
FAA investigates brief communications outage at air traffic facility responsible for flights at Newark
The Newark terminal radar approach control facility, also known as Philadelphia TRACON Area C, experienced a radio outage for approximately two seconds around 11:35 a.m. Monday, the FAA said.
All aircraft remained safely separated and operations are normal, the agency said, adding it is investigating.
The outage comes after the FAA insisted new upgrades to the facility, which moved from Long Island to Philadelphia last July, would blunt new outages. After the May 11 outage, the FAA said a newly installed software patch and a backup line kicked in, though the agency implemented a 45-minute ground stop for Newark flights just in case.
Monday, the FAA implemented new delays for flights to Newark averaging 23 minutes due to short air traffic controller staffing in the facility. A 90-second loss of radar coverage and radio communications on April 28 caused five controllers to take 45-day trauma leave, saddling the Newark airport with rolling flight delays.
The outage is the latest after a series of failures that have occurred in recent weeks, cascaded by a facility experiencing staffing shortages and severe problems with decades-old technology. The issues have stretched beyond the New Jersey airport and unveiled a serious problem within the FAA's antiquated air traffic control system. Despite the challenges, Department of Transportation officials still say the system is safe.
Three outages over the past several weeks placed Newark in the spotlight and punished passengers with severe delays and cancellations while the airport attempted to meet demand for the days ahead.
On the afternoon of April 28, an outage of radar and communications at the same facility left controllers unable to talk to planes or see where they were. At least five controllers took 45 days of trauma leave after the incident, leading to a staffing shortage that canceled and delayed more than a thousand flights.
On May 9, controllers handling flights approaching and departing Newark Airport experienced another blackout, losing radar for about 90 seconds early in the morning.
Days later, on May 11, another telecommunications issue occurred at the Philadelphia TRACON, placing a brief ground stop on the airport's operations.
Last week, airline leaders and the FAA met over a three-day period to discuss reducing the number of flights at Newark Airport.
The FAA is proposing a maximum arrival rate of 28 aircraft an hour until the airport completes construction on its runway, with daily work expected to end June 15 and continue on Saturdays until the end of the year.
After the construction period, the FAA said the maximum arrival rate would be 34 aircraft an hour until October 25. A final determination on arrival rates is expected at the end of May.
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Bloomberg
7 hours ago
- Bloomberg
NJ Transit Is NYC's Least Reliable Commuter Rail — By a Long Shot
An analysis of real-time train data shows its passengers face major service disruptions at six times the rate of riders on other NYC commuter railways. New Jersey Transit, the commuter rail serving New York City for the state, has a reputation for frustrating delays and frequent cancellations. An analysis of real-time train data shows that it is less reliable than its New York and Connecticut counterparts — Metro-North and the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) — and riders face significant service disruptions at six times the rate of other commuters. About one in every 18 NJ Transit trains was delayed by at least 15 minutes or canceled completely in May, June and July. For an average commuter, that meant a bad commute roughly every two weeks, versus once every three months or more on the more reliable lines to New York and Connecticut suburbs. On Most Days, NJ Transit Had the Most Delays and Cancellations Percentage of trains delayed more than 15 minutes or canceled during weekdays for New York City commuter rails Monday, June 23 was one of the most challenging afternoons for NJ Transit riders. A combination of an Amtrak signal issue, a brushfire, and mechanical problems led to 28 delays of 15 minutes or longer and 15 cancellations for trains departing the city. Only half of NJ Transit trains in that direction were on time that evening. Commuters on the other two New York City-area railroads, which don't rely on Amtrak's infrastructure or an aging fleet, mostly got to their destinations as scheduled. Metro-North had only three delays of 30 minutes or longer, due to track work on the Hudson line. The LIRR had none. Neither railroad canceled any trains. NJ Transit Had Far More Service Disruptions Number of trains on time, delayed and canceled during June 23's evening commute Metro-North