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Biden touts NYC-NJ train tunnel that won’t be built before 2035

President Biden vowed Tuesday that there’s finally light at the end of the tunnel for 200,000 often-delayed, city-bound train riders — but it’s still more than a decade away.

During a speech at Manhattan’s underground West Side Yard rail complex, Biden touted $292 million in funding from his Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that will help pay to install $643 million worth of concrete casing from Penn Station to the Hudson River for a second tunnel to the Secaucus Junction station in New Jersey.

Biden called the eventual completion of the $16 billion tunnel a “critical step for everything else we’re going to do in the corridor — and rail, period.”

The president’s sweeping, $1 trillion infrastructure package will pay for $8 billion toward the construction of the new tunnel.

“It’s a multi-billion-dollar effort between the states and the federal government,” he said. “But we finally have the money and we’re gonna get it done. I promise you we’re going to get it done.”

JOE BIDEN
AFP via Getty Images
The Federal Railroad Administration
Amtrak

The 80-year-old president cautioned, however, that “it’s gonna take time” — and he wasn’t exaggerating.

Work on the river tunnel isn’t to start for more than a year, in fall 2024, with completion scheduled for sometime in 2035, barring any delays.

Officials have wanted to add an extra tunnel under the Hudson River for at least a generation because of the crush of commuters riding New Jersey Transit and Amtrak trains along the “Northeast Corridor” between Washington, DC and Boston.

The existing, two-track tunnel was badly damaged by flooding during Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and breakdowns in electrical systems often cause cascading delays across the system.

A previous plan, called Access to the Region’s Core, was proposed in the mid-1990s and would have spent $8.7 billion to build a new tunnel and a new terminal for NJT trains beneath  Macy’s flagship store in Herald Square.

Construction began in 2009, but the project was killed in 2010 by then-New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who diverted funds to pay for highway repairs instead.

The Federal Railroad Administration
Hudson Tunnel Project

The tunnel plan is part of a larger initiative called the “Gateway Program,” which would also replace New Jersey’s breakdown-prone, movable Portal Bridge over the Hackensack River, connecting Newark and Secaucus.

Additionally, it would add a new looping stretch of tracks so NJT can add service to Penn Station on lines that now terminate in Hoboken, allowing commuters a one-seat ride to Midtown Manhattan.

Those riders now have to transfer at Secaucus for a train to Penn Station.