service under the new ownership. "People
who have been briefed on his plan," said
The New York Times, "said that passengers
might not even notice the changeover
because Wachtel [described as owner of
BillyBey and a partner in a Manhattan law
firm] does not intend to change the logo."
An oldtime New York cabbie would tell
you that the shortest distance between two
points is a straight line. And the Avenues
of Manhattan may be among the last
straight lines in the region. The convolut-
ed, twisty-turny careers of modern com-
muter ferry operators - charges, allega-
tions, complaints, misfortunes and all -
echo conditions a century ago that pro-
duced municipal takeovers. The concept
came up again, before the appearance of
BillyBey.
Still Waters Run Deep
The shape of things to come was pretty
clear, when New York Water Taxi began
running in September 2002. High-wake or
low, dozens of vessels crisscrossing the
lower Hudson and upper Bay churn the
waters, as dictated by laws of physics. If
Waterway took the heat, it was partly
because they had the most boats. They
control more today, and others have
jumped into the pool. New York Water
Taxi has revised its estimate upward, to
"fifteen boats by 2006," according to the
company's new Director of Marine Oper-
ations, Tom Paldino.
Some are predicting that the strained
lines of tugboat tows, damage to the
shoreline and moored craft, are the
inevitable byproducts of highspeed trans-
portation. The remedies, some say, have
less to do with assigning blame, or design-
ing even more efficient vessels, than the
construction of resources that mitigate the
effects of turbulent water. Some of the
potential solutions appear to be opposed
by environmental regulations.
Into the midst of such turbulence,
oceanographic and social, stepped Tom
Fox with the Water Taxi. "How do I say
our boats are low-wake?" he asked, early-
on. "How do I substantiate it? How is it
defined?" He came upon the Rich Passage
regulations from the Seattle area, where
ferry wakes had incited community
action. Certain standards were set. "Our
boats exceed those standards," said Mr.
Fox. "People see us as someone who
cares."
Tom Fox says he was one of the first
Urban Rangers. "That's when I fell in love
with the harbor, and got the idea of con-
necting parks by water - it only took 30
years." About 20 of those were spent actu-
ally building the parks, "including the
Brooklyn Bridge Park, and the Hudson
River Park." He left the latter to pursue
other interests - including the rudiments
of the Water Taxi - the Park's administra-
tion turning mostly to "people who are
neither waterfront people nor park
builders."
The idea that people like looking at
boats, modern and historic, was built into
the original Hudson River Park design,
Tom Fox told us. "We kept a midtown
maritime district. I purposely did not san-
itize the waterfront." Supporting that
original view, Mr. Fox now serves on the
30 • MarineNews • March, 2005
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