Kangaroos great Wayne Carey has hit out at reports suggesting he and Anthony Stevens almost came to blows during an argument, calling it a “firm conversation.”
The AFL world was shocked earlier this week when SEN’s Sam Edmund reported a run-in between Carey and Stevens, whose relationship was infamously fractured when Carey had an affair with Stevens’ wife while the pair were teammates in 2002.
However, Carey downplayed the incident, saying it had been “blown into something it wasn’t.”
READMORE:The real punishment in coach’s ‘dog’ meltdown
READMORE:Kyrgios stuns world No.1 Medvedev
READMORE:Master coach set to snub club for AFL rivals
“The first story said came to blows and that’s factually incorrect. There were no blows,” Carey told Triple M.
“There was a firm conversation – altercation I think is even too firm to say that occurred.
Wayne Carey has suggested that there was no major altercation between him and Anthony Stevens (Getty)
“I wanted to have a conversation about Stevo, I was worried about him. I said, ‘I’m worried about you’, and he obviously took a little bit of umbrage to say I was worried about him.
“I said I’m worried about (him), I want him to look after himself like people want me to look after myself.
“To say that it was a massive altercation and it came to blows and then we left there and everyone was upset with everyone and it was a big thing is totally incorrect – that’s the disappointing thing about it.”
Carey revealed that he and Stevens ended the night on decent terms, despite what reports had suggested.
“What (the journalist) did leave out was at the end of the night or the evening or late afternoon or whatever it was, Stevo and I actually had a couple of beers together and left together,” he said.
Carey (C) pictured with Kangaroos premiership coach Denis Pagan (L) and teammate Wayne Schwass (R) (Getty)
“We were standing out the front both waiting for our respective Ubers to leave the particular venue. He left that out.”
Stevens was absent from the motorcade of the 1996 premiership team which took place prior to the Kangaroos’ clash against Adelaide at Marvel Stadium on Sunday, with Edmund’s report suggesting he was “shattered” by the run-in with Carey.
“I don’t know whether Stevo was upset the next day or not, and that’s why he didn’t come to the motorcade,” Carey said.
“What I do know about that, and my understanding and I’ve spoken to Arch (Glenn Archer) and I’ve spoken to Kingy (David King) and I’ve spoken to heaps of other players that are close with Stevo and some of those players I’m close with and Stevo wasn’t well.
Wayne Carey and Anthony Stevens clash during a 2003 match-up (Getty)
“He’d had a reasonable night. It would be fair to say. We all had a reasonable day. Stevo maybe bigger than others so he didn’t attend the Sunday.”
The 51-year-old, who is widely considered to be the Kangaroos’ greatest ever player, said the most hurtful part of the story was the impact it has on both he and Stevens’ loved ones.
“What he doesn’t realize is it affects Stevo’s daughters, my daughters – not my son because he’s really young. It affects family members and everyone else. That’s what these types of things do.
“Who cares if Stevo and I had a firm conversation together? How is that an actual story?”
For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter byclicking here!
The backstories and controversies that have ignited feuds involving athletes
The number 51 in the monetary request holds special significance for the group because it is the number of victims in the Christchurch massacre.
Jimeone Roberts drinking at The Irish Times Pub with distinctive black sun tattoo.
On The Irish Times Pub Facebook page, Parashar apologized to Roberts, Eracleous, known neo-Nazis Neil Erikson and Thomas Sewell, and their friend. The Age is not aware of any evidence that Roberts, Erikson, Sewell or their friend were involved in making the demand for money. The pub also sacked the two staff members involved.
“The Irish Times Management team strongly disapproves of the ex-employee’s unprofessional conduct by spitting into the patron’s drink as a consequence of a discussion with the patron over a political topic,” the message said.
In the 10 days since the incident, the pub has received a litany of one-star Google reviews written about its service, many referencing the incident. The campaign was amplified by social media channels with far-right activists co-ordinating across borders to ruin the reputation of the pub.
An audio memo posted to a secret channel and obtained by The Age also suggested using complaints to regulators to apply pressure to Parashar, who was overseas at the time of the incident.
loading
The audio memo said they were considering making reports to Consumer Affairs Victoria, the Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission, taking legal action in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal and reporting the pub to the Melbourne City Council.
“I think we should get the ball rolling, get everything in motion, so when [the owner] does come back from overseas [he] is confronted with emails and f—ing complaints from Melbourne Council, Consumer Affairs, VCAT,” the voice said.
“He’ll be like ‘what the f—, I don’t want to deal with this shit’.”
Police said they were notified of the incident.
