Petition updateStop the Penn PlanFinal Penn Plan Vote is Tomorrow (July 27): Make Your Voice Heard.
Trains Before TowersNY, United States
Jul 26, 2022

Thank you to everyone who signed the Trains Before Towers petition against the Penn Plan.

Tomorrow, on Wednesday, July 27, the Public Authorities Control Board (PACB) will meet to vote on the Penn Plan.

Let our public officials know that the current version of the plan is unacceptable.

At the bottom of this note, we have pre-written a message with a list of recipients who should receive the email. It only takes a few seconds to send. You can edit the message to personalize it if you wish.

Send as many messages as you’d like.

If you want take things a step further, call Gov. Hochul’s office and demand she stop the Penn Plan, and instead hold public hearings so that New Yorkers can learn more and get answers to their questions.

You can call Gov. Hochul’s office at 1-518-474-8390. Follow the prompts. If nobody answers, make sure to leave a message.

We deserve a better Penn Plan—one that benefits commuters and doesn’t leave New York taxpayers on the hook.

Send the message today. Make the call. Time is running out. 

Best,

The Trains Before Towers Team

EMAIL MESSAGE TO SEND ELECTED OFFICIALS:

Send to: gov.hochul@chamber.state.ny.gov, Robert.Mujica@budget.ny.gov, Paulin@nysassembly.gov, comrie@nysenate.gov, GiglioJ@nyassembly.gov
hoylman@nysenate.gov, krueger@nysenate.gov, scousins@nysenate.gov
speaker@nysassembly.gov, GottfriedR@nysassembly.gov, info@manhattanbp.nyc.gov, District3@council.nyc.gov empirestation@esd.gov 
jackson@nysenate.gov, stephen.gardner@amtrak.com

Subject Line: I Do Not Support Gov. Hochul's Penn Project.

Email: 

I am writing to you because I am alarmed by the lack of financial transparency around the Penn Project, and I am urging members of the Public Authorities Control Board to vote no on the Penn Project.

There are too many unanswered questions, and the people of New York deserve to fully understand all aspects of the plan and the financial risks it poses to us as taxpayers.

I read in the New York Times that this plan is giving real estate developers an estimated $1.2 billion in tax breaks" to construct ten skyscrapers around the Penn Station area with the idea they will use the profits from those building to upgrade Penn Station.

But there doesn’t seem to be any guarantee from the developers to do so.
What if the developers don’t make a profit? What is the point of the tax break to developers if they are under no obligation to make station upgrades?

I am also unclear about how much this project will cost. I read that if developers don’t pay for upgrades then it’s going to cost $3-$6 billion dollars in New York State taxpayers’ money. Who is this plan really for?

It would be beneficial to create a public forum to give everyday New Yorkers like me the opportunity to ask questions from our elected officials directly and share our thoughts and concerns.

I understand Penn Station needs to be revitalized, but there's no guarantee of that happening with what Gov. Hochul is proposing without financially burdening the people of New York while developers reap all of the benefits.

I hope the Public Authorities Control Board will vote no to the Penn Project and work on creating a plan for Penn Station that benefits the people and is fully transparent.

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