New York City’s Transit Chief Is Trying to Keep the Trains Running
Threats from the Trump administration to cut federal funding aren’t slowing the city’s progress on big-ticket transportation projects, says MTA chairman Janno Lieber.
An MTA train at the Brooklyn Bridge subway station in New York City in 2025.
Photographer: Michael Nagle/BloombergThe Metropolitan Transportation Authority has big plans for the next few years. New train cars, signal fixes and station upgrades are on the way for New York City’s aging subway system; so are multibillion-dollar projects like the Interborough Express, a proposed rail line between Brooklyn and Queens.
But many of Gotham’s grandest transit ambitions hinge on funding help from the federal government, which has taken an increasingly antagonistic stance toward the city and its vast transportation network.