NYC's transit budget is short $16 billion. Here are the proposed cuts, as the governor seeks funds

FILE - Pedestrians cross Delancey Street as congested traffic from Brooklyn enters Manhattan over the Williamsburg Bridge, March 28, 2019, in New York. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the state agency governing New York City transit, formally recognized the Governor's indefinite suspension of a revenue-generating vehicle toll, voting yes on a resolution to delay the implementation of $16.5 billion in subway and bus projects. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — New York's public transit system will stop work on a planned subway line expansion and retreat from other maintenance and improvement projects because of a $16.5 billion shortfall caused by Gov. Kathy Hochul's decision to halt a plan to fund the projects through “congestion” tolls imposed on Manhattan drivers.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority board took a formal vote Wednesday to delay the tolling program. It had been on track to launch June 30 before Hochul's surprise announcement of an unspecified “pause” in implementing the program.

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