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NJ TRANSIT MOBILE TICKETING NOW AVAILABLE TO ALL BUS CUSTOMERS

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NJ TRANSIT MOBILE TICKETING NOW AVAILABLE TO ALL BUS CUSTOMERS

Monthly Pass Purchase Available April 28 via MyTix on all bus routes

April 27, 2015

NEWARK, NJ — As part of an ongoing effort to improve the overall customer experience, NJ TRANSIT today announced the expansion of its MyTixmobile ticketing app to all intrastate bus routes in New Jersey.  Beginning tomorrow, April 28th, customers will be able to utilize their mobile device to purchase and display monthly intrastate and intra-commuter bus passes for all NJ TRANSIT routes on their mobile devices. The feature is already available on all rail lines and on South Jersey bus routes and routes serving Port Authority Bus Terminal, Lower Manhattan and GeorgeWashington Bridge.

“The feedback from our customers regarding MyTix mobile ticketing has been overwhelmingly positive,” said Transportation Commissioner and NJ TRANSIT Board Chairman Jamie Fox. “We’re pleased to expand its availability statewide and provide another amenity to make travelling more convenient for our customers.”

“Time and again we have heard from our customers that they love the ease and convenience of MyTix mobile ticketing,” said NJ TRANSIT Executive Director Veronique “Ronnie” Hakim.  “This expansion of the mobile ticketing app gives all of our bus customers the ability to treat their smart phones as both a ticket vending machine and a monthly bus pass all in one.”

MyTix is available for free download on any web-enabled iOS or Android device, via the App Store or Google Play.  To purchase monthly bus passes via MyTix, customers must first install the app and then create an account, which will securely save customers’ profile information and purchase history for ease of use.  Bus monthly passes self-activate at midnight on the first day of the calendar month for which they are valid and remain active throughout the entire month.  Customers then simply display the monthly pass on their mobile device to the bus operator when boarding the bus.

NJ TRANSIT first introduced MyTix in April 2013 as a pilot program for rail customers on the Pascack Valley Line, as well as between Penn Station New York and the Meadowlands Rail Station for special events, to test the functionality of the app and determine the feasibility of expanding it to other rail lines.  In September 2013, NJ TRANSIT expanded MyTix to the Main/Bergen County and Port Jervis lines, followed in October by the Montclair-Boonton and Morris & Essex lines, and in November to the North Jersey Coast and Raritan Valley lines.  The rail system-wide rollout was completed in December 2013 with the inclusion of the Northeast Corridor and Atlantic City Rail Line.  In September 2014, MyTix was first introduced to bus customers in South Jersey on 59 bus routes, serving communities throughout South Jersey, as well as Philadelphia.   In January of this year,MyTix was expanded further to routes serving Port Authority Bus Terminal, Lower Manhattan and George Washington Bridge.

Many improvements made to the agency’s MyTix app were the direct result of valuable feedback from customers using the app during the gradual rollout. Since its 2013 introduction, MyTix has already become very popular among NJ TRANSIT customers.  To date, customers have established more than 468,000 accounts through MyTix and purchased more than 5.46 million tickets.

For more information on MyTix, visit njtransit.com and go to “Ticket Options,” then click on “MyTix” from the drop-down menu.

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NJ TRANSIT SET TO BEGIN PUBLIC HEARINGS ON THE PROPOSED 9% FARE INCREASE

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Public comment encouraged at locations across the system
April 20, 2015

NEWARK, NJ —Throughout the past five years, NJ TRANSIT held the line on fare increases while maintaining high quality services and implementing new customer amenities including MyTix, Departurevision, and MyBus Now.

However, costs such as contract services – Access Link, the organization’s paratransit service, Hudson-Bergen Light Rail and private carriers – and healthcare and benefits, general liability insurance, workers’ compensation and pensions have steadily risen. As a result, NJ TRANSIT has been left with a significant budget gap.

Although NJ TRANSIT has identified more than $40 million in reductions in overtime, fuel savings, energy and vehicle parts efficiencies, the agency still faces an approximate $60 million budget gap for the 2016 fiscal year. To close the gap, fare and service adjustments are being proposed.

NJ TRANSIT will hold nine scheduled public hearings and one information session beginning Saturday, May 16, 2015 to allow the public the opportunity to learn more about the proposed fare increases and service changes and offer comments before the plan is considered by the Board of Directors on July 8, 2015.

