mobile app download for iOS 113 88 On November 29 2012 an Android version of the app was released 89 The MTA announced plans to integrate all three apps in 2017 The combined app which was scheduled for release in 2018 would include real time arrival information for all subway and bus routes as well as weekend service changes and travel planners 114 In April 2018 the MTA started testing MYmta which provides arrival information for MTA railroad subway and bus routes escalator and elevator outage information and real time service changes The app also includes an improved version of the MTA s Trip Planner whereas the existing Trip Planner can only plan trips along MTA operated modes of transportation MYmta s Trip Planner can also suggest routes via other operators such as the Staten Island Ferry NYC Ferry PATH and NJ Transit 115 A beta version of MYmta was released to the general public in July of that year 116 117 In future versions of the MYmta app the MTA planned to integrate the eTix functionality as well as make it easier for Access A Ride customers to view when their vehicle will arrive at a certain point 118 In October 2020 the MTA unveiled a new digital map providing real time arrival estimates and service updates It was developed pro bono by technology and design company Work amp Co 119 Fare collection editFurther information New York City transit fares The subway buses and Staten Island Railway charge a single flat fare for each trip regardless of time or distance traveled From the MTA s inception until 2003 the agency collected subway and bus fares via a series of small metal tokens The MTA cycled through several series of tokens throughout the late 20th century 120 121 In 1993 MTA started testing the MetroCard a magnetic stripe card that would replace the tokens used to pay fares 122 By 1997 the entire bus and subway system accepted MetroCard 123 and tokens were no longer accepted for fare payment in 2003 120 121 A different fare payment system is used on the LIRR and Metro North Both railroads sell tickets based on geographical zones and time of day charging peak and off peak fares Tickets may be bought from a ticket office at stations ticket vending machines TVMs online through the WebTicket program or through apps for iOS and Android devices 124 nbsp OMNY Payment System for Subway TrainsIn 2017 it was announced that the MetroCard would be phased out and replaced by OMNY a contactless fare payment system with fare payment being made using Apple Pay Google Wallet debit credit cards with near field communication enabled or radio frequency identification cards 125 126 As of December 31 2020 the entire bus and subway system is OMNY enabled However support of the MetroCard is slated to remain until 2023 126 MTA also plans to use OMNY in the LIRR and Metro North 127 Issues editExpenses edit Budget gaps edit The budget deficit of the MTA is a growing crisis for the organization as well as for New York City and State residents and governments The MTA held 31 billion in debt in 2010 and it also suffered from a 900 million gap in its operating budget for 2011 128 The capital budget which covers repairs technological upgrades new trains and expansions is currently 15 billion short of what the MTA states it needs If this is not funded the MTA will fund the repairs with debt and raise fares to cover repayments The MTA has consistently run on a deficit but increased spending in 2000 04 coupled with the economic downturn led to a severe increase in the financial burden that the MTA bore The budget problems stem from multiple sources The MTA cannot be supported solely by rider fares and road tolls In the preliminary 2011 budget MTA forecasted operating revenue totaled at 6 5 billion amount to only 50 of the 13 billion operating expenses 129 Therefore the MTA must rely on other sources of funding to remain operational Revenue collected from real estate taxes for transportation purposes helped to contain the deficit However due to the weak economy and unstable real estate market money from these taxes severely decreased in 2010 tax revenue fell at least 20 short of the projected value 130 Beyond this steadily reducing support from city and state governments led to borrowing money by issuing bonds which contributed heavily to the debt 131 This budget deficit has resulted in various problems mainly concentrated in New York City New York City Subway fares have been increased four times since 2008 with the most recent occurring August 20 2023 raising single ride fares from 2 75 to 2 90 express service from 6 75 to 7 00 and the monthly MetroCard fare from 116 to 132 132 133 Each fare raise was met with increasing resistance by MTA customers and many are beginning to find the fare increases prohibitive 2010 also saw heavy service cuts for many MTA subsidiaries 134 Fewer trains spaced farther between resulted in heavy overcrowding beyond normal rush hours leading to frustration for many subway and bus riders 135 136 137 In 2013 the subway had the highest ridership since 1947 138 MTA employees also suffered due to the budget issues By mid July 2010 MTA layoffs had reached over 1 000 and many of those affected were low level employees who made less than 55 000 annually 139 As of 2015 update the MTA was running a 15 billion deficit in its 32 billion 2015 2019 Capital Plan 140 Without extra funding many necessary construction and renovation projects would not be performed 141 In October 2015 the MTA passed the 29 billion 2015 2019 Capital Plan 142 the largest capital plan in MTA s history it will be funded by federal state and city government as well as riders fares and tolls 143 Three months later New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and MTA chairman Thomas Prendergast unveiled their plan to spend 26 billion to modernize the subway network which includes adding Wi Fi and cellphone services throughout all 278 underground stations by the end of 2016 Other plans call for making extensive renovations to 30 subway stations allowing mobile ticketing by cellphone or bank cards and adding security cameras on buses charging stations for electronics and