Opponents cite environmental, financial concerns
Of course, the GCL, like similar major public transportation projects, has drawn opposition.
“This thing, in my opinion, is a dinosaur that’s going to operate on fossil fuels,” said Ryan Campbell, who runs the “Say no to GCL” Facebook group and started a petition opposing the line. It had more than 1,500 signatures as of 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
He argues that trains running on fossil fuels will be bad for the environment, though he made clear his group is not against public transportation. He said there are better options, including an alternate route that would join the existing PATCO line. It would run along Route 55 to reach Glassboro with a possible extension to Vineland and Millville.
He also said there is a much cheaper, greener option: “Buses are more efficient. Buses are the answer, my guy.”
“You go get your road crew a bucket of paint and tell them the paint bus only lanes,” he said. “That negates traffic, the technology is already there for buses to have electric. That negates the environment concern, and it’s more feasible.”
Campbell is also concerned by the lack of federal support for the project, which he calls “a boondoggle.”
New Jersey is slated to receive more than $12 billion from the federal government, thanks to the $1 trillion infrastructure bill signed in November by President Joe Biden. Gov. Phil Murphy’s office declined to comment on whether the project would receive funding.
Hanson pushes back on criticisms about the diesel cars that are being considered for the GCL.
“People don’t understand that the kind of diesel car that we’re looking at right now is extremely clean,” he said. “In some cases, depending upon how the electricity is manufactured, it is actually cleaner than some electric power trains can be.”
On the project’s “Is It True?” page, it says the project will evaluate the latest technology available as part of the final design phase.
In defending the project, Hanson also says it will allow people better access to the Greater Philadelphia region.
“It is a project that is designed to support community downtowns while connecting people to the biggest cities that we have in the area,” he said.
Many people who have long anticipated the project are growing impatient — and its current target completion date of late 2027 may be too late for some.
“I’m getting ready to retire soon,” said Tonja Sharper. “I won’t even need it soon.”
Sharper lives in Glassboro, and works in Philadelphia at Penn Medicine. On a recent Friday evening, she was waiting for Bus 408 to Millville to get home. Normally, she would drive to one of the PATCO stations and take the train into the city from there. But her vehicle was totaled after an accident when her son was driving it.
“A box truck hit him,” she said, “and they collided together and the whole side got ripped up.”
She said her commute in the morning was “a breeze,” getting to the Rand Center in 45 minutes. “It’s just the commute coming home, because they don’t have enough drivers,” she added.
Sharper, who had been waiting for her bus for more than an hour, said she first heard about the GCL project more than 12 years ago. If it had been built already, she said with a laugh, “I’d have been home by now.”