$60M Subway Money Fight: New York Goes to Court

Manhattan, New York City, USATue Mar 17 2026
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which runs New York City’s subway system, has taken the federal government to court over a missing $58‑million payment that could hold up the Second Avenue line’s long‑awaited expansion. The lawsuit, filed in Washington’s Court of Federal Claims, alleges a breach of contract: the Trump administration had promised but failed to release funds that are critical for extending the Q train from 96th Street to 125th Street in East Harlem. If the money does not arrive, the authority warns that construction delays could snowball into higher costs and a domino effect across other projects. The planned extension is part of the original 1920s blueprint for a Second Avenue subway and is already under construction, with completion targeted for 2032.
About half of the $6. 9‑billion budget—roughly $3. 4 billion—is expected to come from the federal government, but President Trump’s decision in October to withhold this money sparked the dispute. The M. T. A. claims that the withheld funds threaten not only commuters but also thousands of union workers who rely on the project for jobs. Governor Kathy Hochul has blamed Trump’s actions for jeopardizing New York’s transit future, stating that the state will not back down. The case highlights how political disagreements can stall infrastructure projects that have been on the drawing board for decades. New York City’s residents now face uncertainty as a major public service waits on federal approval and payment.
https://localnews.ai/article/60m-subway-money-fight-new-york-goes-to-court-750acb5b

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