The proposed service and fare changes would take effect in September 2015 and on October 1, 2015, respectively. The proposed fare adjustment would be an average of 9 percent for the majority of NJ TRANSIT customers.

Beginning on Monday, April 20th, customers may log on to www.njtransit.com for additional information regarding the budget and service adjustment plan.

To ensure an inclusive public comment process, NJ TRANSIT has scheduled nine public hearings and one information session at locations across the state from May 16 through May 21.  The hearings and information session will be held in the evenings and on Saturday to encourage participation.

In addition to appearing in person, members of the public also may submit comments via mail to: PUBLIC HEARING OFFICE – FARE PROPOSAL COMMENTS, ONE PENN PLAZA EAST, NEWARK, NJ 07105; online at www.njtransit.com or dropped off at Customer Service Offices. The online public comment period will be extended until 11:59 p.m., Thursday, May 21.

PUBLIC HEARINGS & INFORMATION SESSIONSSaturday, May 16, 2015                                                 1:00 – 4:00 p.m.

NEW BRUNSWICK (INFORMATION SESSION)

New Brunswick Public Library – Carl T. Valenti Community Rm.,

60 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ

Monday, May 18, 2015                                                    5:30 – 8:30 p.m.

ATLANTIC CITY

Atlantic City Rail Terminal – Lobby

One Atlantic City Expressway, Atlantic City, NJ

FREEHOLD

Monmouth County Agricultural Building

4000 Kozloski Road, Freehold, NJ

Tuesday, May 19, 2015                                                   5:30 – 8:30 p.m.

SECAUCUS

Frank R. Lautenberg Station at Secaucus Junction

County Road & County Avenue, Secaucus, NJ

CAMDEN

Camden City Hall – Council Chambers (2nd Fl.)

520 Market Street, Camden, NJ

Wednesday, May 20, 2015                                               5:30 – 8:30 p.m.

NEWARK

NJ TRANSIT Headquarters – Board Room

One Penn Plaza East, Newark, NJ

HACKENSACK

Learning Center, 4th Floor

One Bergen County Plaza, Hackensack, NJ

Thursday, May 21, 2015                                                   5:30 – 8:30 p.m.

TRENTON

Trenton Transit Center

72 South Clinton Avenue, Trenton, NJ

MORRISTOWN

Morristown Town Hall – Senior Community Center (3rd Fl.)

200 South Street, Morristown, NJ

PATERSON

Paterson Museum – Thomas Rogers Building

2 Market Street, Paterson NJ

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Good news for N.J. drivers: Motor vehicle fees won’t be increasing this year

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By Larry Higgs | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
Email the author
on April 20, 2015 at 7:31 AM, updated April 20, 2015 at 8:53 AM

While NJ Transit riders are looking at a possible fare hike, one group of commuters will be spared a similar increase in the coming fiscal year.

Drivers will not see an increase in the fees they pay to register a motor vehicle, renew their driver’s license or conduct other transactions this year, state Motor Vehicle Commission officials said.  This is also the year the MVC starts shopping for a company to run the states inspection stations.

“The last increase was in 2009 and some have decreased since then. The internet transaction fee has gone down,” said Raymond Martinez, MVC chief administrator, who has overseen the agency since 2010. “Some fees are done by statute, some are by regulation. We have not increased any fees since I got here.”

https://www.nj.com/traffic/index.ssf/2015/04/mvc_wont_increase_drivers_fees_but_shops_for_compa.html

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NJ Transit fares could be hiked as much as 9 percent, state report says

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By Larry Higgs | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
Email the author
on April 14, 2015 at 12:33 PM, updated April 15, 2015 at 7:31 AM

Commuters could be hit with an NJ Transit fare increase that might reach 9 percent in fiscal year 2016, based on budget documents for the coming year.

NJ Transit’s budget documents said revenue from fares would increase by 8.8 percent, from the $928.6 million earned in fiscal year 2015 to $1.01 billion in 2016, according to an Office of Legislative Services’ review of NJ Transit’s financials.

“It is not clear whether this increase in fare box revenue reflects a possible fare increase or whether this represents estimated (ridership) growth before the impacts of a possible fare increase,” said the OLS analysis.

But that growth is unlikely to come from ridership. Total NJ Transit ridership only grew by two percent between Jan. 2014 and Jan. 2015 to 270 million passenger trips, according to the last agency ridership report. That is the highest ridership since fiscal year 2009.

