The mayor should take a seat at the MTA table


At the Lexington Ave.-59th St. subway station, commuters encounter a vibrant piece by Elizabeth Murray featuring a quote from W.B. Yeats: “In dreams begin responsibility.” This sentiment seems a fitting motto for New York’s transit network, a system built on grand aspirations yet constrained by an organization — the Metropolitan Transportation Authority — structured to shield politicians from accountability.

For years, mayors have distanced themselves from the MTA. The rationale is straightforward: the authority isn’t within their direct jurisdiction. Instead, it relies significantly on state funds, which means it operates under the influence of the governor.

Mayor Mamdani aims to change this dynamic.

He campaigned on the promise to make bus services free and more efficient, advocating that public transportation should alleviate economic stress rather than exacerbate it. This vision resonated with voters, arguably contributing to his electoral success, underscored by his symbolic choice to take the oath of office in the deserted subway station beneath City Hall.

Now, the pressing issue is whether City Hall will truly take on the responsibility of making this vision a reality.

To clarify, as a past MTA chair, I do not concur with Mamdani’s plan to offer free bus services. However, some iteration of this idea is likely to advance, and I hope he achieves what I could not — transforming New York’s bus system into a reliable service for the millions who depend on it daily.

Mamdani should start by doing something no mayor has done: nominate himself to serve as one of the city’s representatives on the MTA Board.

Unlike the below-ground oath of office, this would not be a symbolic gesture. Sitting on the board would signal that the city’s transit system is a core mayoral responsibility.

There is precedent for this kind of leadership. Twenty-five years ago, London faced a similar dilemma. The British government funded and managed London’s declining transport system with little local control. That changed in 2000, when Ken Livingstone became London’s first directly elected mayor and assumed the role of chair of Transport for London.

I worked at TfL during that period and witnessed Livingstone treat transportation as a defining responsibility of city leadership. He campaigned on expanding what the system could deliver and accepted political ownership for the consequences.

That ownership imposed discipline. It forced difficult trade-offs, including support for fare increases he had long opposed, resulting in reinvestment in the Underground, a transformed bus network and safer streets.

New York should learn from London’s success. Clear political ownership matters. Having Mamdani himself on the MTA Board would move the region closer to a model where the city’s top elected official owns and champions public transit.

Critics may worry that a mayor serving on the MTA Board would politicize the agency or blur lines of authority. But the MTA already operates within a political framework shaped by state and regional appointments.

Mamdani’s direct participation at the MTA Board table would help reassure the public that his free-fare proposal is achievable within the authority’s broader financial reality and that its effects on the overall transit network are being taken seriously. In any case, free fares are the easier part of his bus agenda.

Speeding up buses is far harder. We know what works: dedicated lanes, signal priority, enforced curb rules, route redesigns and faster boarding. The success of the 14th St. Busway proves the point. Select Bus Service should continue to expand, but it cannot be the backbone of a citywide solution when only 20 of more than 300 bus routes benefit from it.

The real obstacle to faster buses is our collective tolerance for behavior that paralyzes the streets: double-parking “just for a minute,” blocking bus stops and rushing intersections. These actions feel normal, even harmless — but multiplied thousands of times a day, they bring the city to a standstill.

Here, the mayor can shape street design, traffic enforcement, parking policy and interagency coordination to get buses moving. The mayor can elevate bus speed as a top-tier priority in an authority historically dominated by subway concerns. That shift would really matter — especially for the most vulnerable riders most reliant on our bus system.

Accountability cannot stop at buses. Subway safety, including policing and social services, also depends heavily on decisions made at City Hall. The mayor’s focus on buses should reinforce, not distract from, the city’s broader responsibility for the entire transit system.

The artwork at 59th St. offers a quiet reminder. Dreams are easy. Responsibility is harder. By taking a seat on the MTA Board, the mayor can show New Yorkers that he is a leader willing to accept both.

Walder is a former chairman and chief executive of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and a former senior leader at Transport for London.

You May Also Like
100 Long Island retirees caught 'double-dipping' $1.6M on Medicare: audit

Audit Finds 100 Long Island Retirees Improperly Collected $1.6M in Medicare Reimbursements

Nearly 100 Nassau County retirees improperly received duplicate Medicare reimbursements for more…
Lawsuit filed after tree dubbed 'Widow Maker' fatally crushes man at Texas BBQ restaurant

Texas BBQ Restaurant Faces Lawsuit Over Widow Maker Tree That Crushed Man to Death

British fan praises American hospitality and food, recommends visiting Texas British World…
New York native Johanna Gregory killed in Lake Michigan boat crash

New York Native Johanna Gregory Dies in Lake Michigan Boat Crash

A 26-year-old New York native remembered for her “heart of gold” died…
Mel Brooks turns 100: Happy birthday, comedian, filmmaker and 2000 Year Old Man

Mel Brooks Turns 100: Legendary Comedian and Filmmaker Celebrates Milestone Birthday

NEW YORK — The “2000 Year Old Man” is about to reach…
3 firefighters killed, 2 injured fighting wildfires near Colorado-Utah border

Colorado-Utah Border Wildfires Turn Deadly as 3 Firefighters Are Killed, 2 Injured

Three firefighters were killed and two others were hurt while battling wildfires…
Texas sisters charged with stabbing mom of 5 to death

Texas Sisters Charged in Fatal Stabbing of Mother of Five

Three women, including two sisters, have been accused in the fatal stabbing…
Jacob Frey praises Somali community as Minnesota faces renewed scrutiny over fraud investigations

Jacob Frey Defends Minnesota’s Somali Community Amid Renewed Fraud Investigation Scrutiny

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey addressed members of the city’s Somali community over…
Kash Patel Highlights FBI's Four 'Foreign Transfers of Custody' on Fraud

Kash Patel Spotlights FBI’s Four Foreign Custody Transfers in Fraud Cases

FBI Director Kash Patel said the bureau carried out four separate Foreign…
Chicago heat wave: Chicago weather tomorrow includes Extreme Heat Warning, Heat Advisory for high heat index values

Chicago Heat Wave: Extreme Heat Warning and Heat Advisory in Effect Tomorrow as Heat Index Climbs

CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago is bracing for a stretch of dangerous heat…
Grand Theft Auto VI fans rage over 'greedy' paywalls, $100 price tag for new game

GTA 6 Backlash Erupts as Fans Slam Rumored $100 Price Tag and Greedy Paywalls

Now that’s Grand Theft, indeed. Grand Theft Auto fans are blasting what…
Gun-wielding couple in viral BLM standoff got firepower — and 'a voice' — back after legal saga

St. Louis Couple in Viral BLM Protest Gun Standoff Regain Firearms After Legal Fight

It became one of the most recognizable scenes of 2020: a pair…
Dwayne Johnson is "protective" of 'Moana' live-action because "the animated film was so good"

Dwayne Johnson Says He’s Protective of Live-Action Moana After Animated Film’s Success

“To be able to showcase our Polynesian culture in this way has…