NJ Transit and Amtrack are warning their rail customers to gird their loins for a potential full month of misery as a yearslong infrastructure project reaches a critical juncture — while promising the pain will be worth it in the end.
“In just a few short weeks, we will reward the patience of Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT customers by helping eliminate a cause of long delays and unreliable commutes,” Amtrak President Roger Harris said in a statement.
Amtrak on Sunday began the laborious process of transferring rail traffic away from the 115-year-old Portal Bridge spanning the Hackensack River in New Jersey to the newly constructed Portal North Bridge.
The train route is notorious for creating downstream effects affecting the entire Northeast Corridor because NJ Transit and Amtrak share a track north of Trenton. Delays at the junction frequently cause train traffic into and out of New York City to grind to a halt.
NJ Transit train riders will now have to do without direct weekday service into Penn Station on its Morristown, Gladstone Branch and Montclair-Boonton Lines — with all Midtown Direct service to be diverted to Hoboken — for the next few weeks.
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