The appeals courts unanimously allowed the MTA's various fare and toll hikes to stand, overturning two lower courts' decisions. The main points, from NY1:
- City subway and bus fares are $2
- Higher ticket prices on Metro North and the Long Island Rail Road
- Higher tolls on the MTA’s nine bridges and tunnels
- Also, the MTA can close 62 token booths
- While the MTA may not have been as forthright with its finances, the MTA did abide by the "letter of the law," technically giving riders enough notice about a fare hike (the justices wrotes "the information in the MTA's notices was neither false nor misleading")
The Straphangers, whose case was that the MTA willfully misled its passengers, will appeal, but since it was a unanimous decision, the Straphangers need special permission to appeal the ruling. Gothamist loves the Straphangers' attorney, Eric Schneiderman, who tells Newsday: "Look, we think that the appellate division was just wrong. What they're essentially saying here — if this opinion stands — is there's no obligation, unless you write it into the statute, for agencies to tell the truth." Plus, the MTA is just flat out crazy.
Randy Kennedy goes dramatic in the Times: The ruling dealt a potentially mortal blow to the summertime dreams of many New Yorkers, who had followed the case like a kind of lottery drawing over the past two months. They had hoped for two things that are rare in New York governmental bureaucracy: for officials to be caught in a lie, and for money to be refunded as a result.
Kennedy also examines the plight of non working subway phones, which should be remedied as some token booths are being closed and cellphones, our damnable lifeline, don't tend to work in the subways. But he's a tiny bit less flowery.





this is the biggest fucking farce in the world. if any private company pulled this bullshit on its shareholders, there would have been a shareholder revolt, and the entire management team would have been sacked. then, the management would probably also get harassed by the feds for fraud. what happens here? they lie to us, rip us off, and then skate through it all without a scratch. remember- these people work for us- why isn't there a movement asking the people in charge at the MTA to step down?
I'll trade an appeal of this verdict for a legally binding pledge by the MTA to actually improve services when its "alleged" financial woes reverse--because you can bet the fares aren't going to drop when the MTA is again swimming in cash, handing out kickbacks and taking part in its typical shady dealings.
Whoa whoa whoa - the MTA, getting overhauled? Maybe I'm extremely cynical, but doesn't it seem like government agencies have to be mired in bureaucracy? I don't like everything Bloomberg's doing, but his deconstructionist style would work. Too bad he's too battered in the poles to take it on.
NY is a totally different animal, but the other subway system I'm pretty familiar with, the MTR in Hong Kong, is run by a private agency and works well. Privatizing that MTA would be a crazy undertaking...maybe we need a private sector head to lead it, a la Joel Klein and the Department of Education.
I'm sorry, but anyone want to help organize a "Clean Out the MTA" campaign? It's time some heads rolled, even if what they did was "legal." Vive l'underground revolution!
i think we should start a petition- like the one that got blair hornstein kicked out of harvard!
I know this is frustrating, especially with the economy the way it is and all, but I have a hard time getting upset about it because the MTA is so damn good. After suffering for 4+ years riding San Francisco's MUNI (where there are no token booths at all and no attendants, so late at night homeless people jam up the turnstiles and block your way unless you pay them your fare, and there's no one even around to stop it) for $1 a ride, $2 for the MTA seems like a deal.
I mean, last Saturday for $2 I went all the way from the West Village to Rockaway Park and spent a lovely day at the beach. You can't beat that price! And the frequency! Within five minutes five or six 1/9 or 2/3 trains pass through 14th St. station in the morning, in just one direction!
So while it is crazy, and they shouldn't be lying, and someone should be looking out for consumers, I think we still have the best public transportation system on the planet. Even if it does cost $2/ride.