NJ Transit Executive Director Veronique Hakim said if the agency decides to raise fares, a package of increases and service reductions would be announced by the end of the month. Hakim also said she wants to limit a fare hike to a single digit increase after fares raised by 22 percent in 2010.

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2015/04/nj_transit_fares_could_be_hiked_as_much_as_9_percent_state_report_says.html

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After 40 years of Renovations : Push to Replace Port Authority Bus Terminal

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After 40 years of Renovations : Push to Replace Port Authority Bus Terminal

New depot is estimated to cost up to $11 billion

By
ANDREW TANGEL
Updated March 17, 2015 12:47 p.m. ET

When the Port Authority Bus Terminal opened in 1950, it helped New York City funnel a growing number of buses carrying commuters into Manhattan’s West Side.

Today, the terminal west of Times Square is a major chokepoint for bus traffic from New Jersey suburbs. Commuters complain of delays, crowding and a dreary environment.

Like Penn Station about 10 blocks to the south, the terminal is also the butt of jokes. Last summer, the comedian John Oliver declared it “the single worst place on Planet Earth” and joked that even cockroaches are trying to escape.

Now the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has preliminary estimates for how much it could cost to replace its eponymous terminal: $8 billion to $11 billion, a potential price tag rivaling that of a project to dig new passenger rail tunnels under the Hudson River.

The terminal is expected to take the spotlight at the Port Authority’s board meeting on Thursday, highlighting how the agency is trying to refocus on regional transportation in the wake of the September 2013 scandal involving lane-closures at the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee, N.J.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-push-to-fix-port-authority-bus-terminal-1426547679

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NJ Transit chief: Will try to hold hikes to single digits

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NJ Transit chief: Will try to hold hikes to single digits

MARCH 11, 2015, 11:03 AM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2015, 4:38 PM
BY DAVID PORTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEWARK — Rail and bus commuters facing potential fare hikes likely won’t see increases as high as they did in 2010 when fares rose an average of more than 20 percent, the head of the North Jersey Transportation Authority said Wednesday.

Executive Director Ronnie Hakim told board members that a looming $80 million budget gap is forcing her to look at all options, including fare increases. She said that if increases become necessary, her goal is to make them less burdensome for commuters.

The last fare hikes averaged 22 percent across the system and were accompanied by service cuts and the elimination of off-peak discounts.

What happened in 2010 “was very harsh for our customers and we’re doing everything to significantly avoid any recommendation remotely like that,” she said. “So I would like to stay in the single digits.”

In an accident of timing, Hakim’s comments came on a day when four of NJ Transit’s rail lines were suspended temporarily, with two of the suspensions occurring during the morning commute — one due to police and fire activity and another due to a trespasser fatality on the tracks.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/nj-transit-chief-will-try-to-hold-hikes-to-single-digits-1.1286555

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New York Sponsor of Port Authority Reform Bill Rejects a New Jersey Compromise

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New York Sponsor of Port Authority Reform Bill Rejects a New Jersey Compromise

ALBANY — A legislative sponsor of an effort to overhaul the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said on Monday that a possible compromise bill suggested by a leading New Jersey Republican would not be acceptable in New York, all but dooming its chances as currently imagined.

The sponsor, Assemblyman James F. Brennan, a Democrat from Brooklyn, said that the compromise bill, proposed by Senator Thomas H. Kean Jr., did not include several elements that he felt were necessary, including independent oversight of large capital projects, requirements to disclose the compensation of top officers and an obligation on the part of the chief executive to certify that financial statements are “true and accurate.” (McKinley/The New York Times)

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/03/nyregion/new-york-sponsor-of-port-authority-reform-bill-rejects-a-new-jersey-compromise.html?_r=0

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Port Authority reform override rescheduled for March 16th

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Port Authority reform override rescheduled for March 16th

Senate vote to override Gov. Chris Christie’s veto of legislation aimed at reforming an embattled Port Authority has been tentatively rescheduled from March 5th to March 16th, one of the bill sponsors has informed PolitickerNJ.

S-2181, meant to bring greater transparency to the bi-state agency, was vetoed by Christie last year after unanimously passing both the Senate and the Assembly. Democrats pushing the reform measure had originally planned a vote to override that veto in early March, using these last few months to garner Republican support. (Brush/PolitickerNJ)

Port Authority reform override moved to the 16th | New Jersey News, Politics, Opinion, and Analysis

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PATCHY ICE SLICK DRIVING CONDITIONS MONDAY MORNING

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PATCHY ICE SLICK DRIVING CONDITIONS MONDAY MORNING

SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY

…PATCHY ICE OVERNIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING…

TEMPERATURES HAD RISEN TO ABOVE FREEZING ACROSS THE REGION TODAY
WITH A SIGNIFICANT AMOUNT OF MELTING.

