
NEWARK, N.J. — Federal and state officials have confirmed that a top official at NJ Transit wrote a letter to federal safety regulators alerting them about a staffing shortage at the agency two months before the deadly commuter train crash in Hoboken, N.J. last year, The Record reports.
In the letter, the agency's VP/GM, rail operations, detailed the losses: 93 non-union employees had retired from NJ Transit, or sought work elsewhere, between January 2014 and July 2016. Combined, their experience totaled 2,339 years. The letter was sent to the Federal Railroad Administration, which at the time was conducting a safety audit of NJ Transit, the nation's third-largest mass-transit agency.










