New Jersey Files Environmental Lawsuit To Delay Manhattan Congestion Tolls
New York officials have primarily pitched congestion tolls as an easy cash grab for the city's subway system. New Jersey drivers and politicians aren't happy about that.

New York's four-year-old plan to charge drivers entering lower Manhattan has hit yet another bump in the road after the state of New Jersey filed a lawsuit to stop it.
The lawsuit, filed on Friday in U.S. District Court in New Jersey against the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), argues that federal officials didn't do a thorough enough environmental analysis of the congestion pricing scheme before signing off on the project earlier this summer.
FHWA's "fundamentally flawed and improperly truncated decision-making process" failed to study the impacts on New Jersey communities from all the traffic (and attendant pollution) that would be diverted by a Manhattan congestion charge, reads the suit.
The complaint asks the court to freeze the implementation of congestion tolls while additional studies, potentially taking years, are performed.
New York's congestion pricing scheme was first approved by the state Legislature back in 2019, as part of that year's budget agreement. The plan is to charge drivers entering Manhattan below 60th Street a fee to both combat gridlock and raise money for New York City–area transit agencies.
Last year, New York officials suggested tolls could be $23 for rush-hour trips and $17 for non-rush-hour trips.
Tolling federal-aid highways, which New York's congestion pricing plan would do, requires federal approval. The feds' needed sign-off in turn triggers the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which has added years to congestion pricing's implementation.
NEPA requires federal agencies to examine the environmental impacts of the decisions they make, whether that's releasing funding for a new highway, permitting a new coal mine, or (as in this case) approving new tolls on federally funded roads.
New York's congestion pricing was supposed to be up and running by January 2021.
But the NEPA review process—which included some possibly deliberate foot-dragging by the Trump administration—wasn't finalized until June 2023. With federal approval in hand, the hope was that tolls could be in place by May 2024.
New Jersey's lawsuit likely derails that timeline as well.
NEPA also allows third parties to sue federal agencies if they believe the analysis they performed didn't analyze all "significant impacts." As a result, NEPA has become a go-to means for opponents of a project to gum up its implementation with environmental litigation.
Lawsuits like New Jersey's are "extremely normal," says Eli Dourado of the Center for Growth and Opportunity. "Plaintiffs bring a complaint [that] doesn't state the true objection to the project. They sue on environmental grounds because that's the cause of action that's available to them."
Since it first passed, New Jersey politicians have been objecting to New York's congestion pricing plan on primarily economic grounds. They've complained that the tolls would harm New Jersey commuters' pocketbooks while directing all the revenue to New York transit agencies.
In 2019, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy demanded that Garden State commuters receive special discounts. The same year, Reps. Josh Gottheimer (D–N.J.) and Jeff Van Drew (R–N.J.) introduced federal legislation to exempt their state's drivers from the charges.
Those complaints haven't abated over the years.
"The FHWA has unlawfully fast-tracked the agency's attempt to line its own coffers at the expense of New Jersey families," said Murphy in a press release announcing the state's lawsuit. Sen. Bob Menendez (D–N.J.) called congestion pricing a "shakedown."
New Jersey's lawsuit decries the "significant financial burden" of congestion pricing and cites Murphy's description of the policy as a "huge tax" being levied on New Jersey families.
Marc Scribner, a transportation policy analyst with the Reason Foundation (which publishes this website), says that New Jersey residents' complaints about New York's congestion pricing scheme have some merit—given how the policy is being sold and implemented.
Well-designed congestion pricing can be a huge benefit to car commuters by eliminating the urban gridlock that reduces the total number of people who can use the roads on a given day.
But supporters of New York's policy have largely pitched the new tolls as a means of funding New York City's subway system that New Jersey's car commuters don't ride. New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), the state agency which operates the subway, will receive the lion's share of the new congestion toll revenue.
"They didn't lead with, 'We're going to stabilize traffic flow and therefore benefit you as motorists,'" says Scribner. "You can understand the knee-jerk reaction from a lot of motorists is that this is a cash grab."
The relatively small zone where congestion charges will apply and the fact that the tolls will likely be a flat rate (as opposed to varying with traffic flows) make New York's policy less than ideal for combating gridlock, argues Scribner.
That also cuts against the benefits New Jersey drivers will receive from the policy.
Nevertheless, the state's NEPA lawsuit won't improve New York's congestion pricing scheme. It won't even stop it. The best-case scenario for New Jersey's lawsuit is that it forces New York and the federal government to do years of additional environmental analysis before implementing the same policy they're trying to impose now.
This represents a recurring problem with NEPA generally, says Dourado.
"They might write another thousand pages no one is ever going to read, and it will take them another couple of years to do it," he says. "But the outcome will be the same in the end."
