NJ Transit cross-honoring in preparation for winter storm
Customers can use their tickets or passes on alternate travel modes. The agency is also taking additional steps to handle the impending winter weather, including making snow plows and salt spreaders ready for service, stocking 16,000 bags of snow-melting supplies, and inspection and maintenance on nearly 2,200 buses.
With a blast of winter weather predicted to move into the region, NJ Transit is taking proactive steps to minimize delays, ensure service reliability and give customers additional travel options.
To give customers additional travel options during expected winter weather conditions, NJ Transit will offer system wide cross-honoring on Tuesday, enabling customers to use their ticket or pass on an alternate travel modes: rail, bus or light rail.
Many NJ Transit trains are on modified schedules because of Hurricane Sandy. Because of the modified schedules, the website’s trip planner is not operable.
"NJ Transit is taking a proactive role to prepare for the impending storm. While we have both the equipment and personnel ready to clear tracks and platforms, we also want to provide customers with as much travel flexibility as possible. We want to keep our customers on the move, and this is why system wide cross-honoring will be in effect for all of Tuesday," said NJ Transit Executive Director James Weinstein. "We want our customers to be safe, and encourage them to plan ahead and use good judgment in their travels. Customers should also monitor njtransit.com, in addition to social media pages, broadcast reports and station announcements."
Steps NJ Transit is taking to handle the impending winter weather include:
Making snow plows and salt spreaders ready for service. Snow-removal contracts are in place with outside vendors.
Stocking 16,000 bags of snow-melting supplies, and hundreds of shovels and snow blowers.
Performing maintenance and testing on its two rail-mounted jet snow blowers in the event they are needed to help clear train tracks of snow and ice, particularly in rail yards.
Inspection of more than 750 rail switches prior to Hurricane Sandy. Inspections are continuing along rail lines where rail service has been recently restored.
Inspecting onboard heating systems, thermostats, weather stripping, and electronic components on railcars and locomotives.
Inspecting and maintenance performed on a fleet of nearly 2,200 buses — from the heating and airbrake systems, to the engine fluids, tires, windshield wipers and doors.
While every measure has been taken to prepare, it may be necessary to adjust service during the storm. NJ Transit is encouraging its customers to monitor the latest service updates via njtransit.com, Twitter, Facebook, station announcements and broadcast traffic reports.
More Bus

Frontrunner Bus Group Expands with New Massachusetts Headquarters
The significantly larger facility will provide the infrastructure needed to support the company’s growing workforce, advanced technologies, and expanding product line.
Read More →
Joshua Schank on Transportation Innovation, Risk, and the Future of Mobility
In this edition of METROspectives, Joshua Schank discusses lessons from launching LA Metro’s Office of Extraordinary Innovation, the challenges of advancing new mobility technologies, and much more.
Read More →
Reinventing Fleet Maintenance with Real-time Visibility and AI
Transit leaders need to know what needs fixing, where to look, who is responsible, when work is completed, and what it costs without having to chase information across disconnected systems.
Read More →
SamTrans Sets Priorities for Potential Connect Bay Area Revenue
The board-approved framework allocates future funding to maintaining service, rider improvements, equity initiatives, and infrastructure repairs.
Read More →
When Routine Fails: How Public Transit Must Adapt for the World Cup
The 2026 FIFA World Cup will test transit agencies’ ability to manage unpredictable travel patterns, making real-time data and operational flexibility critical to moving millions of visitors efficiently.
Read More →
Photo Highlights from APTA's 2026 Mobility Conference
The photo gallery captures scenes from the conference, including the International Bus Roadeo, exhibit hall activities, the Bus Showcase, and much more.
Read More →
Chicago's NITA Act Moves Into Next Phase as Service Improvements Begin
Rider-focused improvements will begin rolling out across the system immediately as CTA, Metra, and Pace increase service this summer in the six-county region.
Read More →
Philadelphia's SEPTA Approves Annual Transit Service Plan
Between 2021 and 2024, SEPTA held more than 200 public meetings — including 144 in-person sessions — throughout the SEPTA service region.
Read More →A True Low-Floor Minibus Design Delivers Better Accessibility and Efficiency for Everyone
As transit demands evolve, so should your fleet. Download the whitepaper to see how the Low-Floor Frontrunner Minibus compares to traditional options.
Read More →
WMATA Debuts 'Fares Pay for Service' Awareness Campaign
The campaign was highlighted during a media event at the Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center in Silver Spring, where WMATA’s GM/CEO Randy Clarke joined Metro Transit Police officers, WMATA management team, board members, and staff to expand fare enforcement and customer education efforts on Metro Bus routes throughout the region.
Read More →