“It’s believed a number of men became involved in an altercation with a staff member and have subsequently made a number of demands from the business. As the matter is currently being assessed, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this time,” a police spokeswoman said.
Eracleous pictured in a recent online discussion with other neo-Nazis.
Eracleous, a former Young Liberal member turned neo-Nazi from Victoria, was responsible for a January 19 propaganda video depicting three masked men burning an Aboriginal flag, reciting a white supremacist manifesto and criticizing Greens Senator Lidia Thorpe.
Erikson, a far-right nationalist, has previously been convicted of inciting serious contempt for Muslims by making offensive remarks in a LGBTQI church service. He maintains his innocence of him and is currently appealing his conviction and jail term.
Though not in attendance at the pub but mentioned in the apology request, Thomas Sewell, leader of the Australian nationalist socialist movement, is currently on bail as he awaits trial on allegations he attacked and robbed a group of hikers in regional Victoria. Sewell has pleaded not guilty.
loading
Parashar says he now feels sandwiched between two groups: the neo-Nazis that insisted on the sacking of the staff, and people who think it was wrong to sack the employee who spat in his beer.
“We’re still recovering from the impacts of COVID and the next thing we’re getting dragged into this,” he said.
The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.
BEIJING (AP) — China on Wednesday repeated military threats against Taiwan while appearing to wind down wargames near the self-governing island it claims as its own territory that have raised tensions between the two sides to their highest level in years.
The message in a lengthy policy statement issued by the Cabinet’s Taiwan Affairs Office and its news department followed almost a week of missile firings and incursions into Taiwanese waters and airspace by Chinese warships and air force plans.
The actions disrupted flights and shipping in a region crucial to global supply chains, prompting strong condemnation from the US, Japan and others.
An English-language version of the Chinese statement said Beijing would “work with the greatest sincerity and exert our utmost efforts to achieve peaceful reunification.”
“But we will not renounce the use of force, and we reserve the option of taking all necessary measures. This is to guard against external interference and all separatist activities,” it said.
“We will always be ready to respond with the use of force or other necessary means to interference by external forces or radical action by separatist elements. Our ultimate goal is to ensure the prospects of China’s peaceful reunification and advance this process,” it said.
China says its threatening moves were prompted by a visit to Taiwan last week by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, but Taiwan says such visits are routine and that China used her trip merely as a pretext to up its threats.
In an additional response to Pelosi’s visit, China said it was cutting off dialogue on issues from maritime security to climate change with the US, Taiwan’s chief military and political backer.
Taiwan’s foreign minister warned Tuesday that the Chinese military drills reflect ambitions to control large swaths of the western Pacific, while Taipei conducted its own exercises to underscore its readiness to defend itself.
Beijing’s strategy would include controlling the East and South China seas via the Taiwan Strait and imposing a blockade to prevent the US and its allies from aiding Taiwan in the event of an attack, Joseph Wu told a news conference in Taipei.
Beijing extended the ongoing exercises without announcing when they would end, although they appeared to have run their course for the time being.
China’s Defense Ministry and its Eastern Theater Command both issued statements saying the exercises had achieved their targets of sending a warning to those favoring Taiwan’s formal independence and their foreign backers.
Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen and her Democratic Progressive Party administration are “pushing Taiwan into the abyss of disaster and sooner or later will be nailed to the pillar of historical shame!” Defense Ministry spokesperson Col. Tan Kefei was quoted as saying in a statement on the ministry’s website.
Troops taking part in the exercises had “effectively tested integrated joint combat capabilities,” the Eastern Theater Command said on its Twitter-like Weixin microblog.
“The theater troops will monitor changes in the situation in the Taiwan Strait, continue to conduct military training and preparations, organize regular combat readiness patrols in the Taiwan Strait, and resolutely defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity,” spokesperson Col. Shi Yi was quoted as saying.
Taiwan split with the mainland amid civil war in 1949, and its 23 million people overwhelmingly oppose political unification with China while preferring to maintain close economic links and de facto independence.
Through its maneuvers, China has pushed closer to Taiwan’s borders and may be seeking to establish a new normal in which it could eventually control access to the island’s ports and airspace.
Along with lobbing missiles into the Taiwan Straitthe nearly week-long drills saw Chinese ships and planes crossing the center line in the strait that has long been seen as a buffer against outright conflict.
The US, Taipei’s main backer, has also shown itself to be willing to face down China’s threats. Washington has no formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan in deference to Beijing, but is legally bound to ensure the island can defend itself and to treat all threats against it as matters of grave concern.
That leaves open the question of whether Washington would dispatch forces if China attacked Taiwan. US President Joe Biden has said repeatedly the US is bound to do so — but staff members have quickly walked back those comments.
