New Jersey Gov. Christie blames Amtrak
for nightmarish commutes
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[July 25, 2015]
By Hilary Russ
(Reuters) - New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie, a 2016 Republican presidential candidate, on Friday blamed
Amtrak for a week of nightmarish commutes to and from New York and
called on the Obama administration and Congress to "step up their
responsibility," and fix the problems.
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New Jersey pays Amtrak, the national rail operator, $100 million
annually so that NJ Transit trains can use Amtrak tunnels and rails,
Christie said.
Travelers using NJ Transit trains were "victimized" by extreme
delays and cancellations throughout the system this week because of
"Amtrak's indifference to New Jersey commuters and its abject
neglect of the infrastructure that New Jersey and our entire region
relies upon," Christie said in a statement.
Christie said he had asked the state attorney general to review the
matter.
Amtrak apologized for the delays.
"We are actively sharing information with our partners at New Jersey
Transit and other agencies and will continue to work closely with
them in developing an immediate solution," spokeswoman Kimberly
Woods said in a statement.
She said the power failures that caused problems on the Northeast
Corridor this week showed the "urgent need for a funding solution."
Christie's broader record on transportation is less supportive. Just
after taking office in 2010, he cancelled a new Hudson River tunnel
project already under construction, called Access to the Region's
Core, saying costs were likely to skyrocket and citing his state's
lack of funding ability.
New Jersey's Transportation Trust Fund, which pays for roads and
bridges, is also nearly broke. That has prompted calls from
Democrats to raise the state's gas tax, which Christie has rejected.
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New Jersey Assembly Transportation Committee Chairman John
Wisniewski called Christie's comments about Amtrak hypocritical.
"His piece-meal approach and lack of long-term planning has left our
roads and bridges in shambles," Wisniewski said in a statement.
Christie's cancellation of the tunnel project also "left New
Jersey's trans-Hudson commuters with no choice but to endure
Amtrak's delays, a problem that will only be exacerbated as the
existing tunnels reach their expected lifespan and must be closed
for improvements," he said.
(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Tom Brown)
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