You Can’t Be All ThreeTransit for the city, an attraction for visitors, and a liability on the Island’s books. The tram is already part of the MTA system. The only question is whether RIOC is ready to admit it.
April 9, 2026, during the full board meeting of the Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation, Fay Christian said something that should have landed harder than it did. She wished RIOC were not responsible for the tram. Then she asked what it would look like if it were given to the MTA. That was not a passing comment. It was the clearest acknowledgment yet of something Roosevelt Island keeps pretending is not already true: The tram is not fully ours. David Stone looked at the current state of RIOC this week and wrote, "I watch Roosevelt Island. I know what's coming." For tram riders, that feeling may sound familiar. Residents have spent years hearing that the tram belongs to Roosevelt Island while watching decisions about its future drift further from the people who rely on it every day. When a sitting RIOC board member openly wonders whether the MTA should take it over, the question is no longer whether change is coming. The question is whether anyone is willing to admit how much control has already slipped away. It Already Runs Like MTA TransitFor years, residents pushed to integrate the tram into the MTA system. The logic was straightforward: reduce transfer costs, simplify movement, and make Roosevelt Island feel less like an outlier and more like part of the city. In many ways, that effort succeeded. A brief note: Today, the tram functions as just another access point into the network. You can pay anywhere in the system and use it. Once a rider crosses the weekly fare threshold, additional trips are effectively absorbed, meaning frequent users no longer feel the cost of each ride. Students move through it seamlessly under the same subsidized structures that exist across the city. On paper, this is exactly what was asked for. That is also the problem. The integration consequence.The more the tram behaves like part of the MTA, the less it behaves like something the Island controls. The friction that once defined it, the sense that this was a distinct, local channel, has been removed. What remains is a system that is open, scalable, and no longer bounded by the Island itself. Residents who once fought for inclusion are now confronting what inclusion actually means. The tram can no longer feel exclusive or protected. It is part of a broader system designed to move anyone who enters it. And that shift has created a tension that is hard to ignore. RIOC still carries the operational burden.The staffing, the insurance, the maintenance, and the long-term capital upgrades all remain on its books. The tram, as it stands today, is not a profitable asset. It is a subsidized one, and a significant one at that. And that subsidy is rarely discussed in full, particularly when the conversation turns to what the system actually costs to sustain over time. The Red Bus sits inside the same contradiction. It is described as free, but it is not free. It is funded. Its purpose is to move people efficiently toward the tram and the subway, effectively acting as a feeder into the broader transit system. If that system were fully handed over to the MTA, the structure would likely shift. The bus would not be free, but it would be integrated, with transfers absorbing part of the cost in a way that aligns with how the rest of the city operates. Which leads to the question that has been sitting quietly underneath all of this: If the Island has already accepted the benefits of being inside the MTA system, why does it continue to carry the costs as if it were outside of it? The Choice We Keep AvoidingThere are only three paths forward. Not ten. Not a hybrid. Three. The first is to accept what the tram already is and finish the transition. Hand it to the MTA, and hand the red buses with it. Let the system that already benefits from the integration take on the full cost of operating it. Staffing, maintenance, capital upgrades, and long-term risk. All of it. What the Island gains is clarity. What it loses is ownership. The tram stops being “ours” and becomes what it already resembles, just another line in a system that was never designed to prioritize Roosevelt Island in the first place. That may be uncomfortable. It may also be honest. The second option is to take it back, not symbolically but structurally. Remove it from the MTA network. No MetroCard. No OMNY. No quiet subsidies hidden inside weekly caps. Rebuild it as a closed system and price it accordingly. Let the cost of operating it surface where it belongs, directly to the people who use it. That cost will not disappear. It will move. Into fares, into leases, into the broader economics of living on the Island. Because if the tram is truly a private, local service, then its cost will eventually be absorbed through the only mechanism that exists at scale here: land. Higher costs, just redistributed. That is not a reason to reject the option. It is a reason to stop pretending the option is painless. The Third Option: Close ItThe third option is the one history leaves sitting in plain view. Close it. That sounds extreme only because Roosevelt Island has forgotten that access has been closed before. Long before the tram, there was the old bridge elevator, the vertical connection from the Queensboro Bridge down to Welfare Island. The official story belongs to infrastructure: the Island gained other access, the bridge changed the transportation logic, trolley service disappeared, and the elevator eventually became obsolete. But local memory has always carried a different version. In that version, residents tired of being treated as a curiosity beneath the bridge. The Island did not simply lose an access point. It shed a kind of unwanted attention. Maybe the legend is true. Maybe it is not. But legends survive because they explain what official minutes usually avoid. The tram has become the modern version of the same problem. It is transportation, yes. But it is also advertisement, postcard, shortcut, weekend curiosity, social media backdrop, real estate brochure, and invitation. It brings people here who do not fund the Island’s quality of life but still consume it. It makes Roosevelt Island more visible to developers, more legible to speculators, and more vulnerable to the old argument that every open square inch must eventually be made useful to someone else. Closing the tram would be ugly. It would be disruptive. It would be politically radioactive. But it would force the question that every easier option avoids: Is the tram still serving Roosevelt Island, or is Roosevelt Island now serving the tram?
Nothing Is FreeThis is where the Red Bus brings the argument back to earth. At the most recent RIDAC committee meeting on June 18th, 2026, an exchange between President Jones and Ms. Patel, RIOC’s senior vice president of finance, made the point plainly enough. The Red Bus brings in only about $300,000 from a handful of buildings against roughly $1.8 million in annual operating costs. So no, the Red Bus is not free. It is indirectly paid for. The tram is not free either. Nor are the crowds, capital costs, insurance, staffing, maintenance, wear, political evasions, or development pressure that come with keeping Roosevelt Island permanently open as both neighborhood and attraction. The only question is whether the exchange is worth it. Maybe it is. But that case has to be made publicly, with numbers, with tradeoffs, and with a leadership and a board that can visibly negotiate with the City and State on behalf of Roosevelt Island. Not a board that merely receives the burden after the important decisions have already been made elsewhere. Not a corporation that functions as a control valve, absorbing resident anger so it never travels too far up the chain. That is the role RIOC has been left with.It absorbs. In the absence of a decision, RIOC has taken on a role no one formally assigned but everyone relies on. It absorbs. It absorbs the cost of a system that behaves like it belongs to the city. It absorbs the frustration of residents when that system fails. It absorbs the expectations of both, without having full authority over either. That is not governance. It is insulation. A layer that sits between the Island and the state, taking the impact so it does not travel further up the chain. And as long as the structure remains undefined, that role does not change. Because it is easier to direct frustration at the entity closest to you than the one that actually controls the system. This is why the conversation keeps repeating. Not because the problem is new, but because the responsibility is blurred. Until the Island decides what the tram is, RIOC will continue to carry something it cannot fully control and cannot fully escape. And residents will continue to argue over a system whose terms were never clearly set. If one person came to mind while you were reading this, consider forwarding it to them. That kind of sharing is how this work survives. There is no painless option. Hand it over. Take it back. Or close it. What Roosevelt Island cannot keep doing is pretending the tram is local when it is convenient, regional when it is useful, tourist infrastructure when it photographs well, and nobody’s responsibility when the bill comes due.
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genderequalitygoals
genderequalitygoals
Friday, 10 July 2026
You Can’t Be All Three
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You Can’t Be All Three
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