more countdown clocks Roughly 3 billion will be spent to improve bridges and tunnels 144 145 During the COVID 19 pandemic in New York City following a 50 to 90 drop in ridership on all of the MTA s systems the agency requested 4 billion in federal funds since the decreased fare revenue left the already struggling agency in a financially tenuous position 146 After the subway was temporarily shuttered at night starting in May 2020 147 trains and stations were cleaned more than usual 148 149 Over 132 employees died of COVID 19 as of June 2020 update 150 On February 1 2023 as part of her Executive Budget proposal to the New York State Legislature Governor Kathy Hochul proposed raising the MTA payroll tax a move projected to increase revenue by 800 million and also giving the MTA some of the money from casinos expected at present to be licensed soon for business in Manhattan 151 Reasons for high costs edit On November 18 2017 The New York Times published an investigation into the problems underlying the MTA It found that politicians from both the Democratic and Republican parties at the mayoral and gubernatorial levels had gradually removed 1 5 billion of MTA funding Other actions by city and state politicians according to the Times included overspending overpaying unions and interest groups advertising superficial improvement projects while ignoring more important infrastructure and agreeing to high interest loans that would have been unnecessary without their other interventions 152 The Times stressed that no single event directly caused the crisis rather it was an accumulation of small cutbacks and maintenance deferments 153 The MTA funds were described as a piggy bank for the state with the issuance of MTA bonds benefiting the state at the MTA s expense 152 By 2017 a sixth of the MTA s budget was allocated to paying off debt a threefold increase from the proportion in 1997 The city s 250 million annual contribution to the MTA budget in 2017 was a quarter of the contribution in 1990 David L Gunn who helped end a transit crisis when he led the NYCTA in the mid 1980s described the 2017 crisis as heartbreaking 152 In December of the same year the Times reported that the 12 billion East Side Access project which would extend the LIRR to Grand Central Terminal upon its completion was the most expensive of its kind in the world with a projected price of 3 5 billion per mile of track Over the years the projected cost of East Side Access had risen by billions of dollars due to unnecessary expenses In addition to overpaying workers and overspending politicians and trade unions had forced the MTA to hire more workers than was needed In 2010 an accountant found that the project was hiring 200 extra workers at a cost of 1 000 per worker per day for no apparent reason The bidding process for MTA construction contracts also raised costs because in some cases only one or two contractors would bid on a project Similar construction projects in New York City such as the Second Avenue Subway and 7 Subway Extension had been more expensive than comparable projects elsewhere for the same reasons even though other cities transit systems faced similar or greater problems compared to the MTA 154 In March 2018 the federal Government Accountability Office ordered an audit of the United States transit costs which were generally higher than in any other developed country in the world The GAO planned to devote special attention to the MTA s transit costs 155 The MTA has long struggled to control costs due to contracting fraud and corruption In 2012 MTA executive Mario Guerra attempted to secure a job with train manufacturer Bombardier while evaluating their bid for a 600 million project 156 Paresh Patel an MTA manager responsible for the oversight of repair contracts in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy created and awarded contracts to his own engineering firm staffed with friends with few formal qualifications in engineering After deleting thousands of company emails Patel pleaded guilty to obstructing federal bid rigging and fraud investigations in March 2020 157 In 2022 construction manager Ramnarace Mahabir was found to have provided jobs for family members through the routing of 18 million in bus depot contracts 158 At one 2018 board meeting an MTA executive explicitly noted the sentiment that the authority is willing to assign jobs to contractors with prior histories of corruption 159 Advertisement bans edit The MTA collected 707 million from advertising on its trains and buses in 2018 160 In June 1992 the MTA banned tobacco advertising on subways buses and commuter rail costing the agency 4 5 million in annual advertising revenue The tobacco advertisements were removed once the advertising contracts expired They were removed from subways buses and bus shelters by the start of 1993 from the commuter rail lines by the start of 1994 and from Long Island Bus vehicles by the start of 1997 161 162 The MTA refused to display an ad in the New York City Subway system in 2012 which read In any war between the civilized man and the savage support the civilized man Support Israel Defeat Jihad 163 The authority s decision was overturned in July 2012 when Judge Paul A Engelmayer of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled that the ad of the American Freedom Defense Initiative is protected speech under the First Amendment and that the MTA s actions were unconstitutional 163 164 165 The judge held in a 35 page opinion that the rejected ad was not only protected speech it is core political speech which as such is afforded the highest level of protection under the First Amendment 165 166 The MTA had received 116 4 million in revenue in 2011 from advertising sold throughout its subway commuter rail and bus systems 166 In April 2015 another ad became the subject of controversy when the MTA refused to display it the refusal was again challenged in court and the MTA again lost in court and was ordered by a federal judge to display the ad 167 The ad paid for by the American Freedom Defense Initiative showed a man with a scarf covering his face with the caption