New York — Gov. Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio want to use tax revenue from legal marijuana sales to help fix the city’s crumbling subway system.

The mayor and governor outlined a plan today to revamp the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The proposal would also use revenue from internet sales taxes and tolls for driving on some city streets to fund repairs.

Only a portion of total revenue from marijuana sales taxes would go to the MTA plan, according to the New York Post.

The tolls, also known as “congestion pricing,” have been debated in Albany and the city repeatedly. Tuesday’s announcement marks the first time de Blasio has supported the idea, according to NBC New York.

In the past, the mayor has preferred to use a tax on the wealthy, which Cuomo has opposed, according to the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle.

"I still believe a millionaires tax provides the best, most sustainable revenue source for the transit improvements our city needs," de Blasio said in a statement, according to the Post. "But the time to act is running out, and among all alternatives, congestion pricing has the greatest prospects for immediate success. In light of this reality, it is my hope that critics of congestion pricing will join me in acknowledging its necessity."

Cuomo and de Blasio have been sparring for years over whether the city or state should bear more responsibility for funding the MTA, the D&C said. The authority oversees the city's subways, bus lines and some commuter rail systems.

Major parts of the proposal would need approval from the Legislature, which is in the midst of budget negotiations with Cuomo. Members have varying views on congestion pricing and how to legalize marijuana, including where tax revenue from sales should go, according to the D&C.

The plan does not detail how much marijuana revenue would go to the MTA and it has few details on how much the new tolls would cost, according to the D&C. The proposal envisions automatic tolling structures that would charge drivers via E-ZPass or a bill mailed to their home.

Tolls would be implemented at 61st Street and points south in Manhattan, the D&C said.

Cuomo’s office expects $300 million a year in new tax revenue from his proposed marijuana program.

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