2nd Avenue Subway

Legislation | Documents/Reports | Links | Press Releases

Building the Second Avenue Subway has been one of my top priorities since I was first elected to Congress. New York City’s subway system has not added capacity in over 60 years, and we need to expand. Passengers on the Lexington Avenue line have the dubious distinction of riding on the most overcrowded subway line in the entire nation. There is a limit to the number of people that can be crammed into one subway car, but the Lex line seems to have exceeded that limit. A Second Avenue Subway offers a much-needed alternative for commuters. The full length subway, which will run from 125th Street to lower Manhattan, will also reach underserved neighborhoods on the East Side.

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© Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

 

One of two New Start projects in the city (the other, East Side Access, is also in my district), the Second Avenue Subway has been rated by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) as one of the best in the country. The former Administrator of the FTA, Jenna Dorn, told me that the best work she had ever seen submitted was the MTA’s submission on the Second Avenue Subway.

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© Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

 

The project is being divided into four phases. The first phase will create new tracks and tunnels from 99th Street to 63rd Street, with new stations at 96th, 86th and 72nd Street. The new line will then link onto existing underused Q train tracks and provide a one seat ride to lower Manhattan and Brooklyn. When completed, the Second Avenue Subway will move 202,000 people, more than any other New Start project in the nation. With strong support from the entire New York Congressional delegation and our two Senators, we broke ground for the subway in April 2007. The MTA completed construction of the two tunnels for the subway on September 22, 2011, five months ahead of the February 2012 expected completion date.  Construction is also well underway for the 96th Street, 86th Street, 72nd Street and 63rd Street entrances.

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©Metropolitan Transportation Authority

 

The first phase of the project will cost approximately $4.4 billion, and the lion’s share of the funding is already committed. On November 19, 2007, the FTA entered into a full funding grant agreement with the MTA, committing the federal government to provide $1.3 billion to construct the Second Avenue Subway, of which more than $900 million has already been appropriated.  The state is obligated to provide the remaining $3.1 billion. Thanks to the leadership of Speaker Sheldon Silver, New York State appropriated $1.05 billion in its 2000-2004 capital plan. In 2005, New York State voters approved another $450 million from the Transportation Bond Act. As a symbol of the support for the project, the East Side of Manhattan cast more votes in support of the Transportation Bond Act than any other area of the state. The remainder is expected to be allocated in the state’s 2010–2014 and 2015-2019 capital plans.

Documents

6/18/09 - Testimony to the MTA regarding the Environmental Assessment for the 72nd Street and 86th Street Entrances

02/03/09 - Report on the Economic Benefits of the Second Avenue Subway and East Side Access

9/15/09 - First Annual 2nd Avenue Subway Report Card.

9/15/09 - Second Annual 2nd Avenue Subway Report Card.

More on 2nd Avenue Subway

Jun 24, 2011 Press Release
New York, NY – Alarmed by recent reports of noxious odors and dust plumes emanating from the Second Avenue Subway construction site near East 69th Street and Second Avenue, U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan, Queens) today urged the MTA to redouble the agency’s efforts to mitigate quality-of-life concerns related to the subway project.  In a letter to MTA Chairman Jay Walder (a copy of which follows), Maloney also urged the MTA to test the air at the construction site to confirm that it is safe.  Joining Maloney at a press conference today to express their concerns were area residents and Manhattan Community Board 8 members Dan Quart, Barry Schneider, Jonathan Horn, Jim Clynes, and Patrick Stewart, along with other community members.

Jun 24, 2011 Press Release
WASHINGTON, DC – Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) applauded the announcement of Federal Transit Administration funding for the two major New York City transit projects today. $197 million in funding for the 2nd Avenue Subway and $215 million for the East Side Access project -linking the LIRR to Grand Central Terminal- will be coming to the Metropolitan Transit Authority as part of the Full Funding Grant Agreements governing both projects.

May 5, 2011 Press Release
New York, NY – Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney today called on Federal Transit Administrator Peter Rogoff to preserve the funding originally proposed for the nation’s two largest New Starts projects - the Second Avenue Subway and East Side Access, calling them “vital to the New York City region's $1.26 trillion economy, the second-largest regional economy in the world.”


Feb 7, 2011 Press Release
New York, NY – Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-NY) celebrated the news that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s (MTA) 485-ton, 450-foot-long tunnel boring machine (TBM) had reached 63rd Street, completing the first tunnel for the Second Avenue Subway.  On May 14, 2010, the MTA launched the TBM at 92nd Street.  The TBM will now be disassembled, brought back to 92nd Street, reassembled and relaunched to dig the subway’s second tunnel.
Sep 25, 2010 Press Release
New York, NY – Today, Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, Assemblyman Micah Kellner, and Councilwoman Jessica Lappin released their 2nd annual report card on the construction of the long-awaited Second Avenue Subway. The report card evaluates the MTA’s handling of the project – outlining the significant progress that’s been made this year, but urging the MTA not to exceed its current 2016 deadline for completing the subway. The report gives the MTA a “B” for its final grade in 2010 – a slight improvement from last year. A full copy of the report can be found below.
Sep 20, 2010 Press Release
New York, NY – Today, Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-Manhattan, Queens) announced that $274.9 million in federal funding will be delivered by the end of the week to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to help build the Second Avenue Subway. The funds were approved by Congress in the Fiscal Year 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act (H.R. 1105), which passed in February 2009. These funds will help keep the project moving forward.
Feb 1, 2010 Press Release

New York, NY – Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan & Queens) today hailed the inclusion of $197 million for the Second Avenue Subway and $215 million for East Side Access in the Obama Administration’s proposed Fiscal Year 2011 Federal Transit Administration budget. Congresswoman Maloney has long championed the transit projects, which are both located almost entirely within New York’s 14th Congressional District that she represents.

Sep 25, 2009 Press Release

(New York) – Today Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-Manhattan, Queens) and East Side elected officials State Senator Liz Krueger, Assemblyman Micah Kellner, and City Council Members Jessica Lappin and Dan Garodnick released a report card on the MTA’s Second Avenue Subway project. The report card gives the MTA an overall grade of B- in connection with its performance on the Subway project; it appears in full, below.

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