The South Bronx Has a Pollution Issue. Congestion Pricing May Worsen It.

The New York Times

By: Hilary Howard

​​In addition to easing traffic, New York City’s new congestion pricing plan is expected to produce environmental benefits, including fewer greenhouse gas emissions and cleaner air. But if motorists avoid the tolls leading into Manhattan via detours, other areas in the metropolitan region could see

their air quality deteriorate.

The South Bronx, already burdened by a large number of pollution-spewing trucks that contribute to elevated rates of asthma, is of particular concern. And some preliminary data from the first two weeks of congestion pricing, which began on Jan. 5, find a possible uptick in traffic there. Local activists, like Mychal Johnson, are paying attention.

“You want to reduce congestion, please do it here, do it where we’re breathing toxic air,” said Mr. Johnson, co-founder of South Bronx Unite, a nonprofit focused on social, economic and environmental issues.

It’s still too early to draw any conclusions about traffic in the South Bronx and its link to congestion pricing. But early data from Inrix, a transportation analytics firm, showed that afternoon travel times on major highways and expressways in the Bronx had increased by 9 percent during the first two weeks after tolling started, compared with the same time period in 2024.

Read More

Previous
Previous

South Bronx group says the area has had to bear the burden of congestion pricing success

Next
Next

New York’s Congestion Pricing Could Worsen Traffic in Poor Neighborhoods