LIRR NJ Transit On time 😊 130 139 50 10 - 30 min Delay 😰 5 2 44 30+ min Delay 😡 2 0 11 Canceled 🚫 0 0 15 😊😊😊 NJ Transit, Metro-North, and the LIRR are crucial arteries into Manhattan, moving hundreds of thousands of commuters into the Financial District and Midtown every day. As New York City faces a housing affordability crisis, the railroads are critical to the city's future as the region seeks to build more densely near train stops. Two of those railroads, Metro-North and the LIRR, post on-time rates above 96 percent almost every month. These railroads are run by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), which also operates the city's subways and buses, and is funded largely from fares and dedicated taxes. NJ Transit is different. It has been beholden to the New Jersey governor and state legislature for funding, Amtrak for much of its key infrastructure, and the federal government for major infrastructure upgrades. It has run less reliably in extreme weather, especially heat, partly because of shortcomings with Amtrak infrastructure. The agency publishes high-level performance metrics on a data dashboard, reporting the total number of trains delayed by more than six minutes and total number of cancellations per month. But to the weary office worker trying to get home to her family, there is a world of difference between a seven- and 70-minute delay, a difference the agency's public reporting obscures. Metro-North and the LIRR, by contrast, publish information about every delayed and canceled train, including duration and cause, going back to 2012. To understand the frequency of significant delays on New York commuter lines, Bloomberg tracked more than 190,000 trains this summer using live transit feeds, the kind used by navigation apps such as Google Maps. Overall, the delays in this data matched each agency's reported on-time statistics within 1 percentage point. Bloomberg also collected every service alert issued by the three railroads during the same time frame. The results show NJ Transit riders had more issues than their New York and Connecticut counterparts, particularly with the number of trains delayed more than 30 minutes. NJ Transit had more than 1,000 trains delayed more than a half hour over the summer, compared to about 300 for Metro-North and the LIRR respectively. A NJ Transit spokesperson challenged the accuracy of the analysis and said the real-time feed is not '100% accurate'. 'We are transparent in our reporting of all of this data. In addition to making it publicly available on our website, we report all of this data per federal requirements for official reporting purposes,' the spokesperson said. NJ Transit also reports an 'Amtrak-adjusted' on-time performance, which removes delays and cancellations attributed to Amtrak. NJ Transit reported its trains were on time 91 percent of the time this summer after accounting for Amtrak issues, 3 percentage points higher than its actual on-time rate. Amtrak praised the cooperation it has with NJ Transit. Gerhard Williams, Amtrak's Executive Vice President of Service Delivery & Operations, says they spent $40 million in signal and power upgrades, and that they conduct around-the-clock maintenance with NJ Transit. 'As far as I'm concerned, we are completely united and working very hard together to make sure we're providing reliable service to their customers as well as ours,' Williams said. 'We've been working very hard since last summer.' 😰😰😰 Dharam Makhijani has been riding NJ Transit for 13 years. He now takes the train two or three times a week from Princeton Junction to Penn Station. He said bad commutes create a cascading effect that can put him on edge, crowd the trains that do run on time, and often make him late for work. 'It's OK if it's a one-time thing, but if it keeps happening it just becomes embarrassing,' Makhijani said. 'There are days where in the evening you come home and you're completely exhausted, you feel tired and have no energy to unwind with your kids.' Makhijani expressed disbelief that the percentage of significant delays wasn't higher than Bloomberg found. 'I would think it is closer to one in 10 or one in eight,' he said. On the other railroads, such unpleasant commutes occur only a handful of times a year for the average rider. Consider riders on each of the railroads who live a roughly similar commute time from Manhattan: Summit, N.J.; Syosset on Long Island; and Croton-Harmon in New York. The two New Yorkers can be confident their trips will take the same amount of time every day. Not so for the New Jersey commuter, who is about 13 times more likely to experience a delay of a half hour or longer. NJ Transit Faces More — and Longer — Delays than Metro-North and LIRR Delay time of trains between New York City and comparable suburbs Summit Mayor Elizabeth Fagan said her family moved there in 2001 for the easy commute. Since she became mayor a year and a half ago, she has fielded a handful of calls a week from constituents about NJ Transit's service, more during bad periods. 