Killing Jews is Worship that draws us close to Allah which was attributed to Hamas MTV and then stated That s His Jihad What s yours 167 The ad included a disclaimer that the display of the ad did not reflect the opinion of the MTA 167 U S District Judge John Koeltl of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan said the ad was protected speech under the First Amendment of the U S Constitution and rejected the MTA s argument that the ad might endorse terrorism or violence 167 Pamela Geller president of the group that sued the MTA in order to run the ads lauded the decision and a lawyer for the organization said the same decision had been made in Washington and Philadelphia 168 A week afterward the MTA s board in a 9 2 vote banned all political religious and opinion advertisements on subways and buses limiting any ads to commercial ones 169 170 Specifically it banned advertisements that prominently or predominately advocate or express a political message about disputed economic political moral religious or social issues and any ad that promotes or opposes a political party ballot referendum and the election of any candidate 140 The board estimated that the ads that the board was banning made up less than 1 million of the MTA s advertising revenue of 138 million in 2014 140 Nevertheless lawyers for the American Freedom Defense Initiative called the MTA s action a disingenuous attempt to circumvent the judge s order 169 Another controversy regarding MTA ads arose in 2018 After initially rejecting proposed advertisements from Unbound a sex toy retailer the MTA allowed the ads Previous advertisement proposals from companies such as female hygiene retailer Thinx s ad proposal in 2015 had been rejected and later approved due to dissemination of indecent material to minors and public display s of offensive sexual material 171 172 2017 2021 transit crisis edit Main article 2017 2021 New York City transit crisis nbsp An MTA employee performs maintenance on a B Train bound for Brighton Beach after a brake malfunction October 2021 In June 2017 New York Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a state of emergency for the MTA due to ongoing reliability and crowding problems This order applied particularly to the New York City Subway which was the most severely affected by dilapidated infrastructure causing overcrowding and delays With many parts of the system approaching or exceeding 100 years of age general deterioration could be seen in many subway stations 173 By 2017 only 65 of weekday trains reached their destinations on time the lowest rate since a transit crisis in the 1970s 174 A corresponding bus crisis was not covered as heavily in the media but in November 2017 New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer identified several causes for the bus system s unreliability 175 176 The average speeds of New York City buses were found to be 7 to 8 miles per hour 11 to 13 km h 175 the slowest of any major bus system nationwide 176 Campaigns editSafety campaign edit nbsp Stairs in the Times Square 42nd Street station painted with the slogan If you see something say something In 2002 following the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks the MTA introduced the slogan If you see something say something 177 178 The campaign which was based from a theme created by Korey Kay amp Partners consisted of public safety announcements posted on advertisement boards in stations subway buses and trains urging people to report suspicious activity Allen Kay CEO of Korey Kay and Partners stated in 2007 that the company had to do a lot of research to ensure that consumers understood the message correctly 177 Since 2002 the campaign has evolved from simple print ads to television spots and reports of suspicious packages in the system rose over 40 fold from 814 in 2002 to over 37 000 in 2003 179 The MTA moved to trademark the slogan in 2005 178 The slogan was used by more than 30 other transport and governmental organizations by 2007 177 That year the MTA spent 3 million to run 4 000 television ads and 84 newspaper ads in 11 total papers over a span of more than four months 179 The idea gained traction and in 2010 the domestic security branch of the United States federal government the United States Department of Homeland Security DHS started its own see something say something campaign 180 Kevin Ortiz a spokesman for the MTA described the slogan as having engaged the public in serving as the eyes and ears of our system 180 Meanwhile the DHS s campaign had attracted at least 215 partners in the private public and nonprofit sectors by 2014 which one writer called a true smart practice 181 However the MTA program has not been universally well received in 2012 sociologists from New York University and the Illinois Institute of Technology noted that the campaign had not netted any thwarted terrorist plots and that the sheer volume of calls to the MTA hotline resulted in MTA workers possibly not being able to identify genuine threats 182 183 184 In 2016 MTA updated the campaign renaming it New Yorkers Keep New York Safe As before the campaign features public service announcements in advertisement spaces However this new campaign now features the pictures names and quotes of New Yorkers who called to report suspicious people or things on the MTA s system 185 186 The rebooted campaign also shows 15 to 30 second videos of these New Yorkers who speak about their experiences The two year New Yorkers Keep New York Safe campaign received 2 million of funding from the DHS 185 186 The MTA still owns the trademark for If you see something say something 186 Courtesy campaigns edit In MTA buses there are stickers plastered on the frontmost seats The front seats are priority seating and the stickers state Won t you please give up your seat to the disabled or elderly with the o in Won t replaced with a heart symbol In 2009 it was codified into an enforceable policy that could be punished with a fine 187 Since 2014 the MTA has had a Courtesy Counts campaign consisting of posters that show colored stick figures having either correct or incorrect etiquette