NYC NOW - Morning Headlines: NYC Bodega Owners Demand Action on ATM Thefts, Mayor Adams Defends Record at Annual State of the City Address, Migrant Shelter at Floyd Bennett Field Closes, and Congestion Pricing Week One Recap

Episode Date: January 10, 2025

Get up and get informed! Here's all the local news you need to start your day: New York City’s bodega owners are demanding action after 49 ATM thefts in three months by a group dubbed “The Midnigh...t Smashers,” WNYC’s Phil Corso reports. Meanwhile, Mayor Eric Adams delivered his State of the City address at the Apollo Theater on Thursday, addressing re-election challenges and federal bribery allegations. Also, the city is shutting down a large migrant shelter at Floyd Bennett Field as the National Park Service plans a new chapter for the historic site, WNYC’s Liam Quigley reports. Plus, WNYC transportation reporters Stephen Nessen and Ramsey Khalifeh recap the first week of congestion pricing in their segment, “On the Way.”

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Welcome to NYC now. Your source for local news in and around New York City from WNYC. It's Friday, January 10th. Here's the morning headlines from Michael Hill. New York City's bodega owners are fed up after 49 automatic telemachine thefts in three months by a group now called the Midnight Smashers. WNIC's Phil Corso has more. Using stolen cars, the gang has been smashing into stores,
Starting point is 00:00:30 stealing ATMs and disappearing without a trace. The United Bodegas of America wants action. The association is offering a $5,000 reward for any tips that lead to arrests. Spokesperson Fernando Mateo says the attacks are tearing apart livelihoods and threatening safety. The NYPD has released surveillance video of the suspects and is urging anyone with information to call crime stoppers at 1-800-577 tips. New York City Mayor Eric Adams is facing a slew of re-election. challengers and is defending himself against federal bribery charges, but the mayor continues to
Starting point is 00:01:05 sound a defiant tone and did so during his state of the city address yesterday at the Apollo Theater. There was some who said, step down. I said, no, I'm going to step up. I'm going to step up. Adam spent most of his time talking about policies, he says, will help those living on the street or experiencing serious mental illness. He also says he's planning on adding more cleaners to city parks and opening up some schoolyards to the general public to make sure more New Yorkers have regular access to green space. The mayor is expected to be on trial in the spring and is running in the Democratic primary in June. New York City is shutting down a massive shelter from migrant families at Floyd Bennett Field. WNIC's Lehman quickly reports the National Park Service is looking to start a new chapter at the historic site.
Starting point is 00:01:55 The tent facility on the federally owned airfields runway was designed to house up to 500 families. But the city now plans to move everyone out by January 15th, five days before the inauguration of Donald Trump, who's promised mass deportations of migrants. The National Park Service wants to revamp the recreational facilities at the site. They're seeking a new company to run the facilities and golf courses in and around the airfield. Federal Parks officials say the space is underutilized and in need of repairs. Whoever takes over the lease will be required to renovate the airfield's buildings,
Starting point is 00:02:28 which house everything from athletic fields to swimming, pools and an ice rink. 28 and clear now. It feels like it's 13. Mostly sunny today and 37, but the wind chills down to the mid-teens and then a chance of snow overnight. Up next, our weekly segment of On the Way covering all transportation news. That's after the break. It's Friday, which means it's time for On the Way.
Starting point is 00:02:58 Our weekly segment on all things considered breaking down the week's transit news. Joining us is W&YC's transportation reporters, Stephen Nesson and Ramsey, Cleese. Faye. Okay, so it happened. I feel like I'm in a fever dream. Congestion pricing is actually in effect now. It's hard to believe after all the twists and turns we've been talking about that this thing is actually a reality. And we should say there's pictures all over social media. We can see for ourselves that streets have so few cars on them this week. What does that say? Well, anecdotally, we can say this has been a remarkable week. I mean, I myself bike over the Brooklyn Bridge. There is less traffic this week, definitely. People I've heard from that commute
Starting point is 00:03:34 from New Jersey, say it's faster on the bus, faster to drive back and forth, and just listen to this sound. This is from outside WNYC Studios on Verick Street. It's normally clogged with vehicles heading to the Holland Tunnel. The horns used to start honking around one or two in the afternoon. We don't hear any horns. And, you know, I would say arguably it's dead quiet. The few traffic, you know, the little few vehicles there are, they go pretty fast.
Starting point is 00:04:05 Ramsey and I talked to one of the pedestrian safety managers down there, Shirley Matthews. We usually work, you know, right up there, and around this time we're hearing the honking. We're hearing you guys yelling at cars. Yes, and we're shocked. Like I said, I never expected to see this. And I've been in New York for almost 45 years. I've never seen it like this. I was going to say, is this like in the summer maybe on like a Monday morning?
Starting point is 00:04:33 Yeah, Monday morning. But never in the afternoon. Never. Interesting. But look, it is still really too soon to have any meaningful conclusions from just anecdotes. And in fact, early data from the traffic monitoring company in Rex that was shared with us shows maybe only half the picture. We can look at traffic in two different ways. There's traffic speed and traffic volume.
Starting point is 00:04:56 The data that we got looks at average speeds in the Manhattan zone. Remember, that's everywhere below 60th Street in Manhattan. Those figures don't really show much. Speeds were actually a couple percentage points slower than a comparative January day last year. So what does that actually say? I mean, there are many factors that can contribute to traffic speeds like weather events or accidents, not just the toll. What we're looking to find is traffic volume. How many cars have actually entered the Manhattan zone in any given day since the tolls went live?
