New Jersey fancies itself a progressive beacon—a state of equity, sustainability, and opportunity. Yet its mass transit system, a cornerstone of any forward-thinking society, is an unmitigated disaster that mocks those ideals. NJ Transit, the Port Authority’s PATH trains, and the state’s patchwork of bus lines are not just failing commuters; they’re actively undermining the promise of a progressive utopia.
From the chaos of Newark Liberty International Airport’s transit links to filthy buses and gridlocked routes, New Jersey’s transportation network is a shameful betrayal of its most vulnerable residents.
Let’s start with NJ Transit’s trains, which have devolved into a cruel lottery for commuters. In 2024, on-time performance plummeted to 78% on some lines, a 20% drop from a decade ago. Delays and cancellations are so commonplace that riders—especially low-income workers and students—must pad their schedules by hours. The infrastructure is a relic: tracks dating back to the Eisenhower era and trains prone to breakdowns in sweltering heat or freezing cold.

Newark Airport’s rail link, a critical gateway for travelers, is a particular embarrassment. Trains to the airport are routinely late or canceled, leaving tourists and locals stranded. The AirTrain monorail, plagued by mechanical failures and overcrowding, was out of service for weeks last year, forcing passengers onto sluggish, overpriced shuttles. For a state that claims to prioritize global connectivity, this is a disgrace.
The bus system is no better. NJ Transit’s buses are often late, with GPS tracking so unreliable that riders are left guessing at stops. Routes serving urban hubs like Newark, Paterson, and Camden are chronically underfunded, stranding communities of color who rely on them most. Traffic along key corridors—think Routes 1, 9, or the Lincoln Tunnel approach—turns 30-minute trips into hour-long ordeals. And the buses themselves? Filthy. Seats are stained, floors littered with trash, and air conditioning is a coin toss. Riders on X have posted photos of moldy interiors and broken windows, a far cry from the “world-class” system New Jersey’s leaders promise.
Private bus lines, like those run by Coach USA, are just as bad, with frequent service cuts and no accountability.
Then there’s the PATH train, operated by the Port Authority, which connects New Jersey to Manhattan. Overcrowding is rampant, with rush-hour trains packed beyond capacity—some riders report standing nose-to-nose for entire trips. Signal failures and track repairs cause near-daily disruptions, and the system’s aging cars are prone to breakdowns. Weekend service is a nightmare, with single-tracking and shuttle buses turning a quick hop to New York into a multi-hour saga. PATH’s fare hikes—up 10% since 2023—only add insult to injury for workers who have no other option.
This dysfunction isn’t just inconvenient; it’s regressive. Public transit should level the playing field, offering affordable access to jobs, education, and healthcare. Instead, NJ Transit and PATH punish the working class. Low-income riders, disproportionately Black and Latino, face unpredictable commutes that cost them wages, opportunities, and dignity.
A single mother in Newark missing her shift because of a canceled bus isn’t a glitch; it’s a feature of a system that prioritizes optics over people. Meanwhile, the state’s climate goals—net-zero emissions by 2050—are a cruel joke. Transportation emissions climbed 4% last year as commuters, fed up with unreliable trains and buses, turned to cars, clogging highways and polluting the air.
How did we get here? Decades of bipartisan neglect, for one. NJ Transit’s $16 billion modernization price tag has been ignored while politicians funnel money to flashy projects or corporate tax breaks.
The state’s “Transit Village” program is a hollow talking point, producing more press releases than actual development. Leadership is a revolving door—NJ Transit has cycled through six CEOs in 12 years, each offering vague promises before bailing. The Port Authority, meanwhile, is a bureaucratic black hole, more focused on toll hikes than fixing PATH. And don’t forget the state’s refusal to secure stable funding. A proposed gas tax increase died in committee last year, leaving transit to scrape by on scraps.
New Jersey’s leaders love to brandish their progressive credentials, but their inaction speaks louder. A true progressive utopia would deliver a transit system that works for everyone, not just the privileged who can afford cars or Manhattan rents. Start with accountability: fire incompetent executives and publish real-time performance data. Fund modernization through a wealth tax or corporate surcharges—stop squeezing riders with fare hikes. Clean the buses, electrify the fleet, and expand service to neglected areas like South Jersey. Fix Newark Airport’s rail and AirTrain systems to restore some semblance of global credibility. And for PATH, invest in new cars and signals to end the sardine-can commutes.
This isn’t rocket science; it’s political will. New Jersey’s mass transit crisis is a moral failing that exposes the gap between the state’s rhetoric and reality. Keep ignoring it, and the progressive dream becomes a cynical lie. Fix it, and show the nation what equity and sustainability can actually look like.