Green stick figures show what riders should do such as taking off their backpacks while red stick figures show what riders should not do such as manspreading 188 189 All of the posters have the tagline Courtesy Counts Manners Make a Better Ride 190 Starting in January 2015 these posters were installed in subway cars with the posters coming to commuter rail and buses the following month 189 In May 2017 the MTA started a three month pilot program to encourage riders to give up their seats for the pregnant disabled or elderly It created a website where pregnant women the disabled and the elderly could request specialized buttons 191 There are two designs a Baby on Board button for pregnant mothers and a more generic Please offer me a seat button 192 This idea stemmed from the Baby on Board buttons that were given out across the London Underground in 2013 after the Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton wore such a button there 191 The MTA launched the Hate Has No Place in Our Transportation System campaign in January 2020 193 194 This involved placing notices on several thousand subway and bus screens 195 2021 onsite COVID 19 vaccinations edit In May 2021 the MTA operated eight walk up COVID 19 vaccination sites in subway Metro North and Long Island Rail Road stations as part of a five day pilot project 196 This pilot project was subsequently extended another week at two stations 197 198 Over 11 000 people received the Janssen COVID 19 vaccine as part of the program 199 See also edit nbsp New York City portal nbsp Transportation portalTransportation in New York CityOther transportation authorities operating in New York state Capital District Transportation Authority in Capital District New York Central New York Regional Transportation Authority in Syracuse New York Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority in Buffalo New York Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in New York City and northern New Jersey Rochester Genesee Regional Transportation Authority in Rochester New YorkReferences edit a b c The MTA Network Metropolitan Transportation Authority Retrieved June 2 2018 a b MTA Leadership Metropolitan Transportation Authority Retrieved August 9 2021 a b Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Authority Act Laws of New York Vol 188th sess I 1965 pp 1042 1062 hdl 2027 nyp 33433107706115 ISSN 0892 287X Chapter 324 enacted 1 June 1965 effective immediately Grutzner Charles February 26 1965 Rockefeller Urges State Buy L I R R and Modernize It To Ask Legislature to Vote Funds to Purchase Line at Reasonable Price New Board Is Proposed It Would Sell 200 Million Bonds for Improvements Railroad Favors Plan PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 31 2018 NYS Executive Department June 1 1965 New York State bill jackets L 1965 CH 0324 New York State Library retrieved October 26 2022 Assembly Votes Commuter Board Bill Creates Transportation Authority for City Area PDF The New York Times May 21 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 31 2018 Rockefeller Names Ronan to Rail Job Aide to Governor to Head New Agency at 45 000 PDF The New York Times June 22 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 31 2018 State in Accord With the Pennsy on Buying L I R R P R R Agrees on Price of 65 Million With New Transportation Agency PDF The New York Times June 3 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 31 2018 Authority Signs a Pact To Buy the Long Island PDF The New York Times December 23 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 State Takes Over the L I Rail Road Finishes Paying the Pennsy Re elects All Officers PDF The New York Times 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Perlmutter Emanuel February 28 1965 Connecticuty Joins New York in Plan to Aid Commuters Service Contract Idea Might Involve Leasing Lines of Central and New Haven PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 2 States May Lease Modernize NHRR NYC New Haven Section PDF Yonkers Herald Statesman September 27 1966 p 2 Retrieved February 1 2018 via Fultonhistory com Rail Panel Views New Haven Needs Reports Situation Is Worse Than It Had Expected PDF The New York Times October 29 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 New Haven Sale Opposed on Price 140 Million Deal Is Called Wholly Inadequate by Metropolitan Life Passenger Aid Slated Insurer Backs Road s Entry Into Merger of Pennsy and Central Lines PDF The New York Times October 11 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 New Haven Plans to Extend Runs Passenger Service to New York Will Be Maintained Till June 30 1967 PDF The New York Times December 15 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Albany Is Warm to Transit Unity Leaders Indicate Readiness to Weigh Lindsay Plan PDF The New York Times 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Governor Backs Mayor on Transit Support on Legislation for Unification Is Assured PDF The New York Times February 9 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Moses Scores a Transit Merger as Unworkable PDF The New York Times 1967 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Schanberg Sydney H June 3 1966 Rockefeller Seeks Regional Agency to Direct Transit It Would Include Subway and Bridge Authorities and L I Rail Road Bill Under Study Now Commuter Organization for Metropolitan Area May Get More Powers PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Lindsay Is Strongly Opposed To State Transit Proposal PDF The New York Times June 4 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Governor Signs 2d Transit Bill Unification Measure Names Agency to Head Operation PDF The New York Times May 3 1967 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 a b Triborough Pact Ends Last Block to Transit Unity Superagency Will Control Authority but Is Curbed on Transfer of Funds PDF The New York Times February 10 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Moses Cautions New Authority Praises Triborough Bridge Operations in Final Report PDF The New York Times February 19 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Triborough