Feds greenlight NY’s congestion plan as Republicans pledge full court press
3 min readThe Federal Highway Administration last week handed final formal approval to New York’s resurrected congestion pricing program to begin tolling drivers starting Jan. 5.
But the battle over the nation’s first central business district toll program may not be over as President-elect Donald Trump and Republicans prepare to take over next year and Democratic opponents, like New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, pursue court challenges.
The FHWA sent a
Both Republican and Democratic opponents have promised a full court press to torpedo the toll. President-elect Donald Trump, in a May post on Truth Social, vowed to “TERMINATE Congestion Pricing in my FIRST WEEK back in Office!!” In mid-November, after Hochul revived the program, Trump reiterated his opposition but did not repeat his pledge to kill it.
A hearing for four separate federal lawsuits seeking to block implementation, including one from the state of New Jersey requesting a full environmental impact statement, is set for Dec. 20.
“We’re not asking for the moon,” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said Nov. 22 during an interview on Bloomberg television. “We’ve asked the federal judge … that he force the federal administration to do an environmental impact study and we’ll live with the results of that.”
A group of five New York Republican lawmakers on Nov. 12 sent a
The group also sent a letter to Congressional leaders asking them to pass anti-congestion pricing legislation before the end of the year. In 2023, New York Republican Rep. Mike Lawler and New Jersey Democratic Rep. Josh Gottheimer
House Transportation & Infrastructure Chair Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo., who is
“President-elect Trump has made it clear that he does not support this congestion pricing scheme, and the rush to institute it before he can take office is a blatantly political move,” Graves said in a statement. “Americans across the country, from New York and New Jersey, to Missouri and every other state, are feeling the pain of higher costs, and the results from the recent election show that they are ready for relief.”