Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Penn Station repairs not addressing this commuters’ bane

- By David Porter

NEW YORK » It’s a question that has weighed on the minds of countless commuters, usually as they sit in a stalled train in one of the tunnels heading into the nation’s busiest train station: Why does help seem to take so long to arrive?

It’s an issue that will persist long after Amtrak completes this summer’s extensive repairs (and correspond­ing schedule cutbacks) at Penn Station.

A linchpin in the northeaste­rn U.S.’ rail system, the station is undergoing accelerate­d repair work this month and next to replace several thousand feet of track, switches and other aging infrastruc­ture. The speedup was prompted by two derailment­s in the station this spring that wreaked havoc on rail service between Boston and Washington, D.C.

While the summer repairs are expected to greatly reduce the chances for more derailment­s, they won’t address another of the station’s fundamenta­l problems: breakdowns in the cramped, 111-yearold tunnel under the Hudson River from New Jersey, and in the East River tunnel carrying trains to and from Long Island.

At peak times, when 24 trains per hour move in and out of Penn Station, a disabled train in one of the Hudson River tunnel’s two tubes can lead to misery for hundreds of thousands of commuters. But significan­t delays can occur even if a train breaks down in the tunnel during off-peak times.

“A very good rescue, and this is on an open track and at that time of day, is 45 minutes to an hour,” Steven Young, Amtrak’s deputy general manager of its New York division, said last week as he stood overlookin­g the station’s control center, located in a nondescrip­t building about a block away from the station.

Often, these are caused by malfunctio­ns of overhead electrical wires — part of a system that dates to the 1930s in some places — in excessivel­y cold or hot weather. Trains also break down on their own, as a New Jersey Transit train carrying 1,200 passengers did on the evening of April 14.

That incident led to delays of up to three hours and produced a stampede at the station when delayed commuters panicked after police used a stun gun to subdue an unruly person.

Eleven days later, a disabled Amtrak train in the Hudson River tunnel and, the same day, electrical problems in the East River tunnel caused widespread delays and forced some trains to be cancelled.

Young described a protocol for rescuing trains from the tunnel that starts with a 15-minute period for the train’s conductor and engineer to troublesho­ot the problem to see if it can be corrected. If it can’t, orders are relayed to a crew on a rescue locomotive standing by in the station. Two locomotive­s, one that can run on diesel power and the other on electric power, are available.

 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Tuesday photo, people work at the Penn Station Central Control for Amtrak and the Long Island Rail Road in New York. A disabled train’s exact location can be pinpointed on the control center’s big board, a maze of multicolor­ed lines and symbols...
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Tuesday photo, people work at the Penn Station Central Control for Amtrak and the Long Island Rail Road in New York. A disabled train’s exact location can be pinpointed on the control center’s big board, a maze of multicolor­ed lines and symbols...

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