Cross-Hudson Bus Service a Worthy Landing Spot for ARC Funding

The morning bus lane into the Lincoln Tunnel is one of the most efficient pieces of transit infrastructure in the country. But the region needs more bus capacity — especially after the cancellation of ARC.

Yesterday Governor Christie announced the end of the ARC Tunnel, which would have doubled train service across the [...]

PA: Try Some, Buy Some Bike Racks For Harrison

There is demand for bike parking -- but little supply -- near the PATH station in Harrison, NJ.

The Port Authority wants to be more bike friendly and we have the perfect place for them to get started: install bike parking at the Harrison, NJ, PATH station.

According to an internal bulletin from March (seen here at WalkBikeJersey), “the Port Authority supports bicycling as an important and sustainable mode of travel. It seeks to provide its customers, tenants, visitors and employees with safe and convenient bicycle access and secure bicycle parking at its facilities, wherever operationally and financially feasible.”  Agency staff will be compiling and submitting “bicycle master plans” to Executive Director Chris Ward’s office by September 30 of this year.

The Harrison PATH station serves a high volume of bicycle commuters, but has no bike parking.  Multiple sources indicate that a major deterrent to potential bike commuters is lack of a safe, secure parking spot at the destination.

At Harrison, bikers lock to whatever is available — mostly to the railing that separates the sidewalk from busy Frank E. Rodgers Blvd under the PATH tracks.   On the morning these pictures were taken, an average Monday in June, bikes filled both sides of the railing from end to end.  A handful of bikes were locked to the rail on the east side of the street as well.  In all, nearly three dozen bikes crowded the sidewalk under the station.

Expect even greater usage in the future. The station is central to a formerly industrial neighborhood that hosts the new Red Bulls soccer stadium and is the the object of major city redevelopment plans. The Port Authority eventually plans to reconstruct the station (it had to remove the project from its near-term capital program due to lack of funds), but that redesign does not yet include bike parking.

Another view of the station's de facto bike parking.

After the jump, some details from the PA memo, which suggest other ways the authority could accommodate cycling:

» Continue reading…

Region Wades A Bit Deeper Into Public-Private Partnership Pool

The "request for information" includes some details about what the possible structure of a partnership between the Port Authority and a private venture that would build and maintain a replacement for the Goethals Bridge.

Like most transportation agencies, the Port Authority has been stung by the recession. It no longer has the financial [...]

TSTC Board Members in the News

TSTC board member Charles Komanoff at a bike rental shop in Guangzhou.

Tri-State Transportation Campaign board chair Rich Kassel, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council, joined Port Authority executive director Chris Ward last week to announce a truck replacement plan that will help clear the air around the ports of [...]

NJ Transit Digs It! Trans-Hudson Tunnel Work to Begin

The $583 million ARC contract is for the first of three tunnel segments and was awarded to a partnership of two firms, one based in NJ and another based in NY.

Governor Corzine today addressed NJ Transit’s board of directors for the last time, as he took the podium to praise the agency [...]

Port Authority Budget Maintains Funds for ARC, PATH, Cashless Tolling

[Updated 12/10.]

The Port Authority’s preliminary 2010 budget reflects the tough economic climate but continues investment in vital needs like the Access to the Region’s Core rail tunnel and the PATH rapid transit system. The $6.3 billion budget includes a $3.1 billion capital budget. Some highlights:

$504 million for the ARC tunnel, an [...]

In Win for Commuters, Port Authority Launches Bus Route Finder

An online bus route finder is now available on the Port Authority's website (on the left side of the bus terminal page).

Last week, the Port Authority overhauled its website, making it clearer and easier to navigate. One new feature that will benefit commuters and anyone who must use the often-confusing PA Bus [...]

amNewYork Picks Up on NYC Bus Parking Issues

The city designates some bus layovers, like this one in Lower Manhattan.

Private bus carriers are ubiquitous in some NYC neighborhoods, raising community concerns about noise and air pollution.  amNewYork recently picked up on the trend, taking a look at  scofflaw bus companies in Chinatown and sparking an NYPD crackdown on illegally parked [...]

Major Traffic Rise Predicted With New Goethals Bridge

The Goethals Bridge Replacement Draft Environmental Impact Statement has been released by the U.S. Coast Guard and Port Authority.  The design remains largely the same as presented at the stakeholder meetings last fall, including three lanes in each direction, a peak hour HOV/bus lane, and a space in the center of the bridge for [...]

Streetfilm: The Case for Better Cross-Hudson Bus Transit

Check out this just-released short film on cross-Hudson bus service, produced by Streetfilms and the Tri-State Transportation Campaign. In less than 3 minutes, it lays out why bus transit across the Hudson River is important, and how the Port Authority could improve service for the 315,000 people who take buses across the [...]