May 21, 2013
  • MTA slashes half of 2010 projects; little rider impact

    Facing a massive budgetary hole, the MTA will now slash 141 of its already-funded capital projects to save $40 million, according to agency documents released Thursday.

    Compared to the drastic subway and bus service reductions the MTA will implement come summer, the cuts to projects ranging from the purchase of equipment to the upgrade of facilities are far less painful for straphangers, transit advocates said.

    “This looks like the belt tightening we’ve all been looking for,” said Ellyn Shannon, transportation planner for the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the MTA.

    The agency analyzed all 280 projects in its 2010 budget, and eliminated or deferred anything that was “just nice-to-have,” the documents show. Officials did not remove work that would impact safety or was legally required, the documents state. A MTA spokesman did not return repeated calls for comment.

    The agency is scrambling to close a nearly $800 million hole by July, when it must put forth a new budget. In addition to reducing service, the MTA has decided to lay off workers and scale back overtime, among other measures, to bridge the budget gap.

    Agency officials said they are looking to transit unions to give some concessions. So far, union leaders have resisted demands to eliminate conductors on trains, union sources said.


    Here are some of the MTA’s proposed cuts and their savings:
    IT upgrades: $18 million
    Facility upgrades: $12 million
    Auto upgrades: $4 million
    Commuter train armrests: $3 million
    Shop equipment: $2 million
    MTA police K9 facility: $2 million

    Source: MTA

advertisement | advertise on am New York

Have a comment or news tip? We want to hear it! Find us on Twitter and Facebook.

TwitterFacebookFlicker

advertisement | advertise on am New York

Partners

Search cars