Beyond the geopolitical risks, an extended crisis in the Taiwan Strait — a significant thoroughfare for global trade — could have major implications for international supply chains at a time when the world is already facing disruptions and uncertainty in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine.
In particular, Taiwan is a crucial provider of computer chips for the global economy, including China’s high-tech sector.
In response to the drills, Taiwan has put its forces on alert, but has so far refrained from taking active countermeasures.
On Tuesday, its military held live-fire artillery drills in Pingtung County on its southeastern coast.
Australia’s recent change of government is a chance to “reset” its troubled relationship with China, but the new administration must “handle the Taiwan question with caution,” a Chinese shipment said Wednesday.
China has brushed aside foreign criticism of its actions, and its ambassador to Australia said he was “surprised” that Australia had signed a statement with the United States and Japan that condemned China’s firing of missiles into Japanese waters in response to Pelosi’s visit.
Xiao Qian told the National Press Club that China wanted to resolve the situation peacefully, but “we can never rule out the option to use other means.”
“So when necessary, when compelled, we are ready to use all necessary means,” Xiao said. “As to what does it mean by ‘all necessary means?’ You can use your imagination.”
In London, the British government summoned Chinese Ambassador Zheng Zeguang to the Foreign Office on Wednesday to demand an explanation of ”Beijing’s aggressive and wide-ranging escalation against Taiwan” following Pelosi’s visit.
“We have seen increasingly aggressive behavior and rhetoric from Beijing in recent months, which threaten peace and stability in the region,” said Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. “The United Kingdom urges China to resolve any differences by peaceful means, without the threat or use of force or coercion.”
___
Associated Press writer Jill Lawless in London contributed to this report.
It was 1992 when Azlan Ang opened his first box of trading cards.
He was eight years old, sitting in a hotel room in Singapore with his older brother while on a family holiday, with a big box of 1991 Upper Deck basketball cards.
“I remember smelling the cards because they had a really distinct smell,” Mr Ang laughed.
Your local paper, whenever you want it.
“I got a few good cards because there was a Scottie Pippen, and I was also trying to go for a (Michael) Jordan.
“It was a blast because as a kid, a big box of cards was really expensive but so exciting.
Mr Ang with his set. Credit: Supplied
“And at the time the concept of selling cards didn’t even exist; it was all about collecting.”
Mr Ang has since spent more than a quarter of a million dollars on trading cards.
He says his collection, which includes NBA, Pokemon, Fortnite Series 1, Magic: The Gathering and Marvel, is valued at $300,000, funded by his full-time employment as a contractor.
Azlan Ang’s card collection includes NBA and Pokemon. Credit: Supplied
Mr Ang said his collecting kicked off last year when he bought a rookie Michael Jordan card for $400.
“And then the docuseries ‘The Last Dance’ came out on Netflix, which follows the story of Jordan,” he said.
“And suddenly the Jordan card exploded to $900 and I remember thinking ‘oh my God, this is a legit thing’ and started analyzing the trends.
“Now the Jordan rookie card is worth so much more.
“But it’s not just about that — it’s also about what cards mean to people.
“They can remind them of things like their first kiss or first memories. When my friend’s father died he wanted to buy Marvel trading cards because they reminded him of his dad. ”
Mr Ang said he found it therapeutic spending hours collecting and arranging his collections in binders for display.
One of Azlan Ang’s most prized cards is a rookie Michael Jordan card. Credit: Supplied
“I’m a perfectionist, and it sounds weird but what I like the most is sitting in my room, putting cards in the sleeves in the right order and then having that sense of completion and accomplishment in what I’ve done,” he said.
“The simple thing about cards is that they’re fun to collect, unlike gold or bonds or shares which I find boring.
“They’re accessible, fun, tangible, infinite, plus you can smell them.
“My advice to anyone wanting to get into trading cards is to find a card you like and then do at least five hours of research into that set.
“And also set yourself a budget because it can be a black hole — I started with $1000 and I’ve now spent $300,000.”
At the time of writing Mr Ang was three cards away from completing a Marvel trading card set which has so far cost him $100,000.
When completed, he said he would be the first person in Australia to have a Professional Sports Authenticator 10-graded set, the highest grade achievable with trading cards.
Most of his collection is in a vault in the United States.
Mr Ang also has a YouTube channel where he opens packs of trading cards and does giveaways, as well as the occasional comedy skit.
The conservationist’s husband went on to thank his mother-in-law Terri Irwin, 58, for taking care of the couple’s 16-month-old daughter Grace Warrior Powell.