Starting point is 00:05:26 Let's remember. That's the key deterrence with this program, impose a new fee with the hopes that people decided. not to drive in anymore. So we're still waiting for Inrex to give that specific traffic volume data. We've also looked at Google traffic data, which shows how slow or how fast crossings that the various bridges and tunnels are. Traffic seems to be clearer than normal. But again, it's still early.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Not everyone is back from the holidays and weather may be affecting car traffic too. Yeah. Okay, so we know how contentious the rollout of this program has been. We've covered multiple lawsuits against it here, including one from New Jersey, governor, Phil Murphy. New York State tried to settle with him, but he refused. What's his reaction now? Yeah, our colleague, John Campbell and I, we reported this week that the MTA has put a lot on the table.
Starting point is 00:06:09 The negotiations were confidential, but two sources with knowledge of the talks who were not authorized to speak about them said that New York and the MTA offered New Jersey five things. So let me just go through those. The first thing was expanding this existing crossing credit. Currently, it's $3 for drivers entering Manhattan by the Lincoln or Holland Tunnels from New Jersey. They would expand that to the George Washington Bridge. The second thing is a commitment to cover half of an estimate. made it $1 billion shortfall for the Planned Newport Authority bus terminal. I'm not if you heard about that in Manhattan, which serves New Jersey transit buses. A $30 million
Starting point is 00:06:41 in funding for traffic and pollution mitigation projects in New Jersey, a commitment to prioritize the New Jersey transit portions of the new Penn Station project. And also $1 million for a planning study for the Bergen Loop. That's a project that would connect more New Jersey trains to Penn Station without requiring riders to transfer at SACACACACUS. And let me remind you, New Jersey's attorneys declined all of that. They said they wanted a higher crossing credit, and they thought that the traffic and pollution mitigation funding that the MTA is going to provide is too low. That's what sources said.
Starting point is 00:07:14 Here's Governor Phil Murphy himself, speaking on WNYC. So I don't want to get the details of negotiations, but what people are saying out there are patently absurd. And I hate to say it, we're not giving up. You know, we were very reasonable about this, but we're not giving up. It's not clear what Murphy is not giving up because the judge has already ruled the program can proceed. And in fact, the only unfinished business in this lawsuit is clarity on how the MTA is going to use that $9.8 million in mitigation funding for Newark, City of Orange, East Orange, and Fort Lee. That's money from congestion pricing that was going to happen no matter what.
Starting point is 00:07:52 So congestion pricing is in effect. When will transit riders see the improvements they were promised to service? So I got to talk to writers on the first day the program went live on Sunday. And a lot of them are saying, hey, are we going to see improvements on the subway already? You know, service is slow and it's kind of not that great. It's not up to part of what we're expecting here. But remember, that's another prong of this new program. The money generated from the tolls will be bonded to upgrades many parts of the MTA.
Starting point is 00:08:19 It's essentially a $15 billion loan backed by the money from congestion pricing. And look, that loan won't come through for another year, according to the end. MTA. But they'll allow them to buy new train cars, start work on new subway elevators at train stations, and more. These are all projects that were in the MTA's last construction plan. There's still a new one that we're looking at. And remember, the toll was originally going to cost $15 a day. Now it's $9 a day. Hockel cut all the congestion pricing fees by 40% across the board, so trucks are paying less, buses are paying less. So that means the full charge, the full $15 won't be realized until the year 2031. She's going to, you know, incrementally increase it until we get to there.
Starting point is 00:09:02 2031, you know, I think $15 will probably go a lot less. Sure. But remember, you know, this means the MTA has to stretch out all those construction plans as well. So it could take a longer time for new ADA signal, new ADA signal improvements and new train cars and buses to arrive. Okay. Every week in our on the way newsletter, we answer a question from a curious commuter.
Starting point is 00:09:22 The little boy and me loves this question. It comes from Erica in Manhattan. what is New York City's fastest subway train and how fast does it go? Well, buckle up, Erica. Let's hear it. Well, I don't have the exact train. Several trains can go this fast, but it's 55 miles per hour. Sick.
Starting point is 00:09:39 And it's only in certain parts of the system. So slow down, buddy. East River tunnels and certain express tracks allow trains to go that fast. Think of, say, the Lexington Avenue line, which carries the four or five trains in Manhattan. It can reach those top speeds and those long, stretches between 86th and 1205th streets. Also, think about the A train, those expressed stops between 59th Street and 125th Street. I myself was once on a train with an MTA crew that was traveling throughout the system. They were looking for faulty signals that were miscalibrated to be overly
Starting point is 00:10:16 conservative. So back in 2018, this was this project by the former transit president, Andy Biford, much beloved by many people who listened to workers, who told them you can actually speed up trains if you fix all these little faulty signals. There were hundreds of them. And so that really did help speed up train speeds. So we are at that zooming 55 miles per hour in some sections. Well, thank you, Erica, for the question. And thanks to WNIC Transportation Reporters, Stephen Nesson and Remsey-Khalifa. You can stay in the know on all things transit or ask a question of your own by signing up for a weekly newsletter at gotthmus.com slash on the way. My friends, it's been a banner a week for you. Hopefully you can finally get some rest. Thanks so much.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Thank you. Thank you, Sean. Thanks for listening. This is NYC now from WNYC. Be sure to catch us every weekday, three times a day, for your top news headlines and occasional deep dives, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. See you this afternoon.

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