'It matters to us as a town,' she said. 😡😡😡 Mayors like Fagan have little influence over the transit agency. Instead, NJ Transit's fate is tied to the annual state budget. In past years, NJ Transit plugged budget holes with money redirected from long-term capital needs to avoid fare hikes. Overall, about $8 billion was redirected from capital needs in the 2010s. 'Every dollar transferred then is a failed signal or broken down train now,' said Liam Blank, transportation chair for the City Club of New York. Blank said he believed that NJ Transit's budget was 'actively weaponized' in the past to solve other state problems, and 'today's riders are paying the price.' One way riders are paying the price is by riding much older trains. A 2018 audit found approximately 35 percent of the agency's rail cars were at least 25 years old, about the point at which they should be replaced, and that if no new cars were acquired by 2023 that would rise to 45 percent. Just 28 percent of the LIRR's rolling stock is that old and 14 percent of Metro-North's. NJ Transit canceled 686 trains for mechanical issues from May to July, more than Metro-North or the LIRR canceled for all reasons combined. On a per-mile basis, NJ Transit trains failed 3.5 times more often than the LIRR's and almost seven times more than Metro-North's over the last twelve months. Older trains break more often. Plus, NJ Transit has to cancel more trains because more of its trains are powered by a single locomotive, whereas nearly all of the LIRR and Metro-North trains have multiple cars with motors. If one fails, the rest can still get the train to its destination. 🚫🚫🚫 There is hope in the future for NJ Transit's beleaguered riders. The agency has dedicated $3 billion for 374 new multilevel rail cars that it expects to start entering service in mid-2026, according to a NJ Transit spokesperson. The agency is targeting a fully-modernized fleet by 2031. A new transit tax on large corporations passed last year will provide some predictable funding going forward. And after decades of planning and false starts, the $16 billion Gateway Program – which aims to modernize the Northeast Corridor in northern New Jersey and Manhattan and add two new Hudson River tunnels – is finally under construction. The entire project is currently estimated to be done in 2038. 'Governor Murphy inherited a broken transit system that was underfunded and neglected by the previous administration,' spokesperson Stella Porter said in a statement. 'Since 2018, the State has spent billions of dollars revitalizing NJ Transit, modernizing its entire fleet and ensuring consistent funding through the corporate transit fee – investments that will bear fruit long after the Governor leaves office.' In the meantime, New Jersey commuters pay for the mistakes of the past. 'If it's too hot, New Jersey Transit trains don't work. If it's too cold, New Jersey Transit trains don't work,' Fagan, Summit's mayor, said. 'I'm not an expert on this, but I don't believe that hot weather should have to slow down the trains.' Related tickers: 41043MF:US (New Jersey Transit Corp) With assistance from Dean Halford Sri Taylor Edited by David IngoldKate Rabinowitz Methodology Bloomberg collected live transit feeds (GTFS-RT) for each of the three railroads every five minutes from May 1 through July 31, along with static schedules (GTFS) once per week. To calculate train delays, Bloomberg used the delay at a train's final stop, a standard industry measure for on-time performance. A five minute buffer was added to the real-time feed's reported delay to account for feed lag. Because GTFS-RT feeds do not reliably capture cancellations, Bloomberg used the following methods: NJ Transit: For May and June, cancellation totals were taken from the agency's officially reported statistics. More granular cancellations data came from an analysis of the agency's service alerts. For July, cancellations came from service alerts, because official data had not yet been released. Service alerts may undercount cancellations when an entire line is suspended, as not all affected trains are listed. Bloomberg estimates this method undercounts cancellations about 10 percent, affecting July's analysis. Metro-North and LIRR: Cancellation data was obtained from the agencies' public open data platforms. Caveats: Four days in May (due to an NJT engineer strike) and four days in June (due to technical issues with data collection) were excluded from the dataset. NJT's Meadowlands line was excluded from the analysis. For the NJT Gladstone Branch (towards Gladstone), delay data relied on the second-to-last stop rather than the final stop because the GTFS-RT feed occassionally showed trains never arriving at Gladstone. NJT's real-time feed caps reported delays at 99 minutes. 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Travel + Leisure
