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Gov. Hochul boosts subway safety funding by $77 million.
Summary
Gov. Kathy Hochul announced a $77 million increase in subway safety funding and backed a pilot to require repeat speed camera violators to install Intelligent Speed Assistance systems.
Content
Gov. Kathy Hochul announced several transit and traffic initiatives during her State of the State speech. She said the state would increase subway safety funding by $77 million. The governor also endorsed a pilot to require drivers with multiple speed camera violations to install Intelligent Speed Assistance systems. Additional proposals included extending the Second Avenue Subway and funding upgrades to Jamaica Station.
Key details:
- $77 million would be used to maintain heightened police patrols in the subway, install platform barriers at 85 additional stations, and expand SCOUT, a program that pairs mental health teams with police to assist people in crisis.
- The proposed pilot would have New York City require repeat speed camera violators to install Intelligent Speed Assistance technology that helps prevent driving above posted limits.
- State funding was pledged for design and preliminary engineering to extend the Second Avenue Subway west along 125th Street, adding stations at Lenox Avenue, St. Nicholas Avenue and Broadway, and a state study said continuing tunneling could save time and money.
- The governor committed $50 million to modernize Jamaica Station, a major hub used by roughly 200,000 passengers and more than 1,000 trains on a typical weekday, which has not had a major upgrade in 23 years according to the governor's office.
- Hochul defended the congestion pricing plan for lower Manhattan and criticized efforts to cancel it.
Summary:
The announcements allocate funding and planning resources aimed at subway safety, station improvements, and new traffic enforcement measures. They outline policy directions and initial funding commitments but do not specify full implementation timelines or approvals. Undetermined at this time.
