• Dogiedog64
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    1337 hours ago

    Outstanding move on NYC’s part.

    • lazynooblet
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      406 hours ago

      Prior to this going live there was a lot of talk about how congestion will simply move from one place to another. I don’t know new york so can’t name places but it was regarding commuters using a street or bridge that is now under congestion charge so they will flow an alternative route through roads that aren’t designed for the additional traffic.

      Is that now the case?

      • @nandeEbisu
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        42 hours ago

        The other location would be the Subways and buses in this case. I went home at 5 yesterday, right in the heart of rush hour, and it seemed like a normally packed subway not an especially congested one.

      • @disguy_ovahea
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        5 hours ago

        Some people may be inclined to go up and over Central Park to get to the other side without paying the $9. That likely only affects uptown residents. I can’t imagine anyone driving around the park from midtown to avoid the fee.

        The only legitimate concerns I’ve read are from contractors with tools and small businesses who deliver. They should be offered exceptions if walking or mass transit are unrealistic options. You’re not riding the subway with acetylene tanks or delivering fresh meat on Metro North. Other than that, I love it.

        • @Hawke
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          103 hours ago

          They should be offered exceptions if walking or mass transit are unrealistic options.

          No they shouldn’t. That’s how you let rich people skirt the law.

          Tradespeople should just treat it like any other business expense. Eat it or raise your rates a little bit.

          • @Railing5132
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            2 hours ago

            eat it

            They never do

            a little bit

            It’s never a little, and we all bitch about inflation.

            There’s never a simple solution.

        • @nandeEbisu
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          42 hours ago

          Construction firms make a ton of money in NYC, they can handle it, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone delivering food from a car in the city, they all use bikes.

          • @disguy_ovahea
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            229 minutes ago

            Commercial deliveries, not consumer. Every pizza joint needs flour, cheese, and tomatoes.

            • @nandeEbisu
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              222 minutes ago

              We’ll see how it plays out. I could see less traffic meaning you can make more deliveries in a day, I figure one extra commercial delivery more than makes up for $10 extra.

              • @disguy_ovahea
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                119 minutes ago

                Possibly. It may disproportionately impact eateries with more diverse menus or foods with shorter shelf life. Time will tell.

                • @nandeEbisu
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                  111 minutes ago

                  Eh, it’s NYC food is already super diverse. There’s fairly established infrastructure for niche food products. If that truck needs a single restaurant to eat that $10, they were probably already paying an arm and a leg for that delivery.

        • @[email protected]
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          155 hours ago

          The other concern I’ve heard, and has not been brought up in this thread yet, is the lobbying influence from rideshare companies to pass the congestion laws.

          It’s arguable that ride share vehicles are a better traffic density alternative to single rider personal vehicles, but there are pretty clear downsides to consider as well.

          Source:

          https://nypost.com/2025/01/04/us-news/uber-lyft-spent-millions-pushing-for-nyc-congestion-pricing-and-stand-to-make-killing/

          • @[email protected]
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            244 hours ago

            You can be self interested and still accidentally be on the right side of an issue. It doesn’t spark joy, but I’m not going to throw the baby out with the bathwater on this. It’s still a win, imo.

        • Billiam
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          4 hours ago

          The only legitimate concerns I’ve read are from contractors with tools and small businesses who deliver.

          Maybe, but anecdotally the lighter traffic allows contractors to accomplish more jobs per day because they spend less time in traffic, which more than offsets the congestion charge.

          Going from three hours per day in traffic down to even just two means there’s an extra hour a contractor has available to make money each day.

        • Justin
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          85 hours ago

          sure, but you can also deliver those with lighter vehicles that don’t cause traffic. Congestion is congestion.

          • @lewdian69
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            145 hours ago

            I’m confused. How will I deliver 15 pounds of Trump skirt Steaks if I can’t drive my lifted Ram 3500 Heavy Duty with the high-output Cummins Turbo Diesel engine in downtown Manhattan?

        • @blazeknave
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          34 hours ago

          I’ve paid more just to go through the park lol

      • [email protected]
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        145 hours ago

        Of all the things on Reddit, I miss remindmebot the most. They tried to kill it numerous times but it survived like a roach in radiation. On lemmy, I find an interesting question and have to set a timer for myself. This is the most first-world of problems, but I’m still moderately upset every time

      • Dogiedog64
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        5 hours ago

        Unsure, I don’t live in NYC. However, I can say that this will encourage many more people to take transit, which is good. Plus, I don’t doubt that the tolled routes will still see active use by millions as they’re still the fastest way to and from work.