a day ago
- Travel + Leisure
This Tiny, 272-acre Town on the Jersey Shore Doesn't Sell Alcohol—but a Charming New Inn Invites You to Have a Drink on the Porch
The Jersey Shore might not be the first place that comes to mind when you think of beautiful Victorian-style architecture and—wait for it—a dry town. But there's not much about the town of Ocean Grove, and it's charming, newly renovated Hotel Albatross, that's expected. 'This town is completely unique, from its founding as a religious retreat, to the fact that all the homes and businesses have historical land leases from the Camp Meeting Association,' explains Dominick Perrier-Strand, director of hotels for RC Management. RC Management also operates the nearby Majestic Hotel, The Hideaway in Long Beach Island, and Point Pleasant's Casa del Mar. In addition to renovating and reimagining the historic property under the strict guidelines of Ocean Grove's historical preservation commission and the Camp Meeting Association, the Hotel Albatross team had to contend with a challenge that would make most hotel owners balk. The town prohibits the sale of beer, wine, and liquor. In fact, just 40 years ago, the gates of Ocean Grove were locked on Sundays, and cars were not permitted to enter the town. The lobby cafe. 'Guests are welcome to bring their beverages of choice to enjoy on our property. With the hotel ideally situated on Ocean Pathway, our porches (with a BYO bottle of wine) are the unofficial social club of Hotel Albatross,' Perrier-Strand says. The team offers a complimentary Albatross Aperitif each Saturday throughout the summer, and also features a rotating weekly wine selection. If guests are celebrating a special occasion, the concierge can arrange to have a favorite bottle delivered from the team's go-to wine shop in neighboring Asbury Park. 'It'll be chilling in your room before you even unpack,' he says. 'Plus, guests are always welcome to hail a ride to a nearby bevy shop in our six-seater golf cart.' Another unexpected hiccup that cropped up during the renovation? Accessibility. 'The building's Victorian charm created a challenging environment for people with accessibility needs or difficulty climbing stairs. We are proud to have built the first hotel with an all-stop elevator in Ocean Grove, including a stop outside,' says Perrier-Strand. 'We hope that this will make the town available to a wider range of travelers looking to experience our slice of the Jersey Shore.' Interior of the Lobby Lounge. The hotel's fully refreshed interior was designed by Mapa Mueller (who previously worked on concepts like The Equinox Hotel and Life House Hotels) and incorporates cheeky wallpaper as well as vintage pieces like an heirloom mirror from the 1950s and archival press clippings to honor Hotel Albatross' early days. The lobby boasts a rotating merchandise nook styled with personal pieces from the home of Julian C. Hamer, an artist, collector of antiquities, avid gardener, and curator & docent of the local Centennial Cottage Museum on Ocean Grove's Central Avenue; the overall vibe is eclectic yet cozy, with a healthy dose of quirk. The 27 rooms, including two sprawling suites named after famous Ocean Grove residents like Hamer and local architect Mark Pavliv, feature special touches including Serta mattresses, Salt & Stone bath products, and pour-over stations with coffee from Maiden Coffee Roasters in nearby Neptune Township. Complimentary beach passes as well as Priority Coast bicycles are available. While the property doesn't have a permanent on-site restaurant, Perrier-Strand says his team is excited by pop-up opportunities like hosting a nightly prix fixe tasting menu with beloved New Jersey concepts like Buoy's in Manasquan and Dock & Claw on Long Beach Island. They've also hosted trendy New Zealand ice cream pop-up Golden Boy, highlighted New Jersey wine producer Ripe Life Wines, and plan to offer curated fondue and wine pairing nights during the winter months with C'est Cheese from Asbury Park. 'The challenge here was really to establish a new standard of hotel and service that's never been available in Ocean Grove before," Perrier-Strand adds. "We had to be sure that introducing a new accommodation class and price point was going to work in what has historically been a Victorian bed-and-breakfast coastal town.' Nightly rates start at $249 per night and can be booked at


CBS News
a day ago
- CBS News
New Jersey, Delaware beaches prohibit swimming as Hurricane Erin moves closer to East Coast
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