TEMPERATURES WILL BE FALLING TO BELOW FREEZING EARLY THIS EVENING
AND REMAIN BELOW FREEZING INTO MONDAY. AS A RESULT…ANY STANDING
WATER WILL FREEZE THIS EVENING.

IF YOU WILL BE OUT TONIGHT OR DURING THE MONDAY MORNING COMMUTE BE
AWARE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF ICY PATCHES ON ROADS…AND
WALKWAYS.

OVERNIGHT LOWS ARE EXPECTED TO RANGE FROM AROUND 10 TO 15
DEGREES…AND HIGHS MONDAY WILL RANGE FROM AROUND 12 TO 25.

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Rail Crossing Accidents Decline Nationwide, but Less So in New York Region

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Rail Crossing Accidents Decline Nationwide, but Less So in New York Region

By EMMA G. FITZSIMMONS and RUSS BUETTNERFEB. 4, 2015

A work crew used a crane on Wednesday to load the remains of the sport utility vehicle involved in Tuesday evening’s crash with a Metro-North Railroad train in Valhalla, N.Y. Six people were killed. CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
Continue reading the main storyShare This Page

Railroad crossings, with their flashing lights and descending gates, are a fixture of suburban living. The hundreds of crossings along commuter rail lines in New York and New Jersey can be a nuisance for drivers whose journeys are being interrupted, but they are also something to be feared, crossroads that can easily turn dangerous.

Accidents at railroad crossings happen with surprising regularity in the region. Since 2003, there have been 125 grade-crossing accidents on New Jersey Transit lines, 105 on the Long Island Rail Road and 30 onMetro-North Railroad, according to the latest available Federal Railroad Administration data. More than half of those 260 accidents resulted in injuries or deaths. In all, 73 people were killed and 148 injured.

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/05/nyregion/rail-crossing-accidents-decline-nationwide-but-less-so-in-new-york-region.html?_r=0

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NJ TRANSIT ANNOUNCES EXPANSION OF MOBILE TICKETING TO BUS ROUTES BETWEEN NJ AND NYC

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35553589001_2857602242001_vs-528e9154e4b08cc654b1fd35-1592194026001

NJ TRANSIT ANNOUNCES EXPANSION OF MOBILE TICKETING TO BUS ROUTES BETWEEN NJ AND NYC

Convenient, Easy Monthly Pass Purchases Available through MyTix App on Interstate Bus Routes

January 28, 2015

NEWARK, NJ — As part of an ongoing effort to improve the overall customer experience, NJ TRANSIT today announced the expansion of its MyTixmobile ticketing app to interstate routes between New Jersey and New York City.  Currently available on all rail lines and most South Jersey bus routes, beginning January 28 MyTix  will enable bus customers on routes serving Port Authority Bus Terminal, Lower Manhattan and George Washington Bridge to purchase and display monthly interstate bus passes on their mobile devices.

“Following the successful rollout of this technology to our South Jersey bus customers last fall, we have been working to bring the MyTix app to bus customers riding between New Jersey and New York City as well, to make traveling on the NJ TRANSIT system even more convenient for them,” said Transportation Commissioner and NJ TRANSIT Board Chairman Jamie Fox.

The next phase of the rollout will include monthly passes via MyTix for intrastate (local) bus customers.

“With bus riders being our largest customer base, it’s critical that we roll this out gradually to ensure the technology keeps up with the demand, and we resolve any issues before taking the next step,” said NJ TRANSIT Executive Director Veronique “Ronnie” Hakim.  “This expansion of the mobile ticketing app is another step toward giving all of our bus customers the ability to treat their smart phones as both a ticket vending machine and monthly bus pass all in one.”

MyTix is available for free download on any web-enabled iOS or Android device, via the App Store or Google Play.  To purchase monthly bus passes via MyTix, customers must first install the app and then create an account, which will securely save customers’ profile information and purchase history for ease of use.  Bus monthly passes self-activate at midnight on the first day of the calendar month for which they are valid and remain active throughout the entire month.  Customers then simply display the monthly pass on their mobile device to the bus operator when boarding the bus.