Funds Are Again Sought to Save 20c Fare Governor and Mayor Study Way to Include Authority in Metropolitan Program Aid to Lindsay Is An Aim Move Would Avoid Another Fare Rise Before Election No Comment by Moses PDF The New York Times February 28 1967 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Court Here Lets Railroads Consolidate Tomorrow Rail Merger Gets Final Clearance PDF The New York Times 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 a b Full text of Metropolitan transportation a program for action Report to Nelson A Rockefeller Governor of New York Internet Archive New York November 7 1967 Retrieved October 1 2015 Annual Report Metropolitan Transportation Authority 1970 Retrieved October 1 2015 Bennett Charles G February 29 1968 Transportation Funding Would Have 4 Sources Plan s Financing Would Be Varied PDF The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2015 Witkin Richard February 29 1968 2 9 Billion Transit Plan for New York Area Links Subways Rails Airports 2 Phase Proposal Program by Governor Calls for 1 6 Billion in First 10 Years 2 Phase Proposal for Transit Given PDF The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2015 Chapter 1 Purpose and Need PDF mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority p 17 Retrieved December 19 2015 Routes Outlined for New Subways City Aides Report Major Agreement on Layout of Lines in 3 PDF The New York Times 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 27 2017 Regional Transportation Program Metropolitan Transportation Authority 1969 Retrieved July 26 2016 Burks Edward C May 23 1971 Interboro Route Angers Residents Proposal for a Truck Link Assailed in Queens PDF The New York Times Retrieved October 3 2015 a b c Penner Larry July 15 2014 Happy 51st Birthday To Queens Public Transportation Queens Gazette Archived from the original on September 12 2015 Retrieved November 1 2015 a b M T A Takes Over Transit Network Moses Will Be Kept On as Consultant to Agency PDF The New York Times March 2 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Number One Transportation Progress An Interim Report thejoekorner com Metropolitan Transportation Authority December 1968 Retrieved August 19 2016 Moses Says Triborough Projects Will Absorb Surpluses Until 69 PDF The New York Times March 31 1967 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Ronan Lays Transit Crisis To a 30 Year Lag in City Ronan Lays Transit Crisis to 30 Year Lag in City The New York Times August 25 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original PDF on October 28 2014 Retrieved February 1 2018 City Urged to Take Over Staten Island Railway Transportation Agency Asks a 25 Million Modernizing PDF The New York Times May 8 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 6 2018 Board of Estimate Agrees to the Purchase of S I R T Line for 3 5 Million PDF The New York Times December 19 1969 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 6 2018 Corry John 1976 About New York The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 6 2018 Kovach Bill April 17 1970 State to Acquire 2 Commuter Runs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 Witkin Richard May 7 1970 Rockefeller Signs Bill on Rail Lines The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 1 2018 McKinley James C Jr August 28 1994 What s in a Symbol A Lot the M T A Is Betting The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 29 2020 Metropolitan commuter transportation mobility tax Department of Taxation and Finance November 7 2014 Retrieved February 11 2018 Fitzsimmons Emma G April 2 2019 Cuomo Promised Transparency at the M T A Then Its Leader Was Confirmed While You Slept The New York Times Past Board Chairmen Metropolitan Transportation Authority June 20 2017 Retrieved February 11 2018 MTA Management Team MTA Retrieved February 11 2018 New MTA boss Joe Lhota welcomes the challenge of fixing dysfunctional transit system New York Daily News June 22 2017 Retrieved June 23 2017 Siff Andrew November 9 2018 MTA Chairman Joe Lhota Resigns Effective Immediately NBC New York Retrieved November 9 2018 Levin Tim The MTA now has 20 times the confirmed coronavirus cases it had two weeks ago with 5 600 employees in self quarantine and 33 deaths Business Insider Transportation Network Metropolitan Transportation Authority February 11 2018 Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved February 11 2018 MTA About Bridges amp Tunnels Retrieved October 1 2014 Appendix A The Related Entities PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2002 pp A 3 retrieved March 28 2008 a b c McKinley James C Jr August 28 1994 What s in a Symbol A Lot the M T A Is Betting The New York Times Retrieved February 23 2008 a b c d e f g h i Metropolitan Transportation Authority Description and Board Structure Covering Fiscal Year 2009 PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority c 2010 pp 2 3 Retrieved February 10 2017 a b c d e f g h MTA Subsidiary Public Benefit Corporations Report 2021 Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2021 p 1 Retrieved April 21 2023 Castillo Alfonso A June 10 2011 Illinois company to run Long Island Bus Newsday Retrieved February 11 2018 Governor Cuomo Announces Unanimous Confirmation of Carolyn Pokorny Former Federal Prosecutor and Deputy Chief of Staff to U S Attorney General Loretta Lynch as Inspector General at the MTA Governor Andrew M Cuomo May 30 2019 Retrieved September 10 2020 NYS DOB FY 2018 Executive Budget Agency Appropriations Metropolitan Transportation Authority New York State Division of the Budget Retrieved May 16 2017 permanent dead link a b c d e MTA Board Members MTA Metropolitan Transportation Authority Retrieved February 7 2018 a b c d e f Fitzsimmons Emma G June 18 2016 New York s Voice at the M T A Gets Louder as 2 Mayoral Board Picks Are Confirmed The New York Times Retrieved February 7 2018 NYSABO 2018 Report PDF pp 16 29 44 Retrieved November 6 2018 NYS Dept of tax and finance description of the MCTMT Retrieved November 6 2018 a b c Fitzsimmons Emma G June 11 2017 With M T A in Need of a Boss Cuomo