
Where Trump Might Find Success if He Gets Below the Surface
Gov. Kathy Hochul reacted with jagged insouciance when the Trump administration snatched control of the slow-moving Penn Station redevelopment project from New York State last month.
'I want to thank the president,' she said, 'for taking on the sole responsibility to deliver the beautiful new $7 billion station that New Yorkers deserve.'
Put aside the governor's snarky use of President Trump's favorite word — 'beautiful' — and dreams of architectural glory like the original McKim, Mead & White station that was demolished 60 years ago. The future for Penn Station's commuters and neighbors hinges not on aesthetics but on a wonky idea called through-running.
Through-running would allow New Jersey Transit trains to continue to Long Island and Long Island Rail Road trains to go on to New Jersey. It's what Penn Station doesn't have today, which is a big reason it's so miserable for commuters.
Though Amtrak, the national railroad, owns Penn Station, it operates mostly as a terminal for commuter trains — a dead-end station in the middle of a busy city. After trains drop off and pick up riders at Penn, they go back to New Jersey or Long Island once the tracks clear up.
As trains dwell in the station, they take up tracks other trains could use, making commuting more miserable for the nearly 425,000 regional-rail passengers who used Penn each day before the pandemic. Penn's platforms, more than a century old, are so narrow that passengers can't exit and enter trains at the same time. So commuters hover by stairwells and escalators, waiting for others to disembark before they can board.
The idea of a terminal station made sense when New York designed its transit system more than a century ago to bring people to work in Manhattan in the morning and send them home in the evening. But that's not the future or even the present: About a quarter of a million people, nearly 7 percent of city residents who work, are reverse commuters already, living in the city and working in the suburbs or in another nearby city, the Regional Plan Association estimates.
With through-running, the Trump administration could transform Penn Station's commuting experience without needing to build a new station. As advocates at the civic group ReThinkNYC put it, the plan should be for people to be able to go from 'anywhere to everywhere.' A resident of Brooklyn or Queens could ride to a job in New Jersey without a long wait to switch trains or a separate fare. A Bronx marketing executive who loses his Lower Manhattan job could search for jobs in Connecticut or New Jersey. Midtown and Lower Manhattan could build more housing, and suburbs and smaller cities could build more office buildings to welcome more high-paying jobs.
Through-running is the global standard: Transit systems in London, Paris, Berlin, Tokyo and Hong Kong operate this way. Yes, it will be expensive to bring New York up to standard — probably $10 billion, minimum. And yes, it will take time, most likely up to a decade, as contractors shut down a few of Penn's 21 tracks at a time to realign tracks and lengthen and widen platforms.
But through-running could increase Penn's train capacity at less cost and in less time than what Amtrak and New York State have wanted: to build another dead-end underground terminal after knocking down a thriving block and a half south of the station. That's projected to cost nearly $17 billion.
Amtrak and Penn Station's two commuter railroads have said through-running wouldn't meet their goal of doubling train capacity. But several experts, including railroad and transit veterans, doubt the study's conclusions and say through-running would create a far more efficient station. And would attaining a smaller but still significant expansion — rather than sticking to a hard goal.
'Why not take the opportunity to fix the damn thing once and for all?' Andy Byford, a veteran of several marquee global transit systems, including the New York subway system, said at a 2023 ReThink forum. 'You've got not only the economic benefits of the city,' he noted, 'but the knock-on effect of north, south, east and west of businesses popping up, of housing being developed.'
Through-running would create an urban good, and it would also prevent an urban harm by avoiding a project that would require the destruction of middle-class housing as well as office buildings filled with small businesses. In place of the current diversity of owners and renters would be supertall towers exempt from the city's zoning code.
Though Ms. Hochul recently retreated from this Andrew Cuomo-era plan, saying she would not 'destroy a neighborhood' for Penn Station, absent a different way to increase Penn's capacity, this 1960s-style urban renewal project could return.
Providing billions of federal dollars to turn Penn Station into a through-running station may not seem very Trumpy; Mr. Trump's predecessor was the rail guy.
But it can appeal to something Mr. Trump claims to care about: cutting through bureaucracy, by getting three separate railroads, with three separate sets of union work forces, to work together in building a unified rail system to make life easier for hundreds of thousands of commuters, including swing voters from Long Island and New Jersey.
It's possible to reconfigure Penn's tracks and platforms with Madison Square Garden still above it. One plan, proposed by the construction company Halmar, would demolish a small area of the Garden, its theater, to bring more light down and make it easier for passengers to reach platforms.
But it would be easier without the Garden there. Alex Washburn, a former chief urban designer for New York City, has proposed building a new Garden in an empty lot across Seventh Avenue where the Hotel Pennsylvania once stood and then demolishing the old Garden to make way for a new aboveground Penn.
If the Dolan family, which controls the Garden, doesn't like the idea, the president could grasp that this type of project is why the Constitution recognizes the power of eminent domain; the founders designed our system of government so that we don't need an authoritarian to achieve nice things.
New York has already spent a generation ingeniously hacking around Penn Station's fatal flaw, the fact that it is underground. After more than two decades of planning, the state finally opened the Moynihan Train Hall across the street in 2021, relieving the surroundings for some passengers and, in the past few years, raising a ceiling in one hallway and allowing some natural light to flow down a new entrance there.
A big risk is that Mr. Trump will focus on speed to cut a ribbon on something superficial fast.
