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Congestion Mitigation Strategies: Alternatives to the City’s plan New York City Traffic Congestion Mitigation Commission December 10, 2007
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Overview of presentation and research
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* Includes public employees using placards Source: 2007 survey of 1,600 drivers in the Manhattan CBD Parking: Increase the cost of parking in the CBD The current market for parking in the CBD:
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Parking: Policy options studied Three options with VMT impact: Eliminating resident exemption for parking tax or raise parking tax Increase rates for metered on-street parking Introduce overnight on-street parking fee Reduce use of parking placards by public employees Three options have essentially no VMT impact: Parking “freeze” Tax off-street parking as income Parking “cash-out”
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Parking: Eliminate Manhattan resident parking tax exemption Option: Charge Manhattan residents the same parking tax (18⅜%) as other parkers. Currently residents receive an exemption that reduces their parking tax to 10⅜%. Applies to: Manhattan residents that currently receive exemption VMT Impact 0.05% reduction Revenue: $22 million
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Parking: Raise the parking tax Option: Raise parking tax to 28⅜% or 38⅜% for all parkers Applies to: All parkers who pay to park off-street VMT Impact 0.2% (if tax rises to 28⅜%) 0.3% (if tax rises to 38⅜%) Parking garage operators might absorb the cost of the tax, resulting in smaller VMT reduction Revenue: $71 million (28⅜%) or $120 million (38⅜%)
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Parking: Raise the parking tax Recap:
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Parking: Increase rates for on-street parking Option: Increase the price of all metered parking spaces in the CBD. Prices could be determined by time of day or location. Applies to: on-street, metered parking in the CBD VMT Impact 0.5% VMT reduction Revenue: $17 million
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Parking: Introduce overnight on-street parking fee Option: Implement a $2 fee for overnight on-street parking in the CBD during the week. Applies to: on-street, metered and unmetered parking in the CBD VMT Impact 0.4% VMT reduction (most of this reduction would take place at night) Revenue: $7 million
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Parking: Reduce use of parking placards by public employees Option: Remove free on-street parking for government employees currently commuting to Manhattan jobs Applies to: on-street parking for government employees with placards VMT Impact 0.10% VMT reduction for 3,000 placards 0.17% VMT reduction for 5,000 placards 0.33% VMT reduction for 10,000 placards Revenue: $0
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Taxi: Additional taxi stands to reduce cruising Option: Require that passengers be picked up at designated taxi stands Applies to: all medallion (yellow) taxis VMT impact VMT may rise or fall depending on how far taxis travel back to a taxi stand after discharging a passenger, so VMT cannot be estimated reliably Revenue: $0
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Option: Apply $1 or $2 fare surcharges for taxi and for-hire-vehicle travel within Manhattan south of 86th Street Applies to: Medallion taxis, black cars, neighborhood car services and limousines VMT impact: $1 Surcharge: 0.3% reduction $2 Surcharge: 0.6% reduction Revenue: $1 surcharge: $70 million $2 surcharge: $140 million Taxi: Apply surcharge to taxi and livery fares
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Option: Prohibits vehicles from entering based on license plate Applies to: all passenger vehicles VMT impact: 3.1 % reduction (restriction applied 1 in 10 days) 6.2 % reduction (restriction applied 1 in 5 days) Revenue: $0. Will reduce MTA and PA toll revenues that subsidize transit Option: Prohibits vehicles from entering based on license plate Applies to: all passenger vehicles VMT impact: 3.1 % reduction (restriction applied 1 in 10 days) 6.2 % reduction (restriction applied 1 in 5 days) Revenue: $0. Will reduce MTA and PA toll revenues that subsidize transit License Plate Rationing
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Required Carpooling Option: Prohibit single-occupant vehicles (SOVs) from entering Manhattan south of 60th Street weekdays, 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Applies to: SOVs. Does not apply to taxis, commercial vehicles, and motorcycles VMT Impact: Given that SOVs comprise 59% of vehicles entering CBD, expect VMT reduction, though magnitude is unclear Revenue: $0. Will reduce MTA and PA toll revenues that subsidize transit Option: Prohibit single-occupant vehicles (SOVs) from entering Manhattan south of 60th Street weekdays, 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Applies to: SOVs. Does not apply to taxis, commercial vehicles, and motorcycles VMT Impact: Given that SOVs comprise 59% of vehicles entering CBD, expect VMT reduction, though magnitude is unclear Revenue: $0. Will reduce MTA and PA toll revenues that subsidize transit
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Creation of High-Occupancy Toll (“HOT”) lanes Option: Create HOT lanes for passenger cars on major crossings into Manhattan and highways leading to Manhattan CBD Applies to: all vehicles VMT impact: 0%, unless a substantial number of general travel lanes are reallocated to buses, ridesharing vehicles and/or goods movement Revenue: Uncertain Option: Create HOT lanes for passenger cars on major crossings into Manhattan and highways leading to Manhattan CBD Applies to: all vehicles VMT impact: 0%, unless a substantial number of general travel lanes are reallocated to buses, ridesharing vehicles and/or goods movement Revenue: Uncertain
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