Bindi Irwin and Chandler Powell are in the hospital. Credit: Twitter
“Also, thank you Bunny (my awesome mum-in-law) for taking care of Grace while we’ve been in the hospital & I’ve been recovering,” he wrote.
Bindi, 24, was quick to reply to her husband’s message, commenting, “The greatest husband. Most amazing Bunny. Love you beyond words @chandlerpowell9 & @TerriIrwin.
“Go team… tonsils?” she said.
Alongside Bindi, other comments wished the father-of-one a “speedy recovery” and that he “heals quickly and painlessly.”
Chandler, Bindi and Grace. Credit: Instagram / bindisueirwin
Relationship timeline
Bindi and Chandler, who is originally from the US, met when he went to Australia Zoo while in Australia for a wakeboarding competition.
It so happened that Bindi was giving the tours that day.
Bindi went on to post about their meeting at the time, writing on Instagram: “Legendary wakeboarder Chandler Powell and his beautiful family came into @AustraliaZoo yesterday. Wonderful Wildlife Warriors!”
After years of a long-distance relationship, Powell moved to Australia in 2018 and proposed to Bindi the following year.
They married in March 2020 at Australia Zoo and welcomed Grace exactly a year later.
‘sweetest, kindest’
Powell’s tonsillectomy comes a week after the family farewelled its beloved pet echidna, a “family member of 38 years”.
Bindi announced the news on Instagram with a series of photos of the Irwin family and the echidna, which was part of the family before she and her brother Robert were born.
“Saying goodbye to our beautiful family member of 38 years,” she said on Thursday.
“The sweetest, kindest, most wonderful echidna you ever did meet. Rest In Peace, angel.”
The echidna can be seen in the first photo taken of Bindi and Chandler in 2013.
Soon after Bindi shared the news, Robert, 18, reposted the photos with a broken heart emoji.
bindi turns 24
Meanwhile, Bindi has celebrated her 24th birthday with her family, sharing photos on Instagram.
Her caption began: “24, the last year has been filled with enormous growth, unpredictable/ challenging times, and above all, love beyond my wildest dreams.
“Without them realizing, my sweet family has given me the greatest gifts this year through their extraordinary actions each and every day.
“My in-laws, the gift of no distance standing in the way of family bonds,” she said at the time.
The Irwin family. Credit: Instagram
Chandler moved away from his parents Chris and Shannon to marry Bindi in Queensland.
Due to COVID restrictions, his parents were unable to make the 2020 wedding and much of Grace’s first year.
Bindi continued, “My mum, the gift of perseverance, strength, and a shoulder to lean on. My brother, the gift of enthusiasm for life and remembering not to sweat the little things.
“My husband, the gift of steady support and infinite kindness.
Bindi and Chandler Powell with their daughter. Credit: bindisueirwin/Instagram
“My darling daughter, the gift of finding beauty in all things and running towards happiness (and bubbles, which are the same thing to her) with an open heart,” she continued.
“I’m grateful for another trip around the sun and another year to do my best making difference in this world,” Bindi said.
“Thank you to everyone who is part of my journey, I’m tremendously grateful for you.”
For more engaging celebrity content, visit 7Life on Facebook.
More from 7Entertainment
Awkward moment sheriffs serve eviction notice to wrong house.
Awkward moment sheriffs serve eviction notice to wrong house.
The All Blacks show thr disappointment of a fifth loss in their last six tests.
Call it sympathy or understanding, maybe a bit of everyone, but the Springboks have a feel for where the All Blacks are at.
Having lost five of their last six tests, New Zealand are in crisis mode ahead of their sequel with the Springboks at Ellis Park in Johannesburg on Sunday (NZT).
The Boks have experience of this themselves, dipping alarmingly in the last World Cup cycle, only to turn things around in the final year and win the Webb Ellis Cup in Japan.
ALL BLACKS
All Blacks No 10 opens up on his horrific spill in the opening test against the Springboks in Mbombela.
Duane Vermeulen, the bustling No 8 returning to their lineup this weekend and a key member of that 2019 World Cup triumph, believes things can improve for the All Blacks, and New Zealand won’t lack motivation to do that this weekend.
“It hurts, it’s difficult to be down like that. But those downs need to happen for the ups to return,” Vermeulan said at the Springboks’ latest media session.
“It’s like a heartbeat. If you flatline, you’re dead. I’d rather have a weak heartbeat than none at all. The All Blacks will be up for it, we’ll have to be at our best.
“It’s the first time in New Zealand’s history that they’re ranked as low as fifth in the world rankings.
“That will push them to be better and reach a different level on Saturday.”
