Former New York City Councilwoman Elizabeth Crowley has stepped down from her position as chairperson of the board of Friends of the QNS, a nonprofit organization that she founded to advocate for expanded commuter rail-based transit across the borough.
Crowley said her decision to step down was made in order to focus fully on her candidacy for New York State Senate District 17.
“It has been an honor to serve as the chair of Friends of the QNS,” Crowley said.
The “QNS” proposal was introduced by Crowley to improve transit within her former Council district. Specifically, the plan sought to revive the former Lower Montauk rail line, which stretches nine miles from Hunters Point in Long Island City, through central Queens neighborhoods including Middle Village, Glendale, and Ridgewood, to the Jamaica hub.
This portion of central Queens is commonly referred to as one of the City’s “transit deserts,” since no passenger rail currently serves many of these neighborhoods.
In a 2018 report from the Department of Transportation, it was confirmed that the defunct rail line could be converted to include passenger service at a fraction of the cost of other major expansion projects like Manhattan’s 2nd Avenue Subway.
The New York State Senate district seat that Crowley is currently running for would include a vast majority of the former Lower Montauk Line within its boundaries. It was recently created by state lawmakers following the 2020 Census and will include Glendale, Maspeth, Richmond Hill, Ridgewood, Woodhaven, Long Island City, Sunnyside, Woodside, Ozone Park, and Greenpoint in Brooklyn within its boundaries.
But while Crowley is stepping down from her position as the board’s chair, she said she vows to continue to advocate not only for the QNS rail but for a greenway along the QNS line, if elected.
“Queens has been growing at a tremendous pace, especially Long Island City,” Crowley said. “For this borough to keep up with its growth, we need to provide better transit to our residents. It’s not ambitious, it’s common sense.”
This proposal to restore the former commuter rail is similar to Gov. Kathy Hochul’s 14-mile IBX plan, which seeks to add a train line from Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Woodside, Queens.
Both use existing, underused train rights-of-way, converting them to passenger service from strictly freight service.
Crowley also indicated that she would work to include a dedicated bike lane running parallel to QNS, because “an intolerable” number of bicycle accidents and fatalities have been occurring in recent years.
“If we want people to use alternative transportation, we want them to feel safe as they do so. A slightly revised QNS ‘rail and trail’ plan would help that goal,” Crowley said.
5 comments:
At least the QNS line is a route that makes sense. The IBX route is idiotic and will never have more than a handful of riders.
It seems that she's always running. How many times has she ran for office?
Take Lizzie over AOC any day !
Liz just fucking go away into obscurity. It seems like her full time job is running for office.
Stop riding the coattails of the Crowley name and just fade away.
Time to repurpose the endles hours of this cacyphonous 'hausfrau' from her shady and disloyal past and present. Since her monstrously failed record of public service was a karmic disaster, I hear that The View (read, 'The SPEW') is looking for another 'chumpy-frumpy-lumpy' squawk-box/puppet to fill one of their sunken anchor chairs——à la Joy-less Be-whore, I mean Joy Behar: We have a winner!
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