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Mark Nardolillo, CEO of tunnel contractor BEM Systems in Chatum, said 10 to 15 employees he has working on it will lose their jobs. "We don't have alternate work to put these people on," said Nardolillo, whose company handled environmental permits and data management for property acquisition. "This is the one job you counted on. It'll have a devastating impact on the region." Commuters at New York's Penn Station weren't pleased to hear the project had been canceled. "This is not good. I hope they reconsider," said Michael Murphy, an IT and infrastructure expert waiting for a train home to Morristown. But, he added, "if they have a problem with the budget, there's not much choice." Roy Gainsburg, a retired book publisher from South Orange, who still rides into the city occasionally, said commuter trains frequently get stuck in the tunnel. "It certainly would be nice if there was another tunnel, because this one has only two tracks, so trains get stuck at peak hours," he said. Christie's predecessor, Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine, broke ground on the tunnel in June 2009, a few months before the gubernatorial election that he lost to Christie. During his campaign last year, Christie supported the project. But as soon as he announced the work stoppage, lawmakers and transportation officials suggested Christie had planned to scrap the project and to use the state's share of the money to pay for the nearly broke Transportation Trust Fund, which pays for local road projects and rail repairs. Christie has refused to raise the state's gas tax, which is among the lowest in the country, to replenish the fund. So far, about $600 million has been spent on the tunnel project. New Jersey could be on the hook to repay half of that to the federal government for breaking its commitment. Lautenberg has said canceling the tunnel would violate an agreement with the federal government in which New Jersey committed itself to the project in exchange for $3 billion in federal funding. Officials have said the tunnel would create 6,000 construction jobs and add at least 40,000 new jobs after it is completed. If Christie were to divert money to the state transportation fund, that could also create jobs, depending on the projects. Christie said staff will immediately begin a shutdown of the tunnel project.
[Associated
Press;
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