May Finally Pick One Or Two The New York Times Retrieved March 21 2023 a b Newman William October 29 2008 Hard Choices in Time of Transition for M T A s Almost Chairman The New York Times Retrieved March 21 2023 Neuman William May 7 2009 M T A Chief Resigns in Management Shake Up The New York Times Retrieved March 21 2023 Neuman William May 21 2009 Interim Chief Executive of M T A Is Named The New York Times Retrieved March 21 2023 Paterson Plans Panel to Study M T A Budget The New York Times April 4 2008 Retrieved March 21 2023 Yang Lucy May 16 2017 MTA unveils 6 point plan to improve service ABC7 New York Retrieved May 16 2017 MTA Announces 6 Point Plan to Restructure Management of the MTA Improve System Reliability and Service apps cio ny gov Metropolitan Transportation Authority Retrieved May 16 2017 Metropolitan Transportation Authority Past MTA Board Chairs Retrieved February 22 2020 a b c Perez Pena Richard November 21 1995 Giuliani s Chief Budget Officer Is Considered for M T A Post The New York Times Retrieved March 22 2023 Fried Ben June 22 2017 Joe Lhota Is Cuomo s MTA Chief Again Sort Of Streetsblog Retrieved February 22 2020 Martinez Jose July 29 2021 MTA Shuffle Puts Construction Vet in Driver s Seat Leaves Vacancy at Transit THE CITY Retrieved August 14 2021 Luczak Marybeth January 21 2022 Confirmed Lieber Velez Join New York MTA Board Railway Age Retrieved March 20 2023 a b c Watchdog Statement on Senate Confirmation of MTA Board Appointees Reinvent Albany June 10 2020 Retrieved March 20 2023 Ex Sony boss IRS manager join Foye on MTA board Real Estate Weekly April 10 2019 Retrieved March 20 2023 a b c d e f g h Luczak Marybeth June 9 2022 NY Senate Confirmed 9 MTA Board Members Railway Age Retrieved March 20 2023 a b c d e f g MTA Welcomes New and Returning Board Members Confirmed by the State Senate MTA June 3 2022 Retrieved March 20 2023 David R Jones 1199SEIU Retrieved March 20 2023 Porr reappointed to MTA Board Mid Hudson News June 7 2022 Retrieved March 20 2023 Zuckerman Named to MTA Board The Highlands Current July 9 2016 Retrieved March 20 2023 Andrew Albert Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the MTA Retrieved March 20 2023 Vincent Tessitore Jr Archived from the original on May 11 2021 Retrieved March 20 2023 a b Updates Metropolitan Transportation Authority Archived from the original on July 12 2017 Retrieved July 12 2017 a b Whitford Emma June 5 2015 MTA s Bus Tracker Is Now Available As An App Gothamist Archived from the original on November 13 2015 Retrieved November 9 2015 a b The Weekender Is Now an iPhone App MTA info June 11 2012 Retrieved June 13 2012 a b MTA s Weekender App Comes to Android Devices MTA info November 29 2012 Archived from the original on April 3 2015 Retrieved October 20 2013 App Gallery Metropolitan Transportation Authority Archived from the original on May 4 2013 Retrieved October 18 2017 Flegenheimer Matt December 28 2012 Some Subway Arrival Times Are Now Just an Apple Device Away City Room The New York Times Retrieved October 18 2017 MTA Press Release MTA Headquarters MTA Releases Real Time Subway Arrival Times www mta info Archived from the original on June 5 2022 Retrieved February 14 2016 MTA Press Release NYC Transit MTA Adds Real Time Arrival Estimates on L Line To Subway Time App Website and Open Data Portal www mta info Wolfe Jonathan August 7 2017 New York Today New Subway Clocks The New York Times Retrieved September 11 2017 Romero Katherine Namako Tom August 12 2009 34th St bus countdown clocks ticking New York Post Archived from the original on August 18 2009 Retrieved November 8 2015 Grynbaum Michael M August 11 2009 Miracle on 34th Street Knowing Bus Arrival Times The New York Times Retrieved November 10 2015 a b MTA NYC Transit Bus Arrival Info Here Now on 34th Street Crosstown Metropolitan Transportation Authority January 14 2013 Retrieved March 11 2016 Bus Company Committee Meeting January 2010 PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority January 2010 Archived from the original PDF on December 18 2010 Retrieved March 9 2016 New York City Transit History and Chronology Metropolitan Transportation Authority Archived from the original on January 8 2014 Retrieved March 12 2007 Magee Kelly October 15 2010 Bus here yet Check your phone New York Post Retrieved November 9 2015 a b MTA Bus Time to Debut Sunday on the M34 M34A SBS Crosstown Metropolitan Transportation Authority April 6 2012 Archived from the original on April 10 2012 Retrieved November 9 2015 a b Introducing MTA Bus Time YouTube Metropolitan Transportation Authority January 11 2012 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved November 8 2015 a b Sedon Michael January 11 2012 New service will tell Staten Island commuters where their bus is Staten Island Advance Staten Island New York Retrieved November 9 2015 MTA BusTime Offers Real Time Bus Location Information for B63 Customers Information Available Online by Text Message and on Your Smartphone MTA BusTime Coming to Staten Island Next PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority February 1 2011 Retrieved November 9 2015 Barone Vincent December 17 2014 Staten Island to receive additional electronic real time bus signage Staten Island Advance Staten Island New York Retrieved November 8 2015 MTA Bus Time Implementation amp New Applications PDF apta com American Public Transportation Association Metropolitan Transportation Authority Archived from the original PDF on November 9 2015 Retrieved November 9 2015 MTA Real Time Bus Tracking Arriving in Brooklyn and Queens in March Metropolitan Transportation Authority February 24 2014 Retrieved November 9 2015 Introducing The Weekender MTA info YouTube September 30 2011 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved October 1 2011 The Weekender MTA info Archived from the original on April 4 2014 Retrieved October 12 2013 Grynbaum Michael M September 15 2011 Aid for Baffled Weekend Subway Riders The New York Times Retrieved September 30 2011 Introducing The Weekender MTA info September 16 2011 Retrieved September 18 2011 MTA Launches Interactive Online Map Ahead Of