Metro-North to Bring in Extra Transformers for Powerless Rail

A Con Edison feeder cable failed, causing significant delays along the New Haven line that could last for weeks

Officials announced a plan to supply partial power to a heavily trafficked line of the nation's second largest commuter railroad as tens of thousands of commuters took to the highways and continued to scramble for alternative routes after a power failure disrupted service along Metro-North's New Haven line.

Consolidated Edison was setting up three transformers to try and supply 13,000 volts of power to a high-voltage line that failed Wednesday at a Metro-North Railroad station, Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said at a news conference in Grand Central Terminal Thursday evening.

But it was unclear how many electric trains could be served by the transformers' power to the line, which normally needs about 138,000 volts, Malloy said. Officials said they'd be testing the alternative power source over the weekend to see if it could work.

A second high-voltage line serving the trains to New Haven, Conn., had been out of service for two weeks for planned repairs, officials said, and it was unclear if its absence caused extra strain on the line that failed Wednesday.

The MTA, which oversees Metro-North, and Con Ed both said Thursday they believed full service could be maintained by the single feeder line. It hasn't been determined what caused the outage.

Meanwhile parts of Interstate 95 turned into a virtual parking lot for much of Thursday as commuters facing hours-long delays took to the roads despite warnings that the problem could last for weeks.

"I'm the governor of 125,000 pretty unhappy commuters right now," said a frustrated Malloy at Grand Central Terminal, calling the service disruption "a horrendous situation."

Metro-North has said it could accommodate about 33 percent of its regular ridership and has urged customers to stay at home or find alternative transportation. Twenty-four diesel trains were running Thursday, said a MTA spokesman, in addition to about 60 shuttle buses.

At Grand Central Terminal on Thursday, ticket windows for the New Haven, Conn., line were closed. Commuters who rode other lines said those trains were more crowded than usual.

Matt Sullivan, 27, an architect, said it usually takes him half an hour to get to Grand Central from his home in Greenwich. That doubled when he drove to White Plains, N.Y., and took the Harlem line.

"It's disappointing but my company will give me a laptop so I can work from home a couple of days," he said.

The broken circuit could take two to three weeks to repair, Consolidated Edison has said.

"I'm just trying to get through the next two days," said Pete Hartney, 64, who makes a daily two-hour commute from Guilford, Conn., to New York City that has stretched by 90 minutes. "I'm going to try to put up with whatever they throw our way ... then formulate a plan over the weekend."

Amtrak said it would offer limited service between New York and Boston on Thursday because of the power problem.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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