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Idea of Making Subways Free Advanced by Theodore Kheel
BY
ANNIE KARNI - Special to the Sun
February 12, 2007
If New Yorkers don't pay a fee to use the police and fire
departments, they should not have to pay to use the city's
mass transit system.
That's part of the thinking of Theodore Kheel, who last Thursday
donated $100,000 to the Institute for Rational Urban Mobility
to study how a free mass transit system could save money for
the city. Mr. Kheel, a 92-year-old philanthropist, environmentalist,
and labor relations lawyer, says charging a fee to drive on
the city's most crowded streets would create an incentive
for drivers to switch to mass transit. The revenue earned
on the streets could be used to subsidize free subways and
buses.
"Drivers would get a great benefit, too," Mr. Kheel said.
"Instead of getting stuck in traffic, they'd be able to move.
We must treat traffic and transit as inseparably related."
Incentives to switch to subways from cars would improve public
health and reduce time lost due to traffic congestion, as
well as the price of all goods and services delivered in the
city, he said.
Mr. Kheel's critics argue that the already crowded subway
system could not handle the influx of passengers if it were
made free, but he describes the subway system as an underutilized
facility. In 1943, when the fare was five cents, average weekday
ridership was more than 8 million, almost double what it is
today.
The president of the Institute for Rational Urban Mobility,
George Haikalis, said no one is studying the cost implications
of mass transit. "Vertical transportation systems like elevators
are free," he said. "The horizontal transportation system
is as much a part of our system as the vertical."
Mr. Haikalis' nonprofit organization, which focuses on reducing
automobile use in the metropolitan area, is also the group
behind vision42, a proposal to build an auto-free Light Rail
boulevard along 42nd Street.
Mr. Kheel, who represented Christo and Jean Claude in their
legal battle with the city to erect "The Gates" in Central
Park in 2005, founded a nonprofit organization, Nurture New
York's Nature, in connection with the art installation. Under
the symbol of the orange gate, Mr. Kheel through his foundation
funds environmental projects, such as studying the effects
of a free subway system.
The four-month long study, titled "Price Matters," will be
conducted by professional transportation consultants Brian
Ketcham and Carolyn Konheim. Mr. Kheel, a lifelong New Yorker
who describes himself as a "catalyst on a hot tin roof," said
he has always been an advocate of mass transit because "it
is the single most important step that can be taken to improve
the quality of life in our city."
While Mr. Kheel said he is chauffeured through the city in
a private car because of a back problem, he said he is willing
to pay for that privilege. "I'm exercising a privilege that's
costing other people money," he said. "Free mass transit will
be very costly for me, but I will get the privilege of being
driven around in my car."
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