History and details of the Ferry:
The Staten Island Ferry is a passenger ferry service operated by the New York City Department of Transportation that runs between Manhattan Island and Staten Island. The ferry departs Manhattan from South Ferry, near Whitehall Circle, at the southernmost tip of Manhattan near Battery Park. On Staten Island, the ferry arrives and departs from St. George Ferry Terminal on Richmond Terrace, near Richmond County Borough Hall and Richmond County Supreme Court. Service is provided 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. The Staten Island Ferry is the most reliable form of mass transit, with an on-time performance of over 96 percent. The Staten Island Ferry has been a municipal service since 1905, and currently carries over 21 million passengers annually on the 5.2-mile run.
The five mile journey takes about 25 minutes each way. The ferry is now free of charge, though riders must disembark at each terminal and reenter through the terminal building for a round trip to comply with Coast Guard regulations regarding vessel capacity and the placeholding optical turnstiles at both terminals. Bicycles may also be taken on the lowest deck of the ferry without charge. In the past, ferries were equipped for vehicle transport, at a charge of $3 per automobile; however, vehicles have not been allowed on the ferry since the September 11, 2001 attacks.
For most of the 20th century, the ferry was famed as the biggest bargain in New York City. It charged the same five cent fare as the New York Subway but the ferry fare remained a nickel when the subway fare increased to 10 cents in 1948. In 1970 then-Mayor John V. Lindsay proposed that the fare be raised to 25 cents, pointing out that the cost for each ride was 50 cents, or ten times what the fare brought in. On August 4, 1975, the nickel fare ended and the charge became 25 cents for a round trip, the quarter being collected in one direction only. The round trip increased to 50 cents in 1990, but then was eliminated altogether in 1997.
There is commuter parking at the St George Ferry terminal, which is also the terminus of the Staten Island Railway. On the Manhattan side the terminal has convenient access to select MTA NYCT Bus (M1, M6, M9, M15, X90) and Subway (1 N R W trains at South Ferry – Whitehall Street and 4 5 trains at Bowling Green) connections. The ferry ride is a favorite of tourists to New York as it provides excellent views of the Lower Manhattan skyline and the Statue of Liberty. The ferry, notably like the Subway system, runs twenty-four hours a day, with service continuing overnight after most day peak traffic has ceased.
The route of the Staten Island Ferry across Upper New York Bay is shown in yellow on a TERRA satellite photo of New York Harbor
In addition to the ferry, the city also provides a number of Manhattan to Staten Island bus services, but the island has no passenger rail connection to any other Borough, either by bridge or underground.
And yesterday once again Staten Island Ferry hit into a dock at at the St. George terminal on Staten Island, Saturday at around 9:30 a.m. hurting dozens of people. The same ferry crashed in 2003 killing 11 people.
The ferry, Andrew J. Barberi, injured a total of Thirty-seven people, according to the statement made by Jim Long, a spokesman for the Fire Department.
“As the ship was preparing to dock in Staten Island in St. George, there was a steering failure and the ship” hit the pier, Mr. Rowe said.
Charles Rowe, a spokesman for the Coast Guard said 252 passengers and 18 crew were on board the ferry when it crashed. 17 passengers were taken to the hospital including a woman who was seriously injured.
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