Springboks coach Jacques Nienaber reinforced his earlier thoughts around the immense pressures being placed on his All Blacks opposite Ian Foster.
Christiaan Kotze/Photosport
The pressure continues to build on All Blacks coach Ian Foster and his captain Sam Cane.
“As coaches, we’ll always have sympathy for each other,” Nienaber said.
“It’s a pressure environment, we’re all under it. If you’re a coach in countries where rugby is such a big sport like New Zealand and South Africa – places with massive history – then you’re going to have a difficult job at times.
“But it’s not only the coaches. The players are also under massive pressure. We all know if you have lost three in a row, for example, you’re under the microscope because of the expectations. It is what it is.”
He also felt it was only a matter of time before the All Blacks returned to their winning ways.
“If you look at the All Blacks, I’m sure they’ll get it right. Our job is just to make sure they don’t get it right against us,” he said.
“They’ve got such a good coaching team with massive experience, they have centurions in their squad and great players. There’s a good structure and organization back home.
“It’s a matter of time. They pushed us hard in Nelspruit, we only scored our second try in the last minute. We’re looking at this current issue with a fair dose of reality. It was tough and could’ve gone either way in certain periods of that match.”
An Adelaide-based family who is pleading with the federal government to allow them to stay in Australia says the country’s visa laws need to change to give more peopleto “fair go”.
Key points:
The family have been in Australia on bridging visas for 10 years
SA Best MLC Frank Pangallo has raised the plight of the family
He says Australia needs to attract more skilled migrants
Mark and Kelly Green moved to Australia from Scotland a decade ago when their daughter Rebecca was nine.
Mr Green and his family are like thousands of bridging visa holders who have become accustomed to living in limbo, and have found it difficult to secure their future in Australia.
Mr Green, a qualified electrician who has been working on solar projects in Australia, has not yet met the criteria for permanent residence because he has been unable to stay with the same employer for the required amount of time.
The family sold all their belongings and had been booked to board a flight back to Scotland late on Wednesday night, but were granted a last-minute extension after Premier Peter Malinauskas called federal Immigration Minister Andrew Giles.
“We were just so stressed out, we didn’t know what was happening and we thought it was the end yesterday, then to have that news at the very end brought to us, it was fantastic,” Mr Green said.
“We can’t thank these people enough, you know, just for that chance to stay a little bit longer and hopefully forever, because this is our home.”
The Green family says Australia has been their home for 10 years.(Change.org)
Mr Green, who stood holding his wife and daughter while speaking to the media, became emotional when he described how much he loved Australia and wanted to stay.
“Sometimes you’ve just got to fight, fight for what’s right,” he said.
“I’ve got these two people here, they mean the world to me and that’s worth fighting for.”
Mr Green said he hoped the immigration minister would make the “right decision”.
“All we can do is plead with him and say please look at our case and look at it with all your heart, we’ve done nothing wrong,” Mr Green said.
‘So much to offer’ Australia
Mr Green said he had now found a supportive employer who was willing to sponsor him for the full amount of time required to meet the permanent residency requirements and he just needed permission from the federal government to stay.
“We’re still not out of the water yet, all the support we can still get would be fantastic,” Mr Green said.
He said he wanted the system to change to make it easier for others like him and his family.
“There’s been people waiting out there for years to try and get into this country, and no wonder why this country is fantastic, it’s brilliant,” he said.
“There’s so much to offer here and people have got so much to offer this country as well and that’s what they’ve got to take into consideration, the rules have got to be changed a little bit to be brought up to the times. It’s not fair that people are stuck in these situations.”
Rebecca Green, 19, said she had hopes of studying at university to become an aged care worker.
“I wanted to study aged care nursing at uni after I finished high school, but the visa we were on didn’t allow them to do that, but all my friends were doing it and I was really excited to go for that course,” she said.
“We just have to wait to see what happens with the permanent residence.
“It would be really good to work in that industry, I think I could contribute to it a lot.”
She said she was “very proud” of her dad.
“I think this has brought us together a lot, we were still really close but we’ve got each other through this,” she said.
Last minute intervention
Premier Peter Malinauskas said the family’s plight was brought to his attention by SA Best MLC Frank Pangallo.
“On the back of Frank Pangallo’s advocacy, I familiarized myself with the matter yesterday and I did form a judgment that this was something I was willing to put a bit of effort into and we were able to establish a phone hook up which I had early yesterday evening with Andrew Giles, the federal Immigration Minister,” the Premier said.
“I was wrapped that he gave a positive response to a request for at least considering the circumstances of the Green family and then delaying their, in effect, deportation.”
