United States | Stop, start

Congestion pricing in New York gets the go-ahead after all. Maybe

NYC is in a race against the incoming Republican trifecta

Cars, busses and other vehicles congested down Park Avenue in New York City, USA.
Photograph: Alamy
|NEW YORK

NOVEMBER 20th marks the first “Gridlock Alert” day of New York City’s holiday season. This is the official designation for the city’s busiest traffic days of the year. But traffic is bad most days, with more than 900,000 cars entering Manhattan’s central business district. INRIX, a traffic-data firm, found that New York City leads the world in urban traffic congestion among the cities scored, with the average driver stationary for 101 hours a year. After years of false starts, including a cowardly pre-election pause by Kathy Hochul, New York’s Democratic governor, congestion pricing has the green light.

Explore more

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Stop, start”

From the November 23rd 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
A computer technician stands before an array of ibm model 727 magnetic tape data storage drive units.

DOGE is coming for American officials’ magnetic tape

But more modern methods of data storage are not necessarily better

Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals celebrates after scoring his 895th career goal during the second period against the New York Islanders.

How Alex Ovechkin topped Wayne Gretzky’s once-unbreakable record

As our charts show, the Russian machine defies both his age and his era


Third grade dual language program students are learning a the classroom in Houston, Texas.

Texas looks set to pass America’s biggest school-voucher scheme

Evidence from other states suggests pupils will do worse as a result


How Donald Trump’s tariffs will probably fare in court

The president has drawn fire from some conservative legal scholars

Donald Trump is attacking what made American universities great

More than Middle East Studies is in trouble