Difficult Weekend For Subways NY1 September 16 2011 Retrieved September 18 2011 permanent dead link MTA Releases Weekender Smartphone App NY1 June 11 2012 Archived from the original on June 16 2012 Retrieved June 13 2012 Barone Vincent October 17 2017 MTA set to debut comprehensive app in 2018 Sources am New York Retrieved October 18 2017 Barone Vincent April 11 2018 New MTA app to offer real time commuting info am New York Retrieved July 2 2018 Don t Hate Her She s Just the Subway Messenger The New York Times July 1 2018 Retrieved July 2 2018 Rivoli Dan July 2 2018 MTA unveils new travel app for public testing nydailynews com Retrieved July 3 2018 Berger Paul July 2 2018 MTA Launches New App for Riders to Plan Transit in Real Time The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved July 3 2018 Goldbaum Christina October 28 2020 Finally a Subway Map With Real Time Train Locations and Delays The New York Times Retrieved October 21 2020 a b Aniv Oren Barrera Edward Wilcox Beagen April 13 2003 N Y C TOKEN 1953 2003 New York Daily News Retrieved February 13 2016 a b Markowitz Michael April 28 2003 NYC Subway Token 1953 2003 Gotham Gazette New York Archived from the original on April 27 2007 Retrieved April 25 2010 Faison Seth June 2 1993 3 000 Subway Riders Cards in Hand Test New Fare System The New York Times Retrieved April 25 2010 About NYC Transit History October 19 2002 Retrieved September 18 2016 MTA eTix Ticketing App Available on LIRR amp Metro North Retrieved October 23 2016 Rivoli Dan October 23 2017 MTA approves plan to scrap MetroCards for tap payment system NY Daily News Retrieved October 24 2017 a b Barron James October 23 2017 New York to Replace MetroCard With Modern Way to Pay Transit Fares The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 24 2017 Say hello to tap and go with OMNY MTA Retrieved February 24 2019 Drum Major Institute for Public Policy 2010 Solving the MTA s Budget Crisis and Reinvesting in Mass Transit A Five Step Platform for the Next Governor of New York State Retrieved from Solving the MTA s Budget Crisis and Reinvesting in Mass Transit A Five Step Platform for the Next Governor of New York State Archived from the original on April 30 2011 Retrieved April 13 2011 Metropolitan Transportation Authority July 2010 MTA 2011 Preliminary Budget July Financial Plan 2011 2014 Retrieved from 1 Smerd Jeremy June 23 2010 Another Tax Shortfall Hits the MTA s Budget Crain s New York Business Retrieved from 2 Gupta Arun and Valdes Danny June 5 2009 Why the MTA is Broken The Indypendent Retrieved from 3 Ley Ana July 19 2023 Price of N Y C Subway Ride Will Go Up for the First Time in Years The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 10 2024 Simko Bednarski Evan July 19 2023 NYC bus subway fare to 2 90 MTA also boosts train fares tolls New York Daily News Retrieved January 10 2024 MTA approves massive service cuts NYPOST com March 24 2010 Retrieved on July 26 2013 Mooney Jake July 26 2010 MTA Cuts Mean Bigger Crowds More Problems City Limits News Retrieved from 4 Subway and Staten Island Railway Service Reductions mta info Retrieved April 15 2014 Bus Service Reductions mta info Retrieved April 15 2014 MTA news 2013 Ridership Reaches 65 Year High mta info permanent dead link Wells Nicholas August 12 2010 MTA Budget Deficit Not Riders Fault Westview News Retrieved from MTA Budget Deficit Not Riders Fault Archived from the original on September 2 2011 Retrieved April 13 2011 a b c MTA Board Votes to Ban Political Ads DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on May 8 2015 Benjamin Mueller February 25 2015 M T A Chief Tries to Ease Alarm on Budget Gap but Warns of Risks to Projects The New York Times Retrieved May 9 2015 Fitzsimmons Emma Burns Alexander October 10 2015 New York City and State Reach Agreement on M T A Capital Plan The New York Times Retrieved January 9 2016 Harshbarger Rebecca October 29 2015 MTA approves 29 billion capital plan largest in history cuts 1 billion from Second Avenue Subway amNewYork com am New York Retrieved January 9 2016 Krudy Edward January 8 2016 New York s MTA to renovate subway stations equip them with Wi Fi reuters com Reuters Retrieved January 9 2016 Gormley Michael Cuomo plans Wi Fi in subways security cameras on NYC buses newsday com Newsday Retrieved January 9 2016 Goldbaum Christina March 17 2020 M T A Citing Huge Drop in Riders Seeks 4 Billion Virus Bailout The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 20 2020 Goldbaum Christina April 30 2020 N Y C s Subway a 24 7 Mainstay Will Close for Overnight Disinfection The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2020 Goldbaum Christina June 10 2020 Inside the Newly Spotless Subway I ve Never Seen It Like This The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved June 16 2020 How We re Stepping Up Our Cleaning Procedures During the Coronavirus Pandemic MTA Archived from the original on June 11 2020 Berger Paul June 22 2020 New York Subway System May Implement Temperature Checks Robot Cleaners Wall Street Journal via www wsj com Campbell Jon February 1 2023 NY Gov Hochul s 227B budget plan Money for asylum seekers schools MTA and more Gothamist Retrieved February 1 2023 a b c Rosenthal Brian M Fitzsimmons Emma G LaForgia Michael November 18 2017 How Politics and Bad Decisions Starved New York s Subways The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 18 2017 Fitzsimmons Emma G LaForgia Michael December 20 2017 How Cuts in Basic Subway Upkeep Can Make Your Commute Miserable The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 20 2017 Rosenthal Brian M December 28 2017 The Most Expensive Mile of Subway Track on Earth The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 29 2017 Rosenthal Brian M March 28 2018 Why Does Subway Construction Cost So Much Congress Wants to Find Out The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 29 2018 Donohue Pete March 28 2012 MTA exec Mario Guerra hit on ethics over seeking job with subway car maker NY Daily News Retrieved July 23 2023 Former MTA Supervisor Pleads Guilty To Obstructing Investigation Into Bid Rigging And Fraud US Attorney