Mr Malinauskas said the discussions happened with a tight deadline in mind of the Green’s pending flight that same evening.
“It all happened very quickly… I’m just glad I was able to play a role and help the family out.”
Frank Pangallo said Australia should be making it easier to attract skilled migrants.(Supplied: Facebook)
The Premier said the Greens were the kind of people the state wanted to attract.
“We don’t want to find ourselves in a situation as a state where we’re losing skilled workers that we want to keep, and I think Green family is an example of that.”
Mr Pangallo said the Green family are people Australia needs to attract now.
“Australia is renowned for being the land of the fair go, and people like the Greens have not received a fair go,” he said.
“They are the type of people that Australia desperately needs right now, we need skilled people in this country, we shouldn’t be sending them away and asking them to reapply and come back at great expense to them.”
Mr Pangallo said Australia’s visa system was “broken” and needed fixing.
“This is sending a bad message, it’s not just about one family who wants to stay in Australia, it actually reflects on how complicated, expensive and difficult or visa system is, and it needs to be overhauled.”
The years-long effort to toll vehicles in the most congested parts of Manhattan as a way to bankroll billions of dollars in mass-transit improvements and reduce traffic is no longer stuck in neutral.
Today officials released the long-delayed “environmental assessment” of the proposed Central Business District Tolling Program — touting how it could potentially cut congestion coming into the core of Manhattan by nearly 20%, improve air quality, boost bus service reliability and increase mass transit usage.
The document also outlined what the program may cost drivers entering the toll zone: between $5 and $23 per trip, depending on the time of day and the type of vehicle.
The shift would change truck traffic in Manhattan, in particular; the report estimates truck trips through the central district would drop between 55% and 81% as drivers opt for less expensive routes. But it acknowledged that tolls could increase the number of drivers diverting onto roads in the South Bronx and on Staten Island.
Initially approved in 2019 by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the state legislature, the rollout of so-called congestion pricing has been repeatedly hampered by the federal bureaucracy, including hundreds of highly detailed questions from the feds that pushed back the projected launch date.
But the program that aims to fund $15 billion of subway, bus and commuter rail improvements as part of the MTA’s 2020 to 2024 Capital Plan now appears to be on track, with virtual public hearings set for later this month.
“Bottom line: this is good for the environment, good for public transit and good for New York and the region,” Janno Lieber, MTA chairperson and CEO, said in a statement.
In hundreds of pages made public early today, the Federal Highway Administration, the MTA Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority and the city and state transportation departments detailed how congestion pricing could reduce the number of vehicles entering Manhattan’s central business district between 15% and 20% — and also help the struggling mass transit system.
Midday traffic rolls down Seventh Ave in Midtown this week.
Hiram Alejandro Duran/THE CITY
“Millions of riders are counting on a rapid, robust congestion pricing program that delivers essential reliability and accessibility upgrades,” said Danny Pearlstein, policy director for Riders Alliance, an advocacy group. “It can’t happen soon enough.”
For Whom the Bill Tolls
The assessment spells out, in seven different tolling scenarios, how much motorists may have to pay to enter Manhattan south of 60th Street — with potential rates for non-commercial vehicles ranging from $9 to $23 during peak periods and from $5 to $12 during the overnight hours.
Different vehicle classes would pay different tolls, with the peak E-ZPass rate for small trucks ranging between $12 and $65. For small trucks with E-ZPass, the peak rate could be between $12 and $82.
Overall, about 95% of drivers passing through toll stations run by the MTA use E-ZPass, according to a senior MTA official.
Commercial drivers are wary of the added costs.
“It will impact my company,” said Constantine Savagious, 37, an HVAC technician who was unloading a truck near Penn Station. “They will likely raise the rates for clients who hire them.”
Seven tolling scenarios, from the multi-agency summary of the congestion pricing environmental impact statement.
Tolls would also be higher, officials said, on city DOT-designated “Gridlock Alert Days,” which typically coincide with occasions such as the United Nations General Assembly and the holiday season.
The 2019 state law that spurred the current iteration of congestion pricing made three categories of drivers exempt from the tolls: Emergency vehicles, vehicles transporting people with disabilities and any vehicle belonging to families living inside the Manhattan congestion pricing zone in which the household earns $60,000 or less per year.
State Sen. Leroy Comrie (D-Queens), who oversees a committee with oversight of the MTA, pushed back in January against other proposed breaks, saying “there should be no exemptions.”
But a New Jersey Congressman has threatened to “defund” the MTA’s use of federal dollars unless Garden State motorists receive credit for tolls.
