Here are some reasons to get people to shift from cars to transit:
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Saturday, June 8, 2019
Transit should be controlled by transit riders
I was listening to City Council Speaker Corey Johnson on Ben Kabak's new podcast, promoting his proposal to transfer control of the New York City subways from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which is controlled by the Governor, to a new board controlled by the Mayor (a post that Johnson plans to run for in 2021). Johnson's thoughtfulness and his desire for real solutions were refreshing in our political scene, and I appreciated his request for feedback on his proposal. And I have some!
In particular I was struck by Johnson's claim that a board that represents the diversity of the transit riding public would do a better job of serving that public. Now, don't get me wrong: I'm definitely not going to repeat the bullshit that a board needs people with technical or business expertise; that's what staff is for. The subways and buses should be managed in a way that benefits their riders, and riders deserve a say in how they're managed.
The thing is that the system doesn't just serve riders; it serves everyone who lives and works anywhere in the whole metro area. A bank executive who is driven to work isn't going to perform well if their employees can't get in on the train. An antiques merchant in Great Barrington is going to sell less if the weekend visitors from the city have less disposable income. Taxpayers need to know that our money is being spent well. Bondholders won't lend the MTA money unless they can make sure it won't default.
I wouldn't want the Kosciuszko or Tappan Zee bridge replacement projects to be managed by and for the exclusive benefit of drivers. In fact, the problem with these projects is that they actually are being managed by and for drivers. And you know, the problem with the MTA is that it is also being managed largely for drivers.
Johnson is right that the MTA is controlled by a group of people who don't ride transit, but he fingered the wrong group. The Governor clearly doesn't ride transit, but a lot of transit policy is not set by him, but by the State Legislature. As I've written in numerous posts, the State Assembly and Senate are almost completely dominated by drivers and people who are driven everywhere.
Under Johnson's proposal the State Legislature would have almost as much control as they do now, because under our constitution they are the only entity in the state with the power to tax. State laws also have the power to overrule city laws. Even if Johnson can persuade them to implement his plan, they can change it at any time.
To the extent the city government would have control, the City Council would have more power than this "BAT Board," because they have to pass the budget, and can pass certain laws constraining what the Mayor can do. The Council has gotten much better over just the past twelve years, thanks in part to Johnson's leadership, but as Streetsblog documented recently, they still cannot be counted on to reliably prioritize transit riders.
Today the MTA Board today is at worst a fig leaf covering the Governor's management and the Legislature's budget priorities, and at best an advisory panel. On top of that we have another panel, the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee, which is appointed by elected officials based on patronage, and elects representatives to the MTA Board who have no voting rights. Johnson's proposal does not give this "BAT Board" the power to tax, so the real power would remain with the power brokers in the State Legislature.
Having the State Legislature or the City Council control the transit system would not actually be a problem if we had a truly representative system. Even the State Legislature is dominated by representatives of districts with heavy transit ridership. Unfortunately, the system is corrupt and favors elite homeowners who drive. They also subscribe to an ideology of driving as emancipation, and make deals to favor "upstate" that ignore the sizable population of current and potential transit riders outside of New York City.
The focus some advocates place on the non-representativeness of the MTA Board, in particular on the predominance of white men, winds up distracting us from the non-representativeness of the State Legislature, where some of the loudest opposition to transit funding and fair pricing for road use comes from nonwhite and female legislators like Charles Barron, Kevin Parker, Toby Stavisky and Deborah Glick. Last week when first term Senator Jessica Ramos said not only that she doesn't have a driver's license but that "car culture is something that we need to start rethinking as a society as a whole," that statement was notable for how unusual and brave it was.
So yes, we should transfer control of New York City Transit's subways and buses back to the City government. But no, we should not create a whole new authority to run them, or a "mobility czar" to oversee buses, trains, ferries, bridges and streets. We should just make them all part of the Department of Transportation. If we need to borrow money for them, we should use the City's bonding ability.
And no, we should not create a whole new board with no real power. If people want to transfer the New York City Transit Riders Council from the MTA to the city, fine. We don't need another one.
Similarly, if for some reason the City can't borrow enough money using its own bonds, I could see us setting up a temporary authority to issue bonds. Those of you who have read The Power Broker know that the authorities that issued bonds to build projects like the Manhattan Bridge were set up to dissolve once they paid off the bonds. The genius idea that allowed Bob Moses to wield power for decades without ever winning an election was to insert a clause in the law that created the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority allowing it to issue new bonds. Removing that unjustified power from the Transit Authority is an essential step in restoring democratic control to our subway system.
The bottom line: municipal control is a good idea, but a new authority is not the way to do it. It should be done by direct executive power. Representation is a good idea, but an unelected board is not the way to do it. It should be done through our elected representatives to the City Council and State Legislature.
Whether it's NYC politicians who never ride the system, or NYS politicians who never ride the system, that are allegedly "in charge" - well I ultimately don't think it makes much of a difference. The really big problem, which I've rehashed ad nauseam here, there & everywhere - aside from the political hacks (state, county, city, etc) running the show at the top - is that of, essentially, clueless, incompetent middle management, made up, in large part, or suburbanites, many of whom even have TA cars with much coveted parking placards. Those who don't come in on the LIRR. MNR, NJT, and some of those have MTA multiple system passes, so they ride for free on everything (except NJT & PATH). If they ride the actual NYCTA system at all it is probably just in the course of their daily on-the-job chores. They would almost never ride the system at nights or on weekends, so they just don't give a $hit how bad the service actually is. If they actually did (i.e. give a $hit), they would immediately address some of the 800 lb gorillas sitting in the middle of the room, such as the onerous adjacent track flagging rules - instituted under on the watch of grade A 14K gold bonehead Harold Roberts back around 2009; the time signals that have been installed all over the damned place with no apparent rhyme or reason and that often slow the trains down to crawl; the pi$$-poor employee training which gives us clueless train operators, many of whom actually seem afraid of the trains, afraid to move the trains at more than around 20mph, regardless of the signal and or speed postings. (BTW the trains can still go around 50 mph.) The list doesn't end there - it would go on & on. Oh, and add to that, no clear chain of command, except insofar as, when the $hit hits the fan, the guy at the bottom of the heap is hung out to dry (surprise, surprise!). So the guy at the bottom, i.e. the middle management type, has no incentive to speak up and say the emperor's got no clothes on. I write this as a 37 year employee of the NYCTA, now retired, but who, as a resident of Forest Hills, rides the system regularly and is often appalled at how awful the service has become.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your thoughts, Cap, but the point is that there is a chain of command, and the middle management reports to the political appointees. The political appointees, and the politicians who support them, are responsible for this dysfunction because they have neglected to exercise their control over the system.
ReplyDeleteThe "placard class" is a real, core problem.
ReplyDeleteTake a look at the twitter account @placardabuse or the hashtag #placardcorruption.
The placard class is the people who don't give a damn about the subway riders. They also don't give a damn about anyone trying to walk down the sidewalk or across the crosswalk. They are a problem.