New York
Related: About this forumThink New York Transit Is Bad? Just Wait.
By CHARLES E. SCHUMER, KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND, ROBERT MENENDEZ and CORY A. BOOKER
'In the past few weeks, commuters in New York and New Jersey have been dealing with the chaos caused by the derailments of an Amtrak train and a New Jersey Transit train in New Yorks Penn Station. While the accidents themselves were minor, by closing down tracks, they provided a stark preview for what life could soon be like if we dont follow through with critical investments to improve our infrastructure.
Alarmingly, if we dont act soon to repair the two tunnels under the Hudson River, that same reduction in service our region experienced last week will become a permanent reality.
The current tunnels under the Hudson River were built in 1908 and are rapidly deteriorating. This problem was exacerbated by Hurricane Sandy, which filled the tunnels with corrosive salt water, and engineers now estimate that without major overhauls the tunnels are likely to fail within the next 10 years. The closing of either tunnel would be devastating because it would essentially shut down the Northeast Corridor, the transit route from Boston to Washington that produces over $3 trillion in economic output a full 20 percent of the national gross domestic product.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/11/opinion/think-new-york-transit-is-bad-just-wait.html?
greymattermom
(5,794 posts)What airport does he use in New York? How does he get there? Maybe this Gateway project affects him personally.
elleng
(136,170 posts)Maybe we'll see.
LongTomH
(8,636 posts)Squinch
(52,797 posts)TexasTowelie
(116,855 posts)New York commuters are fuming about the latest train derailment that has canceled countless trains and left Penn Station packed with frustrated people. No, not the one from two weeks ago. Or a few weeks before that. The one that happened Monday, and has caused such a disruption to commutes that service underneath the Hudson will be severely limited until at least Thursday.
This particular catastrophe began when a NJ Transit train derailed, with three cars coming off the tracks and one losing a wheel in the process. Because of Penn Stations crowded and completely deficient infrastructure, one disruption cascaded into many, demonstrating how one transit system that is suffering through deep neglect can drag down the entire network. Penn is shared by Amtrak, the Long Island Rail Road, and NJ Transit, so commutes are now bungled across the entire Eastern Seaboard as the derailed train damaged a switch machine, cutting service at eight of twenty-one tracks at Penn Station. So instead of having a single line disrupted, the busiest train station in the United States has seen its service cut by more than a third during the middle of a work week.
The recurrence of derailments is indicative of the metropolitan areas decrepit transit infrastructure, one that badly needs federal funding for another tunnel underneath the Hudson, so that the current tunnel can be repaired (from Sandy, which happened in 2012) and service can keep up with the growth of the New Jersey waterfront. Theres supposedly help on the way, but its not coming anytime soon. At some point, officials say, in the next ten years, LIRR trains will be able to go to Grand Central, providing an alternative for stranded Long Island residents and alleviating some track congestion at Penn. But that project is billions over budget and years behind, with the MTA and governor scarcely mentioning it over the past several years. For practical purposes, it might as well not even exist.
The true silver bullet for sparing New York City from decades of transit madness would be a new cross-Hudson tunnel, something that the Obama administration embraced and the Trump transition team seemed to support. Senator Chuck Schumer appeared ready to sell his soul for that much-needed tunnel, but it looks like he wont even get the chance. The Trump administration has slashed federal infrastructure grants, and Democrats have embraced a resistance politics that has thrown any earlier overtures toward cooperation completely out the window. But its not like Trump is offering the money anyway (or would do anything that Democrats could take credit for).
Read more: http://www.villagevoice.com/news/the-horrible-future-of-new-yorks-mass-transit-is-here-9853366