A recent anti-Car Pool Rule
study by parking garage owners is "false and misleading," according to
an analysis
released today by two transportation advocacy groups and Local 100 of the
Transport Workers Union.
Under the rule, "single
occupant vehicles" cannot use bridge and tunnel crossings into Manhattan
below 62nd Street between 6 am and 10 am on weekdays. (
See attached analysis.)
The detailed analysis-sponsored
by Transportation Alternatives and
NYPIRG's Straphangers Campaign -
shows that the Car Pool Rule is responsible for just 6.7% of the post-September
11th decline in the number of people entering the central business district
between 6am to 11am.
A recent study by the
Metropolitan Parking Association had attributed a loss of 189,687 people daily
due to the Car Pool Rule, with great resulting damage to the city's economy. But
the analysis released by transit groups and the TWU today shows that only 12,709
of the 189,687 can fairly be attributed to the impact of the rule. The group's
report finds that a significant number of motorists who previously drove alone
into Manhattan's Central Business District are carpooling or have switched to
rail, subway and ferry since the rule took effect.
"The garage
industry's report wildly misrepresents the impact of the Car Pool Rule,"
said Gene Russianoff, senior attorney for the Straphangers Campaign.
"The Car Pool Rule is
not hurting business, it's helping to get more people to use transit and
commuter rail," said Roger Toussaint, president of Local 100 of the
Transport Workers Union. "Less traffic and transit service improvements
are the real future for New York.""
The report by the garage
owners contains major false claims regarding the Car Pool Rule:
- False Claim: The rule
caused motorists to stop using the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel
- Fact: The Tunnel is
closed to all motorists between 6 am and 8 pm because it is too close to
Ground Zero. (As a result, the garage owners incorrectly include 42,008
people in their 189,687 total-or 22% of those no longer entering the CBD.)
- False Claim: The rule
kept motorists from entering Manhattan from north of 63rd Street.
- Fact: Bridges north
of 63rd St. are not effected by the rule. (As a result, the garage owners
incorrectly include 60,012 people in their 189,687 total-or 32% of those no
longer entering CBD.)
- False Claim: The Rule
kept motorists from entering after the Rule ends at 10 a.m., incorrectly
including 74,922 people in their 189,687 total-or 39% of those no longer
entering CBD.)
"The Car Pool Rule is
working to keep traffic --- and the economy moving. It should be kept in place
until a better solution is available," said John Kaehny, executive
director of Transportation Alternatives. "It's time for critics to put
up, or shut up. What's their solution to massive traffic congestion?"
The analysis released by the
groups today concludes that "there is no documentation that the Car Pool
Rule has in any way discouraged people from entering Manhattan,"
noting:
- The vast majority of people
coming into Manhattan from 6-10 a.m. when the Car Pool Rule is in effect
travel by bus, subway and rail, and are thus unaffected by the rule.
- Declines in the number of
people entering Manhattan at most East River crossings are lower during the
6-10 a.m. time period than at other times, the opposite of what should occur
if the Car Pool Rule were discouraging people from coming to Manhattan.
- Only one East River crossing
- the Queens Midtown Tunnel - shows a greater decline in persons entering
during 6-10 a.m. than at other times. However, this is entirely offset by
increases in Long Island Rail Road ridership, suggesting that auto users may
have switched to the LIRR.
- Subway ridership has fallen
less quickly than auto travel into the Manhattan CBD, also suggesting that
some auto users have switched to transit.
The report
released today was drafted by Bruce Schaller, a widely-respected analyst who has
worked for the New York City Transit Authority and the Taxi and Limousine
Commission.
The groups noted that the City
Department of Transportation was soon due to release its own study of the impact
of the Car Pool Rule.