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Clinton Pushes $1.7B Mass Transit Aid Bill Before Senate Panel
'85 Million More Trips' "In the first quarter of this year alone, riders took more than 2.6 billion trips on public transportation, nearly 85 million more than during the same time last year," she said in her written testimony. "And of course, as my colleague Senator Charles Schumer pointed out, New York City is the epicenter of mass transit."
She added that the measure should not be the last to address the nation's mass-transit situation. "But I want to recognize that this is what I consider to be a medium-term solution," Senator Clinton said. "We have the short-term problem because of the shortfall in the Highway Trust Fund. We know that it's approaching bankruptcy. The Mass Transit Fund is facing a solvency crisis." Unions Back Bill Several union leaders including Transport Workers Union Local 100 President Roger Toussaint and commuter advocacy groups encouraged New York's Senators to take action on the bill in the upper house of Congress. Mr. Toussaint has suggested that the implementation of the mass-transit funding could help alleviate the MTA's budget deficit without significant fare hikes or give-back demands to unions. Larry Hanley, a vice president of the Amalgamated Transit Union, personally thanked Senator Clinton during a press conference at Grand Central Station Sept. 12, noting that transit workers around the country were currently suffering from the fact that 35 percent of transit systems were cutting back on service. MTA Executive Director and CEO Elliot Sander did not say specifically that the Federal funding if passed would end the need of fare hikes or labor givebacks, but noted it would change the outlook for how the agency planned to reduce spending. "It would do a lot," he said. "It could only help." |
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