The MTA’s environmental assessment outlined some additional potential loopholes, including one scenario that would exempt taxis, but not for-hire vehicles like an Uber car. Two of the seven scenarios exempt taxis from tolls, and three of seven scenarios exempt city buses. (In the cases where buses are tolled, the MTA would effectively be paying itself; revenue from those fees would move from the MTA’s operation budget into its capital budget, which pays for big infrastructure projects, a senior transit official said.)
The documents spell out the impact of congestion pricing on everything from subway stations expected to take on more riders because of reduced traffic to an expected drop in revenue for yellow taxis between 0.3% and 5% in the New York metro region.
The ripple effects of congestion pricing could affect how riders move through subway stations like Times Square, shown here this week.
Hiram Alejandro Duran/THE CITY
Since 2009, all taxi trips have included a 50-cent surcharge to help the MTA. In 2019, a $2.50 congestion surcharge was added to all taxi trips south of 96th Street in Manhattan. Drivers of for-hire vehicles, such as Uber, limousines and green taxis, pay $2.75 per trip.
MB Hosain, a cabbie for 15 years, said congestion pricing could help unclog city streets, but worried it will also drive away passengers from hailing trips on taxis.
“They will see the price on the meters and decide they want to come out of the car because the trip is too expensive,” said Hosain, who was waiting to pick up fares on the Seventh Avenue taxi line outside Penn Station.
Bhairavi Desai, executive director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, said congestion pricing would be “absolutely crushing” for a transportation sector struggling to bounce back from the pandemic.
“Another congestion surcharge would mean drivers are working to pay taxes rather than to earn an income,” Desai told THE CITY. “It’s a debtor’s prison.”
Faster Subway Escalators?
At some subway stations — including Court Square and Flushing-Main Street in Queens and 14th Street-Union Square and Times Square-42nd Street — the assessment found that an expected shift of drivers to mass transit “would affect passenger flows with the potential for adverse effects” at certain stairs or escalators.
At Times Square-42nd Street, if ridership increases during peak period, the MTA may have to remove a center handrail from the staircase between the station mezzanine and the uptown platform for the 1/2/3 lines.
To keep up with an expected influx of riders at the No. 7 line’s Queens terminal at Flushing-Main Street, the assessment notes that the MTA would have to increase the speed on an escalator connecting the station mezzanine with the street from 100 feet per minute to 120 feet per minute.
“In the case of Flushing-Main Street, there is an escalator that would be affected, depending upon scenario,” the senior MTA official said. “And again, we have a mitigation.”
The same speed increase could also be needed at a 14th Street-Union Square escalator that connects the L line’s platform to the mezzanine inside the sprawling subway complex.
Rachael Fauss, a senior research analyst with Reinvent Albany, told THE CITY that congestion pricing is “urgent” for a transit system that has more than $50 billion of upgrades planned as part of the current five-year capital program. The watchdog group has said the plan is off to a remarkably slow start.
“The MTA originally budgeted to have congestion pricing revenues start arriving in 2021, so getting funding in ASAP remains urgent,” she said. “It is also exactly the type of reliable, environmentally beneficial revenue the MTA needs to fund its capital program.”
There was an error. Please try again later.
Get THE CITY Scoop
Sign up and get the latest stories from THE CITY delivered to you each morning
Is Big Don’s. Is Big Good. That seems to be the consensus among Perth eaters that zealously track the movements of Donovan Macdonald, the self-taught brisket whisperer behind barbeque pop-up, Big Don’s Smoked Meats.
A proponent of woodfired Texas-style barbeque – a cooking style synonymous with beef, dry-rub flavoring and slow, patient cook-times – Macdonald has set up shop everywhere from suburban bowls clubs to bottle shop car parks. Faithful fans patiently queue for hours for a taste of our man’s handiwork while ticketed events seem to sell out the moment Macdonald posts ticket links to Instagram. After five years of serving “underground barbeque” to the masses, Macdonald will be opening a permanent location. The really good news? Macdonald will also be opening a microbrewery and taproom next door.
If everything goes to plan, Big Don’s Smoked Meats and New State Brewing will open in Bayswater – or more specifically, in two neighboring warehouses in an industrial area in Bayswater’s Ashfield neighborhood – in January. As those who have attended a Big Don’s pop-up will attest, casual is the name of the game and this relaxed vibe will carry over to Macdonald’s new HQ. While the shop itself will be able to seat 20 people, the taproom will be able to accommodate 100, giving the compound a combined capacity of 120 dine-in guests. What Macdonald is especially excited about, though, is customers being able to park around the shop and enjoy takeaway tailgate-style off the back of utes – a casual eating style commonly found at North American sporting events and concerts.
