Close Menu
Modern Life Today
  • Home
  • Tech
  • Smart Home
  • Energy
  • Home Security
  • Kitchen & Household
  • Outdoor
  • Home Internet
Trending Now

The iPhone 17 Series Gets the Biggest iPhone Design Refresh in Years

September 9, 2025

AT&T’s $177 Million Payout: How to Claim Your Share of the Settlement

September 9, 2025

The 4 Apple Cider Vinegar Health Benefits You May Enjoy When Drinking It

September 9, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Modern Life Today
  • Home
  • Tech
  • Smart Home
  • Energy
  • Home Security
  • Kitchen & Household
  • Outdoor
  • Home Internet
Subscribe
Modern Life Today
Home»Tech»Is Congestion Pricing Working? The MTA’s Revamped Data Team Is Figuring It Out
Tech

Is Congestion Pricing Working? The MTA’s Revamped Data Team Is Figuring It Out

Press RoomBy Press RoomSeptember 4, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email

For the New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s data and analytics team, January 5, 2025, felt a lot like kismet.

Three and a half years earlier, New York state legislators had passed a law requiring the MTA to release “easily accessible, understandable, and usable” data to the public; by January 2022, MTA chair and CEO Janno Lieber officially announced the new team’s formation. Meanwhile, New York City’s controversial congestion pricing program, which tolls cars entering Manhattan’s busiest streets, officially kicked off in 2019 but was chugging through a lengthy setup process, with the transit agency and state fighting lawsuits, politicians, and vocal naysayers along the way.

So when the program finally started in January, the MTA’s data and analytics team had prepared. They could see the moment the tolling started right in the spreadsheets. “The day that it turned on, one field changed from ‘no revenue collection’ to ‘revenue,’” says Andy Kuziemko, the deputy chief of the data and analytics team.

A few days later, the team was pumping out data on vehicle entries into the zone in 10-minute increments, and posting the data on its website, so that New Yorkers themselves could decide whether the congestion program was actually reducing traffic on city streets. The agency has been doing it since. You—yes, you—can view and download the MTA’s data right here.

The online web pages aren’t flashy, but they represent a rare and comprehensive public transit win for open-data advocates, who argue that access to well-maintained public datasets is crucial to government transparency and efficiency.

Since 2022, the MTA’s data and analytics team has grown to 26 full-time employees, who spend their workdays centralizing information that was once scattered through the entire MTA. The agency, to be clear, is big. The nation’s largest, it carries some 5.9 million riders on subways, buses, commuter railways, and through tunnels and bridges every day. That’s a lot of numbers to track.

Really a lot; MTA now publishes more than 180 datasets. Recent additions include more than a decade’s worth of data on the time MTA employees spend on “productive tasks,” a new dataset on subway-delay-causing incidents; and bus speeds on Manhattan’s most crowded downtown roads. Kuziemko says 30 more datasets are becoming publicly available “in the near future.”

Counter Intelligence

In an interview, Kuziemko and MTA chief of strategic initiatives Jon Kaufman credited a new culture of intra-agency data sharing for the renewed program. In 2023, leadership encouraged managers across the agency to allow their data to be ingested into the MTA’s “data lake,” which can be refined, stripped of identifying information, and eventually published openly. (Some of the MTA’s data contains the personally identifiable information of commuters; the agency says this specific data is not published for the public.) The agency has also started using new in-house software and tools, which give them technical capabilities they didn’t have before. “We have paid for zero hours of consulting time, which is a thing we’re really proud of—that we actually built in-house expertise in the public sector,” says Kuziemko. “It’s really cool.”

“It’s rare for a government agency to share this level of data granularity,” says Sarah Kaufman, who directs the NYU Rudin Center for Transportation and once led the agency’s open-data program. In fact, it’s something like an about-face for the MTA, which before 2009 made a habit of legally pursuing developers who scraped system timetable and route data to build rider-friendly apps.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

The iPhone 17 Series Gets the Biggest iPhone Design Refresh in Years

September 9, 2025

Everything Apple Announced Today

September 9, 2025

Save Hundreds on the Razer Blade 16 and 18 Gaming Laptops

September 9, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top Articles

The iPhone 17 Series Gets the Biggest iPhone Design Refresh in Years

September 9, 2025

AT&T’s $177 Million Payout: How to Claim Your Share of the Settlement

September 9, 2025

The 4 Apple Cider Vinegar Health Benefits You May Enjoy When Drinking It

September 9, 2025

Apple Store Goes Down Ahead of Today’s iPhone 17 Apple Event

September 9, 2025
Don't Miss

I Struggle With Health Anxiety and Apple’s Watch Series 11 Scares Me. Here’s Why

By Press RoomSeptember 9, 20250

A few years ago, I was convinced I was about to die. And while (spoiler…

MacOS Tahoe vs. Sequoia: Here’s How Much Liquid Glass Will Change Your Mac’s Icons

September 9, 2025

These Apple Cider Vinegar Drinks Deliver All the Benefits of ACV Without the Sour Punch

September 9, 2025

I Held Apple’s Wildly Thin iPhone Air, and I’m Already Obsessed

September 9, 2025
About Us
About Us

Modern Life Today is your one-stop website for the latest gadget and technology news and updates, follow us now for the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
Featured News

Best Cellphone Plans 2025 | Compare Top Mobile Phone Plans and Carriers

August 29, 2025

780,000 Ryobi Pressure Washers Recalled Due to Explosion Risk

August 29, 2025

Which Google Pixel Phone Should You Buy?

August 29, 2025
Trending Now

This 1-Minute Microwave Poached Egg Is the Breakfast Hack I’ve Been Waiting For

August 29, 2025

This Free Hack Turns Any Old Smartphone Into a Security Camera

August 29, 2025

The Best Kindles to Take Your Library Anywhere

August 29, 2025
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
2025 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.