NYU Langone pleaded with Hochul for congestion pricing exemptions for vulnerable patients, staff

Leaders at NYU Langone Health urged Gov. Kathy Hochul to craft congestion pricing exemptions for burdened patients and staff — a searing plea that went unheeded days later when she announced the hated Manhattan toll program’s return.

The letter sent Monday — and exclusively obtained by The Post — warned Hochul that NYU Langone patients and health care workers were uniquely positioned to suffer under congestion pricing.

The academic medical center along First Avenue is “deeply” embedded in the toll zone below 60th Street, with 70% of its patients living outside it, wrote Joseph Lhota, the system’s executive vice president — who previously served as Metropolitan Transportation Authority chair.

“We have heard directly from patients who are concerned about how congestion pricing will impact their ability to access our facilities for care,” he wrote.

“(Congestion pricing) tolls are an expense that many patients cannot afford.”

NY Langone leaders pleaded with Gov. Kathy Hochul to craft congestion pricing exemptions for their patients and staff. Matthew McDermott

But the congestion pricing revamp unveiled Thursday by Hochul — which would impose a $9 daytime base toll starting in the New Year — offers no such exemption, meaning Langone patients who drive will have to pay to make their appointments.

Lhota noted that taking public transportation is simply not an option for many patients.

“Particularly for immunocompromised individuals, those with mobility challenges, or those in urgent need of medical attention, the use of a vehicle is not a matter of choice but of necessity,” he wrote.

Likewise, Lhota also pressed for a toll exemption for Langone employees, noting nearly 20,000 live outside the congestion pricing zone south of 60th Street in Manhattan.

Gov. Kathy Hochul said congestion pricing will launch with $9 tolls in January. James Keivom

NYU Langone patients and staff who drive will have to pay $9 to get to the medical center. New York Post

“While the majority of NYU Langone employees utilize public transportation, some employees drive to work for a variety of reasons, including a lack of public transportation where they live, incompatible transit schedules (particularly around overnight shifts) or because they are responding to an emergency while on call,” the letter states.

“As the only major academic medical center located in the heart of the Zone, Congestion Pricing could impact our ability to recruit and retain staff,” it continues. “This could exacerbate existing health care workforce challenges.”

The governor’s office didn’t immediately return a request for comment Friday.

Additional reporting by Vaughn Golden

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