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So where exactly is the congestion relief zone? How does the MTA ensure you're only charged once, and what about driving on the FDR? Here are the answers to the top congestion pricing questions ...
Manhattan's Congestion Relief Zone starts at 60th Street and heads south to include the Lincoln, Holland and Hugh L. Carey tunnels on the Hudson River side, and the Queensboro Bridge, Queens ...
Those eligible will receive a 50% discount on the congestion relief zone peak toll after the first 10 trips in a calendar month. Additionally, residents of the Congestion Relief Zone who New York ...
But on Jan. 5, Manhattan was magically split in two by an arbitrary border separating us from the area below 60th Street, the “Congestion Relief Zone” — a bucolic utopia where car fumes will ...
And while unlimited monthly passes aren't free, $132 a month sure is a heck of a lot cheaper than owning and parking a car in the congestion relief zone. Now, it's entirely possible you just don't ...
The author discusses New York City's new congestion pricing toll. "The biggest transportation controversy in New York now is ...
“It makes sense that fewer vehicles, less gridlock and calmer traffic flow in the Congestion Relief Zone would lead to a decrease in crashes and injuries,” MTA spokesperson John McCarthy said.
In addition to some trips to and from Staten Island being shorter, express bus speeds have been trending faster since the ...
The transportation secretary and other Republicans hit a speed bump in their efforts to stop New York from charging drivers ...
New York City’s first-in-the-nation congestion pricing plan took effect Sunday, charging drivers to enter parts of Manhattan up to $9 to enter the busiest part of the Big Apple during peak hours.