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

Cuomo’s Long Island Growth Plan: More Trains and More Traffic

4:05 PM EST on January 5, 2016

    This morning, Governor Cuomo announced plans to move forward with the Long Island Railroad’s project for a third track on the main line between Floral Park and Hicksville in Nassau County. At the same time, Cuomo wants to study a car tunnel linking Long Island to either the Bronx, Westchester, or Connecticut.

    The governor is proposing the construction of a third track along this 9.8 mile stretch of the Long Island Railroad. Image: Long Island Index
    Cuomo wants to move forward with a third track to increase capacity along this 9.8-mile stretch of the Long Island Railroad. Image: Long Island Index
    The governor is proposing the construction of a third track along this 9.8 mile stretch of the Long Island Railroad. Image: Long Island Index

    The LIRR project will lay 9.8 miles of track, primarily in the existing right of way, increasing capacity and hopefully spurring walkable development along one of the railroad’s busiest corridors. Expanding the main line will help existing commuters and wring more value out of the region's most expensive mega-project, the East Side Access tunnel connecting LIRR to Grand Central.

    Currently, nearly two-fifths of LIRR riders use the main line's two tracks. With the Ronkonkoma, Port Jefferson, Montauk, and Oyster Bay branches all converging on the main line, service in the peak direction runs on both tracks during rush hours, severely constraining travel in the other direction. Small hiccups in operations often lead to major delays. With the additional track, ridership is expected to increase 40 percent, Cuomo said.

    Regional transportation advocates have been calling for a third track for years. A 2014 study by the Long Island Index estimated that, in the 10 years following its completion, the project will bring 14,000 jobs, 35,000 residents, and $103 million in annual property tax revenue to the region.

    “This is a project that is critical for Long Island,” said Tri-State Transportation Campaign Executive Director Veronica Vanterpool. “It’s critical if Long Island wants to address their congestion issues. It’s critical if Long Island wants to be a community that sheds its bedroom community status.”

    Speaking to the Long Island Association, a local business group, Cuomo said his proposal would avoid the pitfalls that previous third track plans have encountered. Cobbling together right-of-way for the new proposal will only affect 30 commercial properties and 20 residences, compared to about 200 businesses and residences combined for the previous iteration. The average residential acquisition will be just five square feet. It's not yet clear how these changes will affect the project cost, which was last estimated at $1.5 billion.

    Vanterpool lauded the governor’s proposal. “It’s a project that has to happen," she said. "The infrastructure in that area has not been updated since 1844, when there were only 50,000 people on Long Island.” Today, nearly 2.7 million people live in Nassau and Suffolk counties combined.

    Vanterpool said the new proposal looks like an attempt to address the not-in-my-backyard opposition that led to the removal of the project from the MTA’s capital plan in 2008. That proposal was defeated by a small but vocal group of people who own property by the right of way.

    The region is more open to transit-oriented growth than it was the last time around, said Eric Alexander of Vision Long Island. In Nassau and Suffolk over the last nine years, 11,000 units of housing have been approved near transit and another 20,000 are moving forward, according to Alexander. Still, he said, "It can’t just be a group of people from outside the community saying, ‘Trust me it’s good for you.' I think that’s where past proposals have failed.”

    Also at this morning’s event, Cuomo announced a $5 million study exploring the possibility of a new tunnel connecting the region with Westchester, Connecticut, or the Bronx, as well as $50 million for parking near the Ronkonkoma LIRR station.

    Vanterpool said she did not see a need for the tunnel study. "I don’t think we need another study right now. Put that money towards projects that need the money right now," she told Streetsblog. "We have so many existing shovel-in-the-ground projects that don’t have money where $5 million would go a long way."

    The Long Island proposals are a prelude to what Cuomo is calling "the most ambitious transportation development plan in modern history," reports Politico. Presumably, the governor was referring to the release of more details about how he plans to fund both the MTA capital program and upstate road spending. So far, the governor's approach to these issues has been anything but ambitious.

    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