The tolling plan, the first of its kind in the country, started on a Sunday to work out the kinks before rush hour traffic Monday morning. It appeared to be running smoothly as drivers adjusted to the new fee.
Are there exemptions, credits or discounts?
Low-income drivers can register for a 50 percent discount after the first 10 trips in a month. During peak hours, drivers of passenger vehicles who enter Manhattan via four tunnels that already require tolls — the Lincoln, Holland, Hugh L. Carey and Queens-Midtown — will receive a credit of up to $3 against the daily congestion charge.
Excellent. But I do wish there was an exemption for disabled people on SSDI.
When you’re on 10k income per year, and have no mobility without a car, it basically means you can’t go in/out of manhattan on your own money.
Anybody living off SSDI is almost surely not driving into lower Manhattan to begin with. Parking is like $100/day there.
My understanding is that local disability rights groups favor the charge because it pays for improving access to mass transit, which is what they’re already using
I used to love taking transit as a disabled person (when it was accessible), but now my condition has worsened so bad I cannot travel without being horizontal. Which means I need to pay caregivers to take me to medical appointments by car.
Even people outside Manhattan are largely taking public transit into it.
I get that it’s almost impossible to get around if you need to pay for medical transport so you can travel in a horizontal position every time, and this does little to change that situation.
Excellent. But I do wish there was an exemption for disabled people on SSDI.
When you’re on 10k income per year, and have no mobility without a car, it basically means you can’t go in/out of manhattan on your own money.
Anybody living off SSDI is almost surely not driving into lower Manhattan to begin with. Parking is like $100/day there.
My understanding is that local disability rights groups favor the charge because it pays for improving access to mass transit, which is what they’re already using
If you live in manhattan.
I used to love taking transit as a disabled person (when it was accessible), but now my condition has worsened so bad I cannot travel without being horizontal. Which means I need to pay caregivers to take me to medical appointments by car.
Even people outside Manhattan are largely taking public transit into it.
I get that it’s almost impossible to get around if you need to pay for medical transport so you can travel in a horizontal position every time, and this does little to change that situation.