NJ TRANSIT first introduced MyTix in April 2013 as a pilot program for rail customers on the Pascack Valley Line, as well as between Penn Station New York and the Meadowlands Rail Station for special events, to test the functionality of the app and determine the feasibility of expanding it to other rail lines.  In September 2013, NJ TRANSIT expanded MyTix to the Main/Bergen County and Port Jervis lines, followed in October by the Montclair-Boonton and Morris & Essex lines, and in November to the North Jersey Coast and Raritan Valley lines.  The rail systemwide rollout was completed in December 2013 with the inclusion of the Northeast Corridor and Atlantic City Rail Line.  In September 2014, MyTix was first introduced to bus customers in South Jersey on 59 bus routes, serving communities throughout South Jersey, as well as Philadelphia.

Many improvements made to the agency’s MyTix app were the direct result of valuable feedback from customers using the app during the gradual rollout.

Since its 2013 introduction, MyTix has already become very popular among NJ TRANSIT customers.  To date, customers have established nearly 400,000 accounts through MyTix and purchased over 3.7 million tickets.

For more information on MyTix, visit njtransit.com and go to “Ticket Options,” then click on “MyTix” from the drop-down menu.

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Hudson River train tunnel hinges on pricey plan

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Hudson River train tunnel hinges on pricey plan

JANUARY 17, 2015, 4:32 PM    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 2015, 11:36 PM
BY CHRISTOPHER MAAG
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

As talk heats up again about building tunnels under the Hudson River, Amtrak is hanging its hopes on constructing a new station that will consume more than a block of midtown Manhattan, a site already rejected by other planners who thought the land would be prohibitively expensive.

Proponents of the new station say that whatever the cost, it’s the only way to complete a project that officials on both sides of the river say is needed.

The number of commuters using Pennsylvania Station is growing every year, and the current pair of century-old tunnels face a protracted shutdown for repairs to ensure they don’t become unsafe. While the new tunnels and station are years from opening, under Amtrak’s plan they would carry hundreds of thousands of commuters into Manhattan daily, relieving pressure on the region’s aging bridges and motor vehicle tunnels.

If new tunnels are built without a new station, Amtrak officials say there will be no room at Penn Station to place the additional trains.

“You cannot take advantage of the additional capacity of new tunnels without expanding the physical capacity of Penn Station,” said Drew Galloway, Amtrak’s deputy chief of planning for the Northeast Corridor.

But to get that done, the nation’s rail agency may have to spend more than $1 billion just to buy the land.

“They’re delusional. I don’t think they can build it,” said David Widawsky, who directed the planning to build the Access to the Region’s Core, or ARC, tunnel from New Jersey to New York. The project was killed by Governor Christie in 2010.

Widawsky’s team had considered building a train station at the same site, now called Penn South, but almost immediately realized the property was so expensive that the project could not be done.

“It was eliminated in the first cut,” Widawsky said. “The real estate on that block is just prohibitively expensive.”

The price of land — and getting Congress to pay for it — isn’t Amtrak’s only hurdle. The agency also must deal with two notable, longstanding buildings on the block, including a church. And it must assemble and maintain political support for a 20-year project that will outlast nine sessions of Congress and cover terms of at least three presidents.

Amtrak’s leaders say they understand the high costs of Penn South, but with money from Congress, they believe it can be built.

“We all know it is a huge challenge,” said Galloway. “But there is recognition that some investment in capacity is necessary, and nowhere is that more critical than Penn Station.”

At today’s prices, Amtrak would spend somewhere from $769 million to $1.3 billion just to buy the block bounded to the north and south by 31st and 30th streets, and to the east and west by Seventh and Eighth avenues. That figure is based on development guidelines from the New York City Planning Commission, recent nearby sales figures provided by Ariel Property Advisors, and a rough estimate of the block’s buildable square footage.

Costs are rising fast, however. In just the last three years, the neighborhoods around Penn South went from ghost town to boomtown. Real estate prices are 2½ times higher now than they were just three years ago, said Bob Knackal, chairman of New York investment sales for Cushman & Wakefield.

By the time Amtrak is finally ready to buy land, prices will be even higher, real estate experts said.

“Clearly, values in the area are skyrocketing, and many of the properties are underbuilt relative to their potential,” said Knackal, a Maywood native. “People are selling these properties more for the value of the land potential, as opposed to the value of the existing bricks on the site. So that makes it very, very expensive.”

