jis
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Before we go off name calling here, one might want to be aware that a significant portion of the rail advocacy groups around NY and NJ are not particularly unhappy with that particular set of tunnels not being built. Christie probably did half a right thing for mostly the wrong reasons, though he has also mentioned two things:
1. The tunnels should have connected to Penn Station, perhaps to placate the rail advocacy groups.
2. The way to proceed now is to come up with a plan for collaborative development of trans-Hudson capacity with Amtrak, Port Authority and the Feds, which actually makes way more sense and potentially addresses the funding issue to some extent.
But it remains to be see whether he will proceed to do the other half of the right thing.
The tunnels will be needed eventually, in 15 years maybe, but it is not at all clear that this was the best use of the money, the way this set of tunnels was designed. Meanwhile, there are many things that can be done to address immediate overcrowding issues, which ironically is reduced some due to the enormous fare hikes, a definite Christie wrong decision.
But again the fact still remains that unless a stable source of operating bugets can be found, just building capital infrastructure is a waste of money, since there will not be funds available to operate anything on the infrastructure.
Meanwhile, getting the NJT bureaucracy to come to the realization that they cannot just continuously ignore everyone that produces cogent arguments against what they want to do to preserve and expand their bureaucratic fiefdoms at the cost of the taxpayers, is a positive development in and of itself. They do need to understand that they are our employees and need to start to behave reflecting that fact.
Meanwhile in NJ many are relieved that we might actually get some funding again for some intra-state projects like the Lackawanna Cutoff, MOM and West Trenton and Glassboro, which were all pretty much given up as dead for now because of the incessant vacuum cleaner under the Hudson that was sucking up every available penny and then some.
1. The tunnels should have connected to Penn Station, perhaps to placate the rail advocacy groups.
2. The way to proceed now is to come up with a plan for collaborative development of trans-Hudson capacity with Amtrak, Port Authority and the Feds, which actually makes way more sense and potentially addresses the funding issue to some extent.
But it remains to be see whether he will proceed to do the other half of the right thing.
The tunnels will be needed eventually, in 15 years maybe, but it is not at all clear that this was the best use of the money, the way this set of tunnels was designed. Meanwhile, there are many things that can be done to address immediate overcrowding issues, which ironically is reduced some due to the enormous fare hikes, a definite Christie wrong decision.
But again the fact still remains that unless a stable source of operating bugets can be found, just building capital infrastructure is a waste of money, since there will not be funds available to operate anything on the infrastructure.
Meanwhile, getting the NJT bureaucracy to come to the realization that they cannot just continuously ignore everyone that produces cogent arguments against what they want to do to preserve and expand their bureaucratic fiefdoms at the cost of the taxpayers, is a positive development in and of itself. They do need to understand that they are our employees and need to start to behave reflecting that fact.
Meanwhile in NJ many are relieved that we might actually get some funding again for some intra-state projects like the Lackawanna Cutoff, MOM and West Trenton and Glassboro, which were all pretty much given up as dead for now because of the incessant vacuum cleaner under the Hudson that was sucking up every available penny and then some.
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