
Montclair-Boonton Line Home Page
Note:
The new schedule effective October 26 changes the timing of nearly
every train on the line. Unfortunately, NJ Transit has cut out certain
trains and eliminated many of the connections at Broad Street.
Offsetting this, it spaces the trains out more regularly and adds a
late-night inbound train.
The
big issue on the Montclair-Boonton line right now is the lack of
weekend service.- Have you wanted to take the train to the City on the weekends—only to find there’s no train on the weekends?
- Have
you then filled your tank with $4/gallon gasoline, gotten stuck in
tunnel traffic, and circled like a vulture through Manhattan streets
for parking, or shelled out another $40 for a garage—when all you
needed was a train line that ran on weekends?
- Have you invited
friends from the City to visit on weekends—only to have them balk
when they learn they have to take a bus? And with DeCamp’s level of
service, can you blame them?
- Have you had friends visiting from elsewhere in the country or world who wanted to go into the City on the weekend?
- Have
you ever wanted to move around within the area on weekends—for example,
to visit the farmers’ market, attend an event at Montclair State, or go down to the shore?
NJ-ARP is now gearing up a campaign to find out
exactly why N.J. Transit keeps putting off weekend service and what we
can do to encourage them along. At the Glen Ridge Arts Festival,
Montclair Farmers’ Market, and Bloomfield HarvestFest, we have gathered hundreds of petition signatures.What's the Problem?
The Montclair-Boonton line is the only train line in the entire New York metropolitan area
that doesn’t run on weekends. N.J. Transit has been very inventive
at coming up with new
excuses to avoid providing service. It used to be a small but vocal
opposition in Montclair. When that died down, N.J. Transit said the
hang-up was construction at Newark’s Broad Street Station. When the
station was nearly done, N.J. Transit said the trouble was track work
in
the Hudson River tunnel. Then the problem became bridge
construction on Bloomfield Avenue. Initially the bridge prolonged the
delay by nine months. Now they’re saying a year because of court action
over compensation paid to the adjacent car wash. At this rate,
we’ll get weekend service around the same time as regular space flights
to Mars.
None of these excuses holds up when you consider a few simple facts.
- Weekend service continues on all other train lines, including the Morristown and Gladstone lines. So much for the Broad Street Station excuse.
- Some trains already
run down the Montclair-Boonton line on the weekends as N.J. Transit repositions equipment in preparation for Monday. Why can’t
those trains carry passengers?
- If the Hudson River tunnels really have
such limited capacity on weekends, why doesn’t N.J. Transit explore creative
alternatives such as service into Hoboken with timed transfers at Broad
Street or Secaucus to New York–bound trains?
- Bridge
work is commonly done on other train lines without requiring the
cessation of service. If it requires shutting off power to the overhead
lines, why not run diesel locomotives?
Clearly N.J.
Transit doesn’t see the urgency for weekend service on our line. Maybe
they think no one wants it. We need to raise our voices. Our request is
simple: start weekend service immediately. No more excuses.What Can You Do?
We
are starting to circulate a petition to let N.J. Transit officials know
that you want to be able to have weekend rail service. Look for the
NJ-ARP volunteers at the Montclair Farmers’ Market, Glen Ridge Arts
Festival, Bloomfield Harvest Fest, and other local events. Please contact us if you'd like to help; we can send you a PDF of the petition to print out and distribute.- Contact
your local elected officials and representatives asking them to push
N.J. Transit to do the right thing. Bring up the issue at a local town
council meeting.
- Send
a letter to N.J. Transit’s Executive Director Richard Sarles at
N.J. Transit, One Penn Plaza East, Newark, NJ 07105. Regular mail is
always more effective than email.
- Come to one of our community meetings; we’ll post the information here.
- Join NJ-ARP and help us continue the fight for weekend service.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Isn’t Montclair the hang-up? Nope.
In
the past, a small but vocal group of Montclair residents fought even
weekday train service, let alone weekend service. They held up
the line for years, against the wishes of other towns and of the
majority of Montclair residents. When Midtown Direct service started up
in 2002, N.J. Transit said it would not offer weekend service “at
Montclair’s request.” But times have changed. The town of Montclair,
having seen the benefits of train service, now supports weekend service.
- What about noise? Many
Montclair residents opposed weekend service on account of the noise of
train horns. Noise is indeed a problem, but it is not specific to
weekend service. Federal horn-blowing regulations apply equally on all
days of the week. To obtain an exemption from those regulations,
Montclair must implement a safety plan at grade crossings. As the
Township of Montclair itself states, “Montclair’s proposed implementation of a Quiet Zone has nothing to do with weekend service.”
- Why can’t people just take the DeCamp bus? Buses
do not provide an adequate substitute for weekend train service and
riders would be well served by having more options. There is no reason
DeCamp could not thrive if trains ran on weekends, since buses provide
access to areas unserved by the train and fill in gaps in the train
schedule. In addition, DeCamp can work in conjunction with N.J. Transit
by delivering people to train stations, thus freeing up
residents from having to use their automobiles at all. Unfortunately, in the
past DeCamp has put more effort into litigation (which courts have
dismissed) than service improvements.
- Is there really a need for trains on weekends? Trains
on other lines are heavily utilized on weekends. DeCamp buses are
often standing-room-only on weekends; sometimes the bus is full and
some
unlucky souls have to wait an hour at Port Authority for the next one.
Hundreds of students at Montclair State live by the train station and
have begged for weekend service.
- Would weekend service increase the cost of monthly passes? The
price of monthly tickets is set not by the frequency of service but by
distance according to a zone system. For instance, most of Montclair
lies in zone 5, the same as South Orange or Elizabeth, where the trains
run seven days a week. In effect, Montclair-Boonton monthly pass
holders are already paying for weekend service that they do not receive.
Privacy Policy
Copyright ©1995-2008 NJ-ARP
These files were created by George Musser.