Whatever is eventually built, all sides agree that Amtrak and Congress must act quickly. The two existing Hudson River tunnels are 104 years old, and both suffered extensive flood damage during Superstorm Sandy. At most, the tunnels can operate only until 2034 before one must be shut down and entirely rebuilt, Amtrak officials said in October. Unless new tunnels are built and operating by then, trans-Hudson traffic will drop from 24 trains an hour to six, causing massive congestion across the region, officials said.

Timing is also important because Penn Station is full. Opened in 1910 to serve 200,000 travelers a day, the station now handles half a million a day, according to Amtrak, and that number is growing 2.5 percent to 3 percent every year.

“If you continue that growth into the future, it’s a pretty sobering number,” Galloway said.

Others saw the same problems looming two decades ago and came to different conclusions about the solutions.

The ARC project originally included planners from all three major transportation agencies in the region: NJ Transit, New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The MTA pulled out of the project in 2001.

For that project, planners decided to build a new station under 34th Street. The station was so deep underground that it had only limited pedestrian access to Penn Station and no capacity for trains to transfer between the two stations. The plan eventually was dubbed the “tunnel to Macy’s basement” by Christie, who cited the station’s depth as one of his reasons for canceling the project in 2010.

But the tunnel to Macy’s basement had two big advantages: It was cheap and would have been relatively quick to build. By fitting the entire station inside 34th Street’s wide right-of-way, planners said they knew they could avoid paying top-dollar for prime Manhattan real estate and also avoid protracted legal battles with landowners and tenants.

“We were looking under 34th Street because you can do it without taking a lot of properties,” said Tom Schultz, who ran the planning process for NJ Transit for five years after Widawsky retired.

But for Amtrak, the issue of connecting the new and old stations is paramount, Galloway said. That’s why the agency’s planners decided to go the more expensive, time-consuming and risky route — bulldozing an entire city block to build a station at ground level.

“Unlike some of the other programs that looked at standalone facilities, we think an integrated campus is the right idea for this location,” Galloway said.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/hudson-river-train-tunnel-hinges-on-pricey-plan-1.1211136

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BLACK ICE DEVELOPMENT CAN BE EXPECTED THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING

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file photo Boyd Loving

BLACK ICE DEVELOPMENT CAN BE EXPECTED THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING

SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
1226 AM EST THU DEC 11 2014

…ICY SPOTS THIS MORNING…

BLACK ICE DEVELOPMENT CAN BE EXPECTED THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING HOURS…ESPECIALLY ON UNTREATED SURFACES…AS SUBFREEZING TEMPERATURES INTERACT WITH RESIDUAL MOISTURE AND NEW SNOWFALL. EXTRA CAUTION SHOULD BE — USED WHEN TRAVELING.

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Fourth Port Authority Toll Hike in Four Years Takes Effect

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Fourth Port Authority Toll Hike in Four Years Takes Effect 

Port Authority voting on proposed 2015 $7.8B budget after upcoming toll hike

December 8,2014

the staff of the Ridgewood blog
The Port Authority has unveiled a proposed $7.8 billion budget for 2015. The board of commissioners will vote on the plan Wednesday, days after the fourth toll hike in as many years. Cash tolls will increase by $1 to $14 this weekend, while E-ZPass goes up by 75 cents.The $7.8 billion combined spending plan includes: a $2.9 billion operating budget; $1.1 billion in debt service; and a very robust capital program of $3.6 billion highlighted by continuing work on the Bayonne Bridge roadway raising, replacement of the Goethals Bridge, overhauls of the George Washington Bridge and Lincoln Tunnel Helix, and completion of the transportation hub plus other work at the World Trade Center site, which makes up 45 percent of capital costs.

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NJ TRANSIT ROLLS OUT NEW RAIL SAFETY VIDEO FOR MIDDLE SCHOOLERS

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NJ TRANSIT ROLLS OUT NEW RAIL SAFETY VIDEO FOR MIDDLE SCHOOLERS 

“Chicken on the Tracks” Video to Promote Rail Safety
November 18, 2014

NEWARK, NJ — At an assembly hosted at Hackensack Middle School, NJ TRANSIT  today debuted an updated version of its “Chicken on the Tracks” video, a dramatic depiction of incidents on the rails involving young people – to educate students on the possible consequences of trespassing near rail lines. The video was accompanied by a presentation and interactive session by NJ TRANSIT personnel from the agency’s Office of System Safety.

Continue reading NJ TRANSIT ROLLS OUT NEW RAIL SAFETY VIDEO FOR MIDDLE SCHOOLERS