NJ-NY train service returning to pre-Sandy levels

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - Train service connecting some of the New York region's far-flung suburbs to Manhattan is scheduled to resume full operation Monday, marking a modest milestone for a system that was crippled by Superstorm Sandy and continues to feel the effects more than two months later.

In an unintended bit of timing, the announcement Friday came as New Jersey commuters closed out a week in which several accidents left scores of people injured and transit officials announced plans to close a major inbound roadway for two years for repairs.

The state's public transportation corporation, New Jersey Transit, which suffered an estimated $400 million in damage to its rail cars, locomotives and infrastructure in the storm, will have trains into Manhattan restored to pre-Sandy schedules, executive director James Weinstein said Friday.

That includes the North Jersey Coast Line, which sustained extensive damage from Sandy near South Amboy, where the storm shifted one rail bridge and several boats and cargo containers washed up onto another bridge.

It also includes two lines operated by NJ Transit for the New York-based Metro-North Railroad and serving northern New Jersey and New York's Orange and Rockland counties. Seven trains will be added on the two lines, which had used bus service in the weeks after the late October storm to fill in the gaps.

Friday's announcement follows by two days the news that the Port Authority Trans-Hudson line would resume 24-hour service on part of its system. PATH trains, a late-night lifeline for young professionals who work in Manhattan and live in Hoboken and Jersey City, have been ceasing operation at 10 p.m. to accommodate repair work.

Those were bright spots in a week in which, in order, an escalator at a Jersey City PATH station malfunctioned, injuring several people; a New York-bound commuter ferry crashed into a pier, injuring scores of people; and a bus bound for Wall Street from central New Jersey hit a school bus, causing more than a dozen injuries.

Then on Thursday, transportation officials announced the heavily traveled inbound Pulaski Skyway, a primary feeder into the Holland Tunnel, would close for two years beginning in early 2014 as part of a $1 billion renovation.

Manny Arocho, a regular commuter from Newark to his job as a designer with a Manhattan engineering firm, said he's been bewildered by the recent string of mishaps and delays and feels officials seem to always be reactive rather than proactive.

"Every time something happens, it's like they don't seem prepared," he said. "I really don't think New Jersey is up to par like other states, where, if they get two feet of snow, it's nothing - here, it seems to shut down New Jersey for two weeks. Now that the ferry has crashed, they'll start looking at safety."

The superstorm killed people in 10 states but hit New York and New Jersey the hardest, flooding neighborhoods and destroying homes. It's New Jersey's worst natural disaster.

The region's rail and subway systems were dealt a wallop by the storm's tidal flood surge and hurricane-strength winds. PATH, Metro-North and NJ Transit suspended operations as the storm approached, as did New York City's subway system. Each was able to restore some service within the first week, with harder-hit sections taking weeks more, in some cases.

PATH service to New York out of Hoboken, where the century-old station was flooded with 8 feet of water, didn't resume until the week before Christmas, eight weeks after the storm.