Broadsheet Access members get special tables at busy restaurants, tickets to exclusive events and discounts on food, coffee, brand offers and more.
Find out more
Best of all, Macdonald says the move into a permanent serving space will mean great things for his (already impressive) barbeque food, not least because he’s invested in four 4000-liter offset barbeques that recently finished their year-long journey from Texas to Perth . Not only will these barbeques be a source of theater for guests – compared to most Australian barbeque joints that serve from kitchens, meat will be taken straight from the barbeque and cut to order in front of diners; or in Macdonald’s words, “The theater will be unmatched for any barbeque joint in Australia” – they’ll also streamline the cooking process.
“I’m looking forward to not having to cook and transport 500 kilos of meat from one location to another or dealing with the logistics of moving seven loads of salsas and equipment to every pop-up,” he says. “Whenever you do that, you lose quality. We will be able to push the envelope in this space so much in terms of presentation and what we can cook.”
Or in more concrete terms, guests can look forward to more salsas, house-fermented sauces and other condiments gleaned from the Texas barbeque and Tex-Mex worlds. House-made corn tortillas will soon be offered alongside Macdonald’s flour-based tortillas.
New State Brewing, meanwhile, will be a joint venture between Macdonald and Joel Nash, an experienced brewer who was last seen brewing at Innate Brewers. At New State, the duo plans to keep things fluid and brew a constantly rotating range of beers rather than focus on core beers. In addition to being the perfect foil for Macdonald’s barbeque cooking, the beer will largely be sold on a direct-to-customer model and via subscriptions.
Just as Macdonald believes in slow and steady cooking, his shop will operate in a similar manner and only trade two days a week. Events will be a mix of both ticketed and walk-up events and Macdonald plans to release each week’s schedule on Monday. (Fans can rest assured, however, that pop-ups will continue, although on a monthly rather than weekly capacity.) Outside of Big Don’s trading days, the space will also be available for emerging pop-ups and food vendors to use. Not only is this two-day model good for the community, it’s also good for Macdonald.
“This feels like something that’s much more sustainable,” he says. “I’m 37. I want to be able to do this for 20-plus years. The only way I would have the energy to do it while managing family life, and also maintaining a desire for the product, would be to only trade a couple of days a week but make sure that those days feel like a real party.”
Big Don’s Smoked Meats and New State Brewing are due to open in January.
Nope, Elden Ring definitely isn’t on Xbox Game Pass.
Microsoft has confirmed that, while some users saw Elden Ring appear on Xbox Cloud Gaming as part of Xbox Game Pass, it was just a bug that has now been fixed.
“If you’ve seen Elden Ring and other games appear as if they might be playable on Xbox Cloud Gaming or Xbox Game Pass, Microsoft says this is a bug and it has rolled out a fix,” said The Verge editor Tom Warren via Twitter.
if you’ve seen Elden Ring and other games appear as if they might be playable on Xbox Cloud Gaming or Xbox Game Pass, Microsoft says this is a bug and it has rolled out a fix pic.twitter.com/cnYuANBaBo
Several games including Elden Ring, GTA V, and Soul Hackers 2 appeared on store pages and an ad promoting Xbox Cloud Gaming earlier today. But while many speculated that this meant an Xbox Game Pass debut for the titles, it looks as though it was all an unintended mistake.
“We’re aware of a bug that incorrectly displayed some titles as available with Xbox Game Pass Ultimate,” a Microsoft spokesperson told Eurogamer. “We rolled out a fix and this is now updated.”
Of course, it’s no surprise that gamers and Game Pass subscribers jumped to conclusions. After all, it wouldn’t be the first time a game had leaked in this manner before being added to the Game Pass catalog.
Madden NFL 23 was previously listed on Xbox Game Pass Ultimate in the same manner that Elden Ring appeared here.
Equally, we’ve seen plenty of red herrings too. Cyberpunk 2077 was rumored to be added to Xbox Game Pass when in-game footage was spotted in an advertisement for the online service. The game is still yet to appear on Game Pass.
Best Xbox Game Pass Games
However, it looks as though Elden Ring, GTA V, and Soul Hackers 2 remain off the service – a quick look at Xbox Game Pass and Cloud Gaming now confirms that they’re not available to play.
Still, Xbox has an impressive array of games available with Fortnite recently added to its cloud-based service.
Want to find out more about Xbox Game Pass? Check out our rundown of the best Xbox Game Pass games as well as our review of the Xbox Cloud Gaming service.
Ryan Leston is an entertainment journalist and film critic for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter.