The article has been automatically translated into English by Google Translate from Russian and has not been edited.
Переклад цього матеріалу українською мовою з російської було автоматично здійснено сервісом Google Translate, без подальшого редагування тексту.
Bu məqalə Google Translate servisi vasitəsi ilə avtomatik olaraq rus dilindən azərbaycan dilinə tərcümə olunmuşdur. Bundan sonra mətn redaktə edilməmişdir.

New York introduces ferry discounts and free admission to museums for high school students

'17.03.2023'

Nadezhda Verbitskaya

Subscribe to ForumDaily NewYork on Google News

 

New York City high school students will soon be able to ride the City Ferry at a discount. In addition, they will be issued a municipal identity card with the right to free admission to museums and cultural institutions. The city council approved this on March 16, reports Gothamist

Bill, authored by council member Amanda Farias of the Bronx, will allow teens to ride the city ferry for $1,35 instead of the full fare of $4.

Teenagers have become the latest group to pay reduced fares on the most expensive form of public transport. The city began offering reduced fares of $1,35 for seniors, people with disabilities, and low-income passengers in 2022.

“Not only are we influencing our students and how they can afford to travel to school, but we are also reducing travel costs for families of students,” Farias said at a press conference. The bill is expected to come into force on 1 September.

On the subject: From Bay Ridge to Wall Street in 20 minutes: new ferry route launched in New York

Council voted for billby Council Member Rita Joseph of Brooklyn. This document requires high school students to apply for a municipal identity card at the beginning of each school year.

In addition to being the official form of government identification, IDNYC is also available to undocumented New Yorkers. It provides free and preferential access to programs and cultural institutions. It can help you open a bank account, get a job, and get food stamps.

An attempt to make the ferry cheaper for students was last fall

This was before the city raised fares from $2,75 to help generate more revenue for the heavily taxpayer-subsidized ferry system.

While a one-way ticket costs the average passenger $4 (nearly double the standard $2,75 required for a subway or bus ride), the funds still aren't enough to cover the cost of running the city's ferry system. Officials previously halted plans to expand the ferry system after an oversight committee found the city understated costs related to the ferry system by nearly $224 million from 2015 to 2021.

And as local officials respond to calls from residents to make the ferry as affordable as possible, the city is expected to absorb the costs. The decision to include high school students in the concessionary travel program came amid tense negotiations between the Budget Board and the administration of Mayor Eric Adams.

The $1,35 that high school students are allowed to pay for several months still makes the ferry a more expensive way to travel. The bottom line is that bus or subway travel is free for students in grades K-12 on school days.

When asked about the difference in ferry fares and other modes of transport for schoolchildren, Farias said she knows families in her Bronx County who have already decided their children will take the ferry.

“In my opinion, you need to start somewhere, especially for young people who are already paying $8 round trip, or $40 a week,” she concluded.

Subscribe to ForumDaily NewYork on Google News
WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By: XYZScripts.com