• @[email protected]
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    4 days ago
    • 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.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      74 days ago

      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

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        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.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          33 days ago

          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.

  • @reddig33
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    4 days ago

    Why on earth would you need “live updates” about this?

    “Breaking! Car drives into Manhattan and pays $9. And another. And there’s another!”

    🙄