Friday, September 16, 2022

Governor Hochul Announces MTA Systemwide Ridership Record

  

Subways, Buses, Commuter Railroads and Paratransit Carried 5.6 Million New Yorkers on Wednesday September 14

Subways Carried 3.7 Million New Yorkers on Wednesday, Highest Since Early 2020, Surpassing Record Set Last Week

Buses Set 2022 Ridership Record with Preliminary Count of More Than 1.5 Million Riders on Tuesday

Metro-North Railroad Set Ridership Record for Second Consecutive Day, Carrying More Than 181,600 Riders; LIRR Records Second Highest Ridership Day of 2022

Records Come Same Week as OMNY Reaches a Half Billion Taps


 Governor Kathy Hochul today announced that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority set a systemwide ridership record Wednesday, September 14, carrying more than 5.6 million riders. The subway and buses carried more than 5.2 million riders on Wednesday, both setting records. Subway ridership surpassed the previous record set on September 8, carrying 3,734,742 on Wednesday, a 28.5 percent increase from the comparable day in 2021. Bus ridership hit the 1.5 million-mark with a preliminary total of 1,523,000 riders, which is expected to rise by approximately 15 percent when the rider count is complete. 

"Our record ridership numbers are the latest indicator that New York's recovery is back on track, and we will continue pushing forward to build a better and stronger New York," Governor Hochul said. "Riders are swiping, tapping, and riding their way to New York's economic recovery, and we look forward to keeping this momentum going." 

The commuter railroads continued to show ridership growth. For the second consecutive day Metro-North Railroad set a ridership record, carrying more than 181,600 riders Wednesday, the highest since at least March 2020. The Long Island Rail Road carried over 200,000 riders on a weekday for the second time since March 2020 on Wednesday, carrying more than 202,700 riders. The preliminary total comes second to the record LIRR set last week on September 7. 

Access-A-Ride also reached a milestone of 28,000 scheduled trips on Wednesday, the highest since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Since schools reopened last week, Access-A-Ride trips have averaged 86 percent of pre-pandemic levels.

MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber said, "I have heard people writing New York's obituary for almost my whole career, and I can tell you that we at the MTA are going to prove them wrong. These ridership numbers are on the higher end of our latest projections and show mass transit is moving in the right direction, and we're not stopping. While some form of work from home will surely continue, the surge in ridership that we are seeing says that back to the office is a meaningful trend."

Subway Rider Debbie who recorded the 500 millionth tap said, "I really appreciate being able to take the subway, being able to get to work and back home safely. And the convenience of using OMNY."

OMNY, or One Metro New York, debuted to the public in 2019 as a pilot phase at 19 subway stations and on Staten Island buses. The rollout of the contactless system was completed in December of 2020, with all 472 subway stations and the entirety of the MTA's 5,800 bus fleet is now equipped with approximately 15,000 OMNY readers.  

The Authority launched the OMNY fare-capping pilot on subways and buses earlier this year. The fare-capping pilot includes a "Lucky 13" feature where, starting with the 13th ride of each week, every additional ride on subways or buses is free for the rest of that week. 

On the commuter rail, both LIRR and Metro-North continue to offer fare discount packages, and recently rolled out a new TrainTime app. TrainTime combined ticket purchasing with real-time train tracking, and capacity tracking, and has been well received by customers. Since its launch TrainTime has had 295,000 new downloads, 1.2 million users and over 1.75 million tickets have been purchased. 

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