Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
Andrew Cuomo

36 Assembly Members to Cuomo: Stop Playing Games and Fund the MTA

3:32 PM EST on February 23, 2016

    Andrew Cuomo wants New Yorkers to think he's taken care of the multi-billion dollar funding shortfall for the MTA capital program, even though his new budget allocates no new funds for the MTA. Well, 36 members of the Assembly aren't buying it.

    In a letter to Cuomo, Brooklyn Assembly Member Jim Brennan called on the governor to commit $1.825 billion annually over the next four years to the MTA. This would cover the $7.3 billion gap that remains in the capital program, the five-year package of critical maintenance projects and upgrades for the region's transit system. Another 35 members of the Assembly have signed on to the letter.

    In October, Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio reached an agreement in which the city would contribute $2.5 billion and the state $8.3 billion to the capital plan. The state had already allocated $1 billion of its share in previous budgets, but Cuomo’s proposed FY 2017 budget does not allocate any additional funding. Instead, it says the state will follow-through on its commitment to the capital plan only when the MTA has exhausted all other sources of funding, including loans.

    Transit advocates and budget watchdogs pointed out that Cuomo was not making a real commitment, and that his stalling tactics could lead to excessive borrowing or a slowdown of necessary work on the capital program.

    “Funding the Capital Plan immediately would also eliminate the budget provision requiring the MTA to exhaust all other available money before State funding becomes available, decreasing the uncertainties that have led to capital projects falling behind schedule and going over budget,” Brennan's letter says.

    In response, Cuomo spokesperson Beth DeFalco repeated the party line to the Daily News. “There is no additional new appropriation in the budget because the MTA does not need it now," she said. "However, there is very clear and direct legislation in the governor's budget that makes the commitment to fund the Capital Program a matter of law -- and provides in iron-clad language that the state funds will be available whenever the MTA needs it."

    But there's nothing very "iron-clad" about the current arrangement, since it allows Cuomo to avoid dedicating funds to the current MTA capital plan until he is no longer in office.

    “The Governor is trying to deploy a bait-and-switch tactic of promising riders billions, then quietly putting in zero in the actual budget," said Riders Alliance Executive Director John Raskin. "This letter is the Assembly saying: let's keep the promise that was made to transit riders."

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from Streetsblog Empire State

    Friday Headlines: 205 Million Reasons To Be Happy

    Stopping New York's transportation goals is harder than it looks. Plus more news.

    February 13, 2026

    Talking Headways Podcast: Concrete Doesn’t Spend Money, People Do

    Dr. Lawrence Frank shows how the decisions we make about the built environment are a symbol of why the world is so f'd up. A very special edition of Talking Headways.

    February 12, 2026

    NYC Mayor Mamdani Pitches Free Buses (Cheap!) Plus Other Transportation Needs on ‘Tin Cup’ Day

    Mamdani gave his former colleagues in state government a glimpse of his thinking on transportation and city operations, and hopes they can send more cash his city's way.

    February 12, 2026

    Thursday Headlines: Is Your Tin Cup Full Edition

    Tin Cup day for many mayors is basically like returning to your alma mater for alumni weekend, except you're asking them for money. And more news.

    February 12, 2026

    ‘Everyone’s At Fault’: NYC Government Pointing Fingers Over Lowering Speed Limits

    The mayor and the City Council are using the "art of deflection" to keep the status quo instead of lowering the speed limit to a safer 20 miles per hour.

    February 12, 2026

    More Troubles for Fly E-Bike: Feds Order Costly Moped Recall

    Federal officials have ordered Fly E-Bike to recall all Fly 10 mopeds, the latest troubles for the micromobility company.

    February 11, 2026
    See all posts