s Office Southern District of New York March 11 2020 Retrieved July 23 2023 Meyer David October 3 2022 Veteran MTA exec fired for handing out jobs to family 2 days before retirement New York Post Retrieved July 23 2023 Furfaro Danielle March 19 2018 Top MTA official says agency is fine with corrupt contractors New York Post Retrieved July 23 2023 Financial Outlook for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority PDF Office of the New York State Comptroller Zane J Peder June 27 1992 In Surprise M T A Bans All Tobacco Advertising The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 13 2018 Howe Marvine June 17 1992 M T A Panel Backs Cut in Cigarette Ads The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 11 2018 a b Controversial Defeat Jihad ad to appear in NYC subways CNN September 19 2012 Retrieved October 1 2014 Flegenheimer Matt September 18 2012 Ad Urging Defeat of Jihad to Appear in New York Subway The New York Times a b Ted Mann July 20 2012 Court Rejects MTA s Ban Against Demeaning Transit Ads WSJ Retrieved October 1 2014 a b Weiser Benjamin July 20 2012 M T A Violated Rights of Pro Israel Group Judge Says The New York Times a b c d Judge orders NY transit agency to run Killing Jews ad Reuters April 21 2015 Michael E Miller April 22 2015 Killing Jews is Worship posters will soon appear on NYC subways and buses Washington Post Retrieved April 22 2015 a b Anti Hamas Group Renews Bid to Display Rejected Ads New York Law Journal Emma G Fitzsimmons April 29 2015 M T A Board Votes to Ban Political Ads on Subways and Buses The New York Times Retrieved May 2 2015 After Cries of Sexism M T A Says Sex Toy Ads are O K The New York Times May 17 2018 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 28 2018 Are these ads too hot for the MTA It reverses itself after PIX11 s report WPIX 11 New York May 17 2018 Retrieved May 28 2018 Fitzsimmons Emma G June 29 2017 Cuomo Declares a State of Emergency for New York City Subways The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 25 2017 They Vowed to Fix the Subway a Year Ago On Time Rates Are Still Terrible The New York Times July 23 2018 Retrieved November 3 2018 a b Wang Vivian November 27 2017 Bus Service Is in Crisis City Comptroller s Report Says The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 10 2018 a b Stringer Scott M November 2017 The Other Transit Crisis How to Improve the NYC Bus System PDF Office of the New York City Comptroller Scott M Stringer Retrieved March 9 2018 a b c Elliott Stuart March 16 2007 Do You Know Where Your Slogan Is The New York Times Retrieved August 16 2016 a b Smerd Jeremy November 4 2005 MTA Moves To Trademark See Something Say Something The New York Sun Retrieved August 16 2016 a b Karni Annie July 18 2007 The MTA Has a Message for Television Watchers The New York Sun Retrieved August 16 2016 a b See something say something drive begins in NYC USATODAY com July 1 2010 Retrieved August 16 2016 Adcox Ken August 4 2014 See Something Say Something A Smart Practice for Homeland Security Medium Retrieved August 16 2016 Molotch Harvey McClain Noah 2014 Below the Subway Taking Care Day In and Day Out Against Security How We Go Wrong at Airports Subways and Other Sites of Ambiguous Danger Princeton University Press ISBN 9781283571456 McClain Harvey Molotch and Noah November 22 2012 See something does nothing nydailynews com Retrieved January 5 2021 Gunn Dwyer September 21 2012 Does See Something Say Something Do Nothing NYMag com New York Magazine Retrieved August 16 2016 a b Rivoli Dan March 21 2016 MTA ad campaign to show real New Yorkers who say something NY Daily News Retrieved August 16 2016 a b c Altamirano Angy March 21 2016 MTA re launches public safety campaign with real stories from New Yorkers Metro Retrieved August 16 2016 Sulzberger A G June 17 2009 Please Give the Disabled Your Seat Or Else City Room The New York Times Company Retrieved May 16 2017 MTA targets manspreading in new NYC campaign USA TODAY December 23 2014 Retrieved May 16 2017 a b Kirby Jen December 22 2014 Here Are the New MTA Ads Targeting Manspreaders Subway Eaters and More Daily Intelligencer New York Magazine Retrieved May 16 2017 Fitzsimmons Emma G December 20 2014 Manspreading on New York Subways Is Target of New M T A Campaign The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 16 2017 a b Fitzsimmons Emma G May 14 2017 If a Pregnant Straphanger s Bump Isn t Obvious Maybe the Button Will Be The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 16 2017 MTA Hands Out Baby on Board Buttons to Pregnant Riders NBC New York Retrieved May 16 2017 MTA unveils Hate Has No Place in Our Transportation System campaign News 12 The Bronx January 27 2020 Retrieved February 22 2020 MTA in ad campaign says hate has no place on its rail lines Newsday Retrieved February 22 2020 New York City Transit and Bus Committee Meeting February 2020 mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority February 24 2020 p 91 Retrieved June 23 2019 Lewis Caroline May 12 2021 New Yorkers And Tourists Flock To Convenient Subway Vaccine Hubs On Opening Day Gothamist Retrieved May 13 2021 MTA Extends Vaccine Pilot Program Through May 29th At Penn Station amp Grand Central Terminal Gothamist May 22 2021 Retrieved June 14 2021 MTA Extends Johnson amp Johnson Vaccine Program at Grand Central Penn Station NBC New York May 22 2021 Retrieved June 14 2021 Rivoli Dan May 27 2021 MTA vaccine sites convenient for commuters and tourists Spectrum News NY1 New York City Retrieved June 14 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metropolitan Transportation Authority Official links Official website Metropolitan Transportation Authority s channel on YouTubeOther links Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the MTA NYPIRG Straphangers Campaign a transit rider s advocacy group Metropolitan Transportation Authority in the New York Codes Rules and Regulations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metropolitan Transportation Authority amp oldid 1194859389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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