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The Momentous Decision New York Almost Made

Chicago reversed the flow of a river. Boston put a highway underground. And New York, well, came close to enacting congestion pricing.

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A six-lane street in Manhattan is clogged in all directions with cars, buses and trucks.
Come June 30, this 42nd Street scene will still look pretty much the same.Credit...Karsten Moran for The New York Times

Emily Badger has written about cities and urban policy for more than a decade.

American cities are shaped by the accumulation of many small choices across time: to put a park here, to lay a sewer there, to rezone this commercial strip or redesign that roadway.

But every now and then, a momentous decision is made — to reverse the Chicago River, to construct the Dallas-Fort Worth airport, to move a highway underground in Boston’s Big Dig. And it changes what’s possible for years to come, altering a city’s growth, its economic prospects or the very nature of its public space.

Congestion pricing could have been such a turning point in New York, according to proponents for whom the policy promised not just new revenue for mass transit, but also a fundamentally novel approach to reining in the cost of cars in an American city center.

Gov. Kathy Hochul’s decision to halt it may be remembered as a turning point, too.

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The Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, completed in 1900, helped reverse the flow of the city’s river ...Credit...Chicago History Museum/Getty Images
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... enabling Chicago to grow into the city it is today.Credit...Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times

“Manhattan south of 60th Street is essentially an invention for creating prosperity for the human race,” said Tom Wright, the chief executive of the nonprofit Regional Plan Association, which has pushed for congestion pricing. “It’s an engine of jobs and creativity, and what it does is it employs millions of people. And it grows.”


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