He suggests limiting judges' powers to pause projects while more NEPA analysis is done. That would chill the desire of litigants seeking only to delay a project from filing NEPA lawsuits in the first place.
"You can analyze something forever," says Dourado. "I think we should say enough is enough at some point. And we're well beyond that point."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Manhattan tunnels should have toll free electric car lanes
Why?
To improve the quality of life in Manhattan by discouraging Trump & Christie voters
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Will the rush hour commuters be receiving a benefit from the subway system for being forced to subsidize them?
Usually, I whine about NEPA. This is not one of those times.
For sound economic perspective please go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Well, there won't be ANY cars when they all have to be the electric ones that can't be recharged on the wonderful green new grid.
Why aren’t the NYC borders open and free?
NYC is a sanctuary city. Except for immigrants from New Jersey.
There's nothing Reason loves more than transportation planning tolls.
Forcing people to pay a premium to actually use roads they've already paid for is totally libertarian.
Congestion pricing is a bogus money grab, so why not fight it with a bogus environmental suit? Seems like a good plan to me.
So a court will decide for whom ta bill tolls?
Congestion pricing has been legalized in sports. It's called scalping.
Scalping hasn't been much of a problem on the Jersey side since the Dutch drove the Native Americans out of Hoboken.
NJ could retaliate and slap tolls on incoming traffic, but come on, who would want to go to NJ?
Refugees from Queens.
Does Snake Plissken know about this?
Can't they just sell Mr. Murphy the Brooklyn bridge and call it even? I'm sure he'd bite.
For $23, NYC will throw in some free Canadian smoke as a souvenir.
Mayor Adams plans to sue all Canadian visitors for smoking in Central Park.
I find tolls on federally funded interstate freeways offensive.
Toll roads that are interstates merely have the number put on them. They receive no federal or state funding from taxes and rely solely on user fees (tolls).
I can get from Gary to Milwaukee on I94, with a short detour on US 43, which is a "freeway". But it's been purposefully allowed to deteriorate for decades to force drivers onto toll road I294. 94 is barely passable in a lot of places. When Indiana sold their tollway to private investors the state agreed not to maintain competing roadways, US20 and US30. Reason applauded the deal. Shortly thereafter the tollway buyers went bankrupt and Indiana got it back. Reason Institute went silent. Reason has been selling toll roads for decades as some sort of free market solution to congestion. The roads in Wisconsin, Missouri, Iowa and even Michigan lately are far better than Illinois with no tolls and lower fuel taxes. Wisconsin completely rebuilt I90 from Illinois to Madison. And completely rebuilt the Beloit interchange at I43. But you won't pay a toll until you get to Illinois. Michigan is in the process of completely rebuilding I94 from Indiana to Canada. Ever drive I80 through Will county at Joliet? Two hands on the wheel and one foot on the brake. Why the fuck can I drive on better roads for free everywhere except in Illinois? Toll roads are institutional graft but Reason just can't get enough.
The roads in Wisconsin, Missouri, Iowa ….
Nobody drives there.
I think all access-controlled highways should be toll roads, and that the tolls should stay with that road, rather than going to a collective state highway fund.
Anecdotal - I drive the Atlantic City Expressway (toll) every day, followed by Route 42 (not a toll). The ACX is smooth, and repaved every 3 or 4 years. Route 42 isn't repaved until it looks like it's been shelled by artillery.
OTOH, I've seen toll roads that were allowed to get into terrible condition. When I was renting a room near Washington, DC for work and driving home to Michigan on weekends, the worst part of the trip by far was the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-80 from Ohio to Pittsburgh). The roads in Michigan were decent, although they've become much worse since then. The Ohio turnpike and freeway were both well-maintained. The freeway south from Pittsburgh was good. But the toll road in Pennsylvania was falling apart.
Meh, it's just another mashup of NYC and New Jersey. Honestly they should just get a room and call it New Jerk City and people will avoid it like the plague. All I really want is for Google maps to avoid that whole cluster-fucking-the-dog-screw-up when I'm driving to and/or from my brother's place in NH.
Fun fact, avoiding the city by driving through VT down the Taconic to I-84 then I-81. Yeah, it's nominally 20-30 minutes longer but you're not gaining 30 minutes going through New Jerk City at any time of day anyway, add in avoiding Newark, Philly, Baltimore, DC, etc. and it's an easy win. It's be nice if any mapping app would get that and simply avoid I-95 at all costs.
"The plan is to charge drivers entering Manhattan below 60th Street a fee to both combat gridlock and raise money for New York City–area transit agencies."
I'm thinking the roads providing access above 60th St. will become more congested, no?
"Last year, New York officials suggested tolls could be $23 for rush-hour trips and $17 for non-rush-hour trips."
LOL. Is that every time? Another reason I'd never move there.
They're also considering a toll on every vehicle going south of 60th within Manhattan.
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