Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
MTA

MTA Service Cuts — The Tough Choice Albany Never Has to Vote On

4:05 PM EDT on March 24, 2010

Faced with a budget gap of nearly $800 million, the MTA Board voted to approve a slate of service cuts this afternoon that will affect millions of New Yorkers. The cuts are slated to start
taking effect in June. Unless elected officials intervene to close the MTA's deficit, subway and bus riders will have to contend with less frequent service, more transfers, longer walks to the
bus, and worse crowding on platforms and trains.

The vote comes as no surprise, but it's worth a short recap of how we got to this point.

Of all the recent factors that helped cause these service cuts -- the state's theft of dedicated transit revenue, the deep recession, the MTA's refusal to use stimulus money to help the agency through lean times -- the one that stands out is our state legislature's intransigence.

Twice in the last two years, Albany had the chance to secure a new funding stream for transit by putting a price on car commuting, first through congestion pricing, then through bridge tolls. Both times, they chose to keep on giving drivers a free ride. Would we be talking about these service cuts if the state legislature had enacted the full Ravitch Plan last spring? Each year, those bridge tolls could have generated hundreds of millions of dollars more for transit than Albany's stopgap solution.

The legislators who failed to properly fund our transit system must be thankful they didn't have to vote today. Other people do that for them.

For a full recap of today's MTA Board proceedings, Ben Kabak at Second Avenue Sagas has the moment-by-moment account.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Empire State

Friday Headlines: Meet You In The Lobby Edition

The governor is over lobbyists. And more news.

March 20, 2026

Thursday Headlines: A Team Effort Edition

One mustn't underestimate the Albany press, and more news.

March 19, 2026

‘How Do You Do That to People?’ Crash Victims Speak Out Against Hochul’s Car Insurance Agenda

"Her supposition that, 'There’s a lot of fraud and people are faking these injuries in order to get million-dollar payouts' is preposterous," said one crash victim.

March 19, 2026

Nassau County Police Are Enforcing an E-Bike Ban That Doesn’t Actually Exist

With no clear legal rationale for the ban, Nassau County e-bike riders are left in a tough spot.

March 18, 2026

Why Some Congresspeople Want to Go Big on Greenways

A new bill in Congress would multiply federal funding for walking and biking paths in states like New York — even as some powerful congresspeople threaten to take away what we've already got.

March 18, 2026

Wednesday Headlines: Keeping Up The Pressure Edition

Things happen during budget negotiations, and advocates and lawmakers aren't letting their foot off the gas just yet. Plus more news.

March 18, 2026
See all posts