Metro Takes $8 Million Sequestration Hit
Furloughs could cost another $10 million, with ridership already declining as fares rise.
The Washington-area transit system will lose about $8 million of the $150 million in funding Metro gets from the federal government each year, the Washington Post has reported.
The reduction will affect long-term projects, such as bus purchases and station improvements, according to Carol Kissal, Metro’s chief financial officer. It could also delay and scale-down a project to replace Metro Smartcards with a system that allows passengers to pay for rides by credit card, Kissal said, according to the Post.
Metro had been bracing for $12 million in cuts to federal funding, which is matched by local jurisdictions, the paper said. The Office of Management and Budget alerted the transit agency on March 1 that the reduction would come in lower, at $8 million.
(Image via Wai Chan/Shutterstock.com)