Current:Home > reviewsTransportation officials want NYC Marathon organizers to pay $750K to cross the Verrazzano bridge -Clarity Finance Guides
Transportation officials want NYC Marathon organizers to pay $750K to cross the Verrazzano bridge
View
Date:2025-04-17 18:23:21
NEW YORK (AP) — The New York City Marathon organizers will soon have to pay a bridge toll, just like every other commuter, if New York transit officials have their way.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority is demanding the New York Road Runners, organizers of the venerable race generally held the first Sunday of each November, pay roughly $750,000 for use of the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge.
The agency that oversees New York’s bridges and tunnels says the fee represents the estimated amount of toll revenue lost when the nation’s longest suspension bridge is closed.
“New Yorkers love Marathon Sunday, but taxpayers cannot be expected to subsidize a wealthy non-government organization like the New York Road Runners to the tune of $750,000,” said Catherine Sheridan, president of MTA’s department of bridges and tunnels, in a statement.
But the Road Runners have pushed back, arguing the MTA enjoys increased revenue from greater transit ridership during marathon week that “more than makes up” for any lost toll revenue from the bridge. The Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge connects the New York City boroughs of Brooklyn and Staten Island, and is named after the first European explorer to sail into the New York Harbor.
The organization also noted that the 2019 marathon generated an estimated $427 million for the city, significantly boosting tourism, tax revenues and the economy, according to an economic impact report it commissioned in 2020.
“The impact of MTA’s request would represent a material change to the cost structure and would require an increase to how much runners pay to run the Marathon, making it less affordable for local runners and those who travel to New York City from around the world—both of whom contribute hundreds of millions of dollars to the City’s and State’s economy,” Crystal Howard, a spokesperson for the organization, said in an emailed statement.
She said the organization has repeatedly asked the MTA to provide data to back up their claim of $750,000 in lost revenue loss but have not received it.
The agency has also declined to share data regarding the revenue generated by the increased ridership during marathon week, despite Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office announcing after last year‘s marathon that the MTA enjoyed “record subway ridership” on race day, Howard said.
The Road Runners, she added, are willing to negotiate with transit officials, but any resolution should reflect the “significant value” the agency derives from the marathon, which the organization says has been run over the bridge since 1976.
The MTA has also threatened to restrict the marathon to using just one of its two decks of traffic if it doesn’t pay up, but the Road Runners have said such a move would significantly hinder the race, which is the largest marathon in the world, welcoming more than 50,000 participants annually.
The organization said it might have to either decrease the field of runners or extend the total time of the marathon, forcing the bridge and other roadways in the city to be closed even longer on race day.
The MTA declined to respond to follow up questions, but Sheridan, in her statement, said the agency is similarly open to working with the organization on a compromise, provided it “leads, over time, to full reimbursement for the lost revenue.”
veryGood! (377)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Alabama school band director says he was ‘just doing my job’ before police arrested him
- She has Medicare and Medicaid. So why should it take 18 months to get a wheelchair?
- Prince William says 'optimism' and 'hope' is key to climate reform during Earthshot Prize in NYC
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Under pressure over border, Biden admin grants protection to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans
- A panel finds torture made a 9/11 defendant psychotic. A judge will rule whether he can stand trial
- Young Latinos unable to carry on a conversation in Spanish say they are shamed by others
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Angelica Ross says Ryan Murphy ghosted her, alleges transphobic comments by Emma Roberts
Ranking
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Gates Foundation commits $200 million to pay for medical supplies, contraception
- Meet Methuselah: The world's oldest known aquarium fish is at least 92, DNA shows
- Connecticut agrees to a $25 million settlement in the Henry Lee evidence fabrication case
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Detroit Auto Show underway amid historic UAW strike
- Father and son sentenced to probation for fire that killed 2 at New York assisted living facility
- Singapore police uncover more gold bars, watches and other assets from money laundering scheme
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
'Sex Education' Season 4: Cast, release date, how to watch final episodes of Netflix show
Having a hard time finding Clorox wipes? Blame it on a cyberattack
Man shot and killed after South Carolina trooper tried to pull him over
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Suspect in fatal shootings of four in suburban Chicago dead after car crash in Oklahoma
Alabama school band director says he was ‘just doing my job’ before police arrested him
UAW strike latest: GM sends 2,000 workers home in Kansas