Itās a cycle of insanity.
Gov. Hochul claims congestion pricing reduces traffic in Manhattan ā but rather than enjoy the purported benefits, car-hating city bureaucrats are quietly taking steps to make traffic worse, The Post has learned.
The Department of Transportationās latest scheme ā which requires no government approvals and could happen as soon as the spring ā calls for widening Sixth Avenueās bike lane from 6 feet to 10 feet between West 14th Street in Chelsea to West 35th Street in Herald Square.
To do that, the agency will completely eliminate one of the four vehicle lanes ā welcoming back gridlock to the bustling thoroughfare even as the controversial tolls are supposed to eliminate traffic, critics said.
āThis is New York City, not the Tour de France,ā raged NYC Council Minority Leader Joann Ariola (R-Queens).
āThe anti-car insanity has gotten so extreme. The Department of Tyrants is not just trying to make it impossible for anyone to drive in this city, it is willing to jeopardize the safety of New Yorkers by creating conditions that will seriously impede emergency responders. Where is Elon Musk and DOGE when you need them?ā
Eliminating a car lane will just make the avenue less safe because vehicles āwill have a harder time navigating,ā predicted Manhattan activist Maria Danzilo.
āThis is really serving the delivery-app lobby and delivery workers who use [electric bikes] because regular bikes arenāt served by this change,ā she said.
The DOT unveiled the controversial plan Monday before Community Board 5ās transportation committee.
DOTās project manager Preston JohnsonĀ tried to drum up support by citing statistics showing bike volume increased along the targeted strip by 20.6% from 2019 through 2024 and 35.2% on weekends.
Bike accidents involving cars and bikes along the strip over the same period resulted in 345 injuries, including four deaths, he also told the board, whose committee OKed the proposal 10-2, but worried about more gridlock and questioned why the public didnāt get an earlier warning.

Critics who learned of the plan from The Post called it an insult to everyday New Yorkers.
DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriquezās āhypocrisy is off the chart,ā said Councilman Robert Holden (D-Queens)
āWhat heās really doing is giving a giant middle finger to hardworking New Yorkers, proving exactly why we need President Trump to not only kill the congestion scam tax for good, but also crack down on the DOTās insane street designs that manufactured the gridlock in the first place.ā
Critics say the project specifically thumbs its nose at President Trump, who told The Post last month he plans to ākillāĀ congestion pricingĀ in Manhattan through the federal Department of Transportation and also vowed to rid Big Apple streets of traffic-clogging bike lanes.Ā

āIt sounds like revenge over Trump weighing in on congestion pricing and promising to axe bike lanes, and also further proof that the DOT has been completely co-opted by radical bike nuts that donāt care about the biz world,ā ripped Jason Curtis Anderson, a co-founder and policy director at the nonprofit One City Rising.
Eric McClure, executive director of StreetsPAC, said the street-safety group āstrongly supportsā the redesign.
āWeāve all seen the data on the reduction in traffic volumes since congestion pricing was implemented, and the eye test shows that three travel lanes are plenty for free-flowing motor vehicle traffic,ā said McClure, who lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
The project is also warmly endorsed by Transportation Alternatives, the powerful anti-car group that critics say has incestuous relationship with DOT, indirectly lobbies for Uber and Lyft and wields a lot of power with lefty officials.
DOT spokesman Scott Gastel insisted the project was conceived off community input, and the data used to justify it was pulled from the stripās traffic volume before the first congestion tolls were collected in January and more cars were on the road.
He claimed the āproject is designed to specifically address congestionā and said he agency doesnāt anticipate āany significant changesā to travel speeds.
Pedestrians and motorists on Sixth Avenue panned the plan.
āItās a horrible idea,ā said Madigata Gassama, a 27-year-old Uber driver. ā[City officials] donāt care about anybody.ā
āItās just bullsāt! This city is run by corruption,ā barked Ana Mani, 35, a Chelsea resident who drives daily.
āI hate it. I canāt even park my car in front of my house, and now theyāre removing all these things. Itās dangerous for cyclists, too.ā
Additional reporting by Gabrielle Fahmy and Matthew Sedacca.