The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

New York rail tunnel repairs could mean more rider headaches

- By David Porter

NEW YORK » The news that Amtrak will ramp up repairs to its century-old Hudson River rail tunnel while a project to build a new tunnel languishes likely will translate into more headaches for already beleaguere­d commuters.

U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao told a House subcommitt­ee Thursday that federal officials are working with Amtrak on a plan to accelerate the work now on the 110-year-old tunnel.

The new tunnel, proposed nine years ago as part of the larger Gateway project to transform rail capacity in the New York region, is mired in a funding dispute between the federal government and New York and New Jersey and currently is ineligible for federal grants.

Amtrak already shuts down one of the existing tunnel’s two tubes during overnight and weekend hours to repair damage accelerate­d by flooding from 2012’s Superstorm Sandy. The Gateway plan called for shutting down the tunnel for a complete overhaul once a new tunnel is built, but Chao said Thursday that beginning the repair work now “is the right move.” She noted that building a new tunnel would take seven to 10 years and cost an estimated $11 billion, under the most favorable conditions.

The new plan calls for more extensive repairs that will require further service disruption­s, said Stephen Gardner, Amtrak’s senior executive vice president and chief operating and commercial officer.

“We’re trying to balance what we can do now with the impacts of doing it now,” Gardner told The Associated Press at a transporta­tion conference in New York on Thursday. “If we have to curtail rush hour for the next five years to do some interim work, there’s huge impacts to that. So we’re tying to find that right balance.”

The most disruptive repairs could “require a complete outage at some point,” he added.

The problems — including water leaking in, crumbling walls, an outdated track bed and overhead wire issues — are so extensive that they won’t all be repaired, even under the new plan, Gardner conceded.

Gardner also cast doubt on the idea that 12,000volt electrical cables currently encased in concrete damaged by Sandy can be installed on racks on the tunnel walls. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo opted for that approach to avoid a lengthy planned shutdown last year of New York City’s L subway line connecting Brooklyn and Manhattan. The idea has gained traction for the Amtrak tunnel in recent months, and Chao referred to it Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States