Research requires a second look
The numbers might seem overwhelming at first.
But when you realize where they come from, they suddenly seem a bit under-whelming.
A new study unveiled recently indicates that a high-speed commuter rail line connecting Monmouth and Ocean counties with the Northeast Corridor Line in South Brunswick and running through Jamesburg and Monroe would attract nearly twice as many riders as alternate lines that would run to the east.
The line, according to AECOM Consult, an affiliate of DMJM Harris, would average 40,700 riders a weekday, or 31,700 more than the 9,000 riders estimated in a study conducted by NJ Transit in 2005.
The new study also finds that 22,200 riders would use an option that runs through Matawan, 11,300 more than the 10,900 estimated by NJ Transit, and that 12,000 would use a line through Red Bank option, 4,100 more than the NJ Transit estimate.
The numbers are so striking that it would seem to end all arguments, giving NJ Transit no other choice but to go ahead with the so-called MOM Line through Monmouth Junction despite the opposition of officials in Middlesex County.
There is a catch, however. The numbers come from a firm hired by the freeholder boards in Monmouth and Ocean counties, both of which have been pushing to get the MOM Line built which might explain why they differ so greatly from NJ Transit’s original estimates.
Shore officials had pushed NJ Transit to revisit its original numbers because they believed the agency did not account for new developments including the likelihood that the Trans-Hudson-Express Tunnel, which is still in the planning stages, will open in 10 years and the availability of dual-mode (diesel and electric) trains that will allow commuters to travel straight into New York. These changes would make a huge difference in the figures.
NJ Transit agreed, but only if the shore counties paid for the study which created a built-in conflict that was destined to toss into question the findings.
The folks at the shore want us to believe that this is a minor point, that AECOM was acting independently.
But as Monroe Township Councilman Irwin Nalitt told us last week, "If you pay for a study, you can make it come out anyway you want."
And that’s the key here.
The two freeholder boards released the figures without any accompanying data. When we called to get a copy of the report, officials in Ocean County faxed us a printout of a slide presentation that can at best be called sketchy and we’re being generous.
Imagine if Jamesburg, Monroe and South Brunswick had commissioned a study that happened to find that the Monmouth Junction alternative would be the most lightly used. Shore officials would be fighting mad (they’d have every right to be) and NJ Transit would question the math.
Shouldn’t the same standard apply here?