Another risk is that he will accomplish nothing and that under a future administration New York will need to attempt retaking control over the process in 2029.
Maybe there's something to be said for sluggishness. It took just five years for the Pennsylvania Railroad company and the Madison Square Garden Corporation to smash the grand Doric-columned hall into pieces six decades ago and replace it with the utilitarian sports and concert arena.
A daylit Penn Station has been a memory for longer than it existed. As a third generation of passengers trudges the replacement Penn's remaining sweaty catacombs, we're still trying to undo the result of that efficient work unimpeded by pesky bureaucracy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Trump administration is offering 3 different scenarios for how 'Liberation Day 2.0' may play out
A key deadline in President Trump's trade war is getting closer, with a 90-day pause on his "Liberation Day" tariffs set to expire on July 9. But what will actually happen when the clock strikes midnight on what some are calling "Liberation Day 2.0" is anyone's guess. A series of comments from Trump and his officials this week — even within a 12-hour span on Wednesday — were notable for the variety of scenarios they have on the table. It could be a nonevent with additional deadline extensions in the offing. It might be a day of celebration of long-promised trade deals that have yet to materialize. And it could also be a day when the hammer comes down and tariffs are simply dictated. Trump himself has indicated he is open to all three, telling reporters Wednesday evening that he will be sending letters to tell nations, "This is the deal, you can take it or leave it," but also acknowledging that some deadlines could be extended, and on other fronts, "We're rocking in terms of deals." The scenarios laid out this week by the president, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick aren't necessarily mutually exclusive, but which countries get which outcome will be closely watched by investors, as some outcomes are decidedly more market-friendly than others. As for what will actually happen, Henrietta Treyz of Veda Partners offered a prediction in a Thursday morning note to Yahoo Finance suggesting a combination of all three. "I think this is going to be like a potluck: There's going to be a little bit of everything," she said. On the menu for about 130 nations will be letters, she suggested, "and I'm optimistic their rate will be in the 10-25% range." Other nations may be able to secure limited deals — such as a recent pact with the UK — but with plenty of tariffs staying on or being added. Others may get an extension for now. Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet The uncertainty facing markets revolves around which scenario takes center stage in the coming weeks. The divergences were in stark relief Wednesday as the day unfolded. In the morning, during a CNBC appearance, Lutnick suggested the centerpiece would be a flood of new deals. He said that with China tensions on the back burner for the moment, negotiators will able to find areas of agreement on other fronts. "You're going to see deal after deal," he said. "This is going to start coming next week and the week after and the week after." But observers have grown increasingly unmoved by these promises after the administration has been suggesting imminent deals for months now, with only a limited pact with the UK materializing so far. By midday, Bessent was testifying before Congress and offered a somewhat different portrait of the weeks ahead. He indirectly acknowledged the slower pace of deals and said Trump is "highly likely" to push back his deadline for at least some top trading partners. He said the administration is prepared to "roll the date forward" for the 18 major partners that are negotiating in what the administration views as good faith. "If someone is not negotiating, then we will not," Bessent added. During his testimony, the Treasury secretary also floated the notion of regional trade deals, where a group of countries may get similar terms. By the evening, Trump offered a third focus, announcing that he is going to send letters to trading partners in the next one to two weeks to simply set new unilateral tariff rates. The letters are "telling them what the deal is," Trump told reporters Wednesday during a stop at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. But the president's comments also offered a mix of his aides' other messages from the day. The president said he would be willing to extend the deadline for certain nations, "but I don't think we're going to have that necessity." He also suggested that deals could be imminent on at least a few fronts, noting that "we're dealing with Japan, we're dealing with South Korea. We're dealing with a lot of them." Ben Werschkul is a Washington correspondent for Yahoo Finance. Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Anti-Abortion Assassin Wore Creepy Latex Mask to Murder Dem
The FBI has released new images of Vance Boelter, the man suspected of killing a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband and shooting another, that show the mask he used as part of his ruse. Authorities had previously revealed that Boelter impersonated a police officer during his spree, but new images shared by the FBI on Boelter's wanted poster show that he also wore a latex mask. The images appear to be taken from doorbell or security camera footage. A manhunt is currently underway for Boelter, who is suspected of killing Minnesota State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband. He is also believed to have shot State Senator John Hoffman and his wife. Boelter fled on foot following a shootout with police at the Hortman home. In his abandoned vehicle, authorities found a list of nearly 70 potential targets, including Governor Tim Walz and Rep. Ilhan Omar, as well as abortion providers and advocates. Like Walz and Ohmar, both Hortman and Hoffman are Democrats. Boelter most recently worked as a director of security patrols for Praetorian Guard Security Services, a company that offers 'residential security patrols' by armed and uniformed guards. Boelter's bio on the company's website states that he has been involved in 'security situations' across the world, including in the West Bank, Southern Lebanon, and Gaza. The 57-year-old's bio also states that, 'He brings a great security aspect forged by both many on-the-ground experiences combined with training by both private security firms and by people in the U.S. military.' In 2019, Boelter was appointed to Minnesota's Governor's Workforce Development Board, which advises the governor on the state's workforce, by Walz. The FBI is offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information that could lead to Boelter's arrest and conviction.
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Individual Investors Are Locking in Stock Gains While They Can
Wall Street is betting the worst of tariff turmoil has come and gone. Some individual investors aren't so sure. Last week, retail investors sold a net $400 million worth of individual stocks, JPMorgan Chase analysts found.