Jay Walder
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Bike-Share Arrives in Queens as Citi Bike Marks Its First Expansion
Citi Bike's first station in Queens is now up and running, with 90 more coming to Long Island City, Greenpoint, Williamsburg, and Bedford-Stuyvesant by the end of August. It's Citi Bike's first expansion since launching a little more than two years ago.
August 5, 2015
Citi Bike Installs New Software, Laying the Foundation for Better Service
It's the beginning of the end for Citi Bike's software troubles.
March 30, 2015
Ex-MTA Chiefs: Fund the Capital Plan, Don’t Gamble With the Transit System
With the election over and Albany in session, the time for tiptoeing around the $15.2 billion gap in the MTA's next five-year capital program is over. Today, three former MTA chiefs lined up to say that, one way or another, the plan must be fully funded.
January 13, 2015
Citi Bike 2.0: New Owners Hire Jay Walder and Promise Major Expansion
It's official: Alta Bicycle Share, the company that runs Citi Bike, has a new owner, an infusion of cash, and a fresh face at the top -- longtime transit executive Jay Walder. At a press conference this afternoon, the new team promised to correct Citi Bike's blunders and double the system's size by the end of 2017.
October 28, 2014
MTA Identifies $2 Billion in Savings — Now Comes the Hard Part
Jay Walder's surprise resignation announcement last week overshadowed some important news about the MTA's finances: The agency has identified $2 billion in savings in its capital program [PDF], which maintains and expands the transit system, but expects $1 billion less in federal assistance. That brings the total gap in the five-year, $26 billion capital plan to $9 billion that must be accounted for by the end of the year. This enormous deficit will define the political context in which Governor Andrew Cuomo chooses Walder's replacement.
July 26, 2011
Walder Praised After Resigning; Successor Will Be Thrust Into Era of Scarcity
In his relatively brief time at the helm of the MTA, Jay Walder earned widespread plaudits for introducing technological innovations while guiding the agency through increasingly perilous financial straits. His departure comes at a critical moment for the transit agency. With a $9 billion deficit facing the MTA's capital program at the end of this year, whoever replaces Walder will need political skill and technical expertise to spare transit riders another round of enormous fare hikes or service cuts. Even the most competent transit executive will have a hard time pulling it off, and leadership from the governor's office and the state legislature will be absolutely necessary.
July 21, 2011
Jay Walder Resigns as MTA Chief, Effective October 21 [Updated]
After a two-year tenure during which he earned the praise of transit advocates as a skilled and innovative leader, MTA Chair Jay Walder has announced that he will step down effective October 21. Walder, who was appointed by governor David Paterson in July 2009 and took the CEO position that October, will be taking the reins of the MTR Corporation, a Hong Kong-based rail company.
July 21, 2011
Walder: MTA Commitment to Open Transit Data Is For Real
At a conference at Google's Chelsea office last night, MTA Chair Walder said all the right things about working collaboratively with software developers, confirming the agency's dramatic turnaround on open transit data.
May 6, 2010
Off-Peak Discounts for NYC Transit: An Intriguing Idea
Discounting off-peak transit service could be a boon to New York City's transportation and quality of life, so long as revenues can be found to make up for the likely farebox shortfall.
October 22, 2009
Jay Walder’s Well-Placed Priorities: Doing More With New York City Buses
“In London, you
carry nearly twice as many people in the bus system as you do on the
Underground.” In New York, the opposite is true. “We must close the gap and
make more of the bus system.”
October 21, 2009