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 April 8, 2022 • Schneps Media 
 Disparity at the dock 
 NYC Ferry riders became even wealthier, whiter during pandemic 
 BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 Riders of the heavily-subsidized  
 NYC Ferry system  
 became even wealthier and  
 whiter during the pandemic, according  
 to city statistics. 
 Annual surveys by the Economic  
 Development Corporation  
 — which oversees thewaterborne  
 transit system — show that in  
 2021  the  average  income  of  passengers  
 jumped to six figures at  
 $100,000-$149,999, compared to  
 $75,000–$99,999 for both 2020  
 and 2019. 
 In a system long criticized for  
 serving largely the well-off and  
 white living along the Big Apple’s  
 waterfront, a mere 32% of passengers  
 identified as non-white  
 or multiracial last year, declining  
 slightly from 34% in 2020, and  
 36% in 2019. 
 The city questionnaire also  
 found that more out-of-towners  
 are coming back to the ferries, as  
 tourism began  recovering from a  
 COVID slump in 2021. 
 Last year 88% of ferry riders  
 were residents of the Five Boroughs, 
  compared to an all-time  
 high of 95% during 2020, and  
 86% in 2019. 
 EDC’s most recent report gathered  
 data from 4,100 people in  
 early October. The figures appear  
 to have been published in December, 
  according to its hyperlink  
 address, but have not previously  
 been reported. 
 The chairperson of the City  
 Council’s Transportation Committee  
 lamented that the ferry  
 system has continued to leave out  
 needier New Yorkers, despite footing  
 the bill for the service through  
 their tax dollars. 
 “The communities that are in  
 need, that are a part of transit deserts, 
  and  that have  lower household  
 incomes, those are not the  
 communities,  unfortunately,  that  
 have the pleasure of having a ferry  
 system,”  Queens  Councilmember  
 Selvena Brooks-Powers said.  
 “We need to make sure that it’s  
 not leaving out a community that  
 could greatly benefit from the access  
 and from it being subsidized,  
 quite honestly.” 
 The most popular route remains  
 LOCAL NEWS 
 the East River service, transporting  
 locals living in some of the  
 wealthiest parts of Brooklyn like  
 Williamsburg and Dumbo, and  
 which also had the largest share of  
 six-figure earners. 
 The ferry stats buck trends  
 found  in  the subways  and  buses, 
   which  are  run  by  the  state’s  
 Metropolitan Transportation  
 Authority. 
 More straphangers stayed on  
 the rails and the roads in poorer  
 sections of the city like the  
 Bronx, compared to wealthier  
 Manhattan during the  first year  
 of the pandemic, a report by former  
 Comptroller Scott Stringer  
 detailed last year. 
 Stringer at the time chalked the  
 discrepancy up to people at whitecollar  
 jobs staying remote while  
 frontline workers kept commuting  
 throughout the health crisis. 
 Buses — whose ridership tends  
 to be more lower income and from  
 communities of color than the  
 subways — have consistently carried  
 a higher percentage of their  
 pre-pandemic  passenger  levels  
 than trains. 
 Critics have  for years  slammed  
 the steep public cost to keep the  
 ferry service afloat, with EDC  
 subsidizing each $2.75 trip with  
 about $9. 
 The system, which is overseen  
 by EDC but operated by private  
 company Hornblower, was  
 a pet project of former Mayor  
 Bill de Blasio. 
 Hizzoner pitched it as a boon  
 for poorer New Yorkers without  
 good transit access, even though  
 officials knew it was primarily being  
 used by the rich from the getgo, 
  the New York Post revealed in  
 early 2020. 
 De Blasio supplied a $23 million  
 infusion of cash shortly before  
 he left office, and EDC voted  
 to start churning through city tax  
 dollars for the first time to fund  
 the service, The City reported. 
 Previously, the quasi-public city  
 nonprofit diverted proceeds from  
 its real estate portfolio to pay for  
 the ferries. 
 The City Council is pushing to  
 fund more expansions of the ferry  
 system in the upcoming budget. 
 The Council wrote in its official  
 response to Mayor Eric Adams’s  
 preliminary spending proposal  
 Friday that more stops should  
 come to the boroughs outside of  
 Manhattan, arguing that it will  
 give more New Yorkers access to  
 transit while “stabilizing” the current  
 system as ridership recovers  
 from the pandemic. 
 Ferry passenger numbers have  
 always been a mere fraction of the  
 city’s subways and buses. 
 The latest counts from the final  
 three months of 2021 registered  
 11,688 average weekday  
 riders, 82.5% of same time in  
 2019 and 12,984 on weekends,  
 which was actually 18% above  
 pre-COVID figures. 
 The subways carried an average  
 2.66 million a day during the last  
 quarter of 2021 and 1.2 million  
 on buses, about 57% and 63%  
 of pre-pandemic figures, an am- 
 NewYork Metro analysis of MTA  
 data found. 
 An  EDC  spokesperson  said  
 that  the  ferry  remains  an  affordable  
 transit  option  for  
 all New Yorkers. 
 “As ridership recovers from the  
 pandemic,  NYC  Ferry  continues  
 to offer affordable and accessible  
 transit for all New Yorkers – for  
 the same fare as a subway ride,”  
 said Mary Mueller in a statement.  
 “We proudly serve 25 landings  
 across all five boroughs and will  
 stay focused on running a system  
 that is helping to power the  
 city’s recovery.” 
 PHOTO BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 An NYC Ferry goes down the  
 East River. 
 EDC 
 A graphic of riders’ incomes by NYC Ferry route.