NJ Home   Services A to Z   Departments/Agencies FAQs
Great Seal of the State of New Jersey  
Site Index  |  Search: NJ Home   NJDOT

Publication date: January 2007
  Fact Book 2007 graphic

Goods Movement

 

Total freight tonnage 2003

621 million tons

Truck
466 million tons
Rail
42 million tons
International Water
112 million tons
Air

1 million tons

 

Port Authority of New York & New Jersey

84.7 million tons
 
4.8 million TEUs*
 
722,411 vehcile units
* Twenty-foot Equilalent Unit
 

South Jersey Port Corporation (2005)

3.5 million tons
 
24,605 direct/indirect jobs
$343 million business
 

Newark Liberty International Airport(2003)

964,323 tons
 

Goods distribution in New Jersey

Centrally located in the largest market in the world.
Within an eight-hour drive of 123 million people, 45 percent of the US population

More than 700 Million square feet of warehousing and distribution space

Estimated direct New Jersey freight employment: 501,000 full time jobs

 

Maritime Resources

NJDOT's Office of Maritime Resources (OMR) provides interagency support, program planning and policy recommendations on maritime issues to the Governor, Commissioner and Legislature. It also promotes coordination and cooperation with and among state, multi-state, federal and non-governmental agencies and provides public eduaction on maritime issues.

OMR serves as the primary advisory body and lead agency for support of New Jersey's $50 billion maritime industry which includes ports and terminals, cargo movement, boat manufacturing and sales, ferry operations, government services, maritime trades and maritime environmental resources.

The office supports technology research and development, investigates innovative dredged material management technologies to ensure a balance between development and protection of the ecosystem and advocates and plans for continued development and growth of New Jersey's marine transportation system.

Projects

Policy and Planning: Port Jersey Channel Deepening, NJ's Marine Trades Program federal initiatives such as the Water Resources Development Act, SAFETEA-LU, Coast Day, "All Hands On Deck" Harbor Education Program, NJDOT Freight Working Group, State Channel Dredging, Dredged Material Management, and the Harbor Operations Support System

Maritime Development: Commuter ferries, South Jersey Port Inland Distribution Network and related short sea shipping efforts, Bring a Buddy Boating Campaign, National Boating Infrastructure Grant Program, I BOAT NJ, Delaware River ports, Peninsula at Bayonne Harbor and harbor deepening.

Marine Biology: NJ Toxics Workplan, Harbor Estuary Program, Passaic River Restoration, Hudson-Raritan Restoration Program, Port Jersey Channel NJ Flats

Technology Development: Decontamination Technologies Demonstration Program, NJ Sediment Processing Facility, Dredged Material Beneficial Use Options

Freight Services
Freight Services and Freight Planning are responsible for a wide range of projects, programs, and activities designed to promote the safe, efficient and modally balanced movement of goods throughout the state.

  • Commercial Vehicles Information Systems and Networks
The objective is to set up an electronic data exchange to support commercial vehicle operations and to provice timely access to safety and health information about drivers, vehicles and carriers on inspections and accidents, end-to-end electronic credentialing and electronic data exchanges for automated, accurate roadside and fixed-site screening. The project team includes state, federal and regional public agencies and authorities.

  • Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program (MCSAP)

MCSAP is a federal grant program that provides financial assistance to states to reduce the number and severity of accidents and hazardous materials incidents involving commercial motor vehicles (CMV) through consistent, uniform and effective programs. The safety programs will increase the likelihood that safety defects, driver deficiency and unsafe motor carrier practices will be detected and corrected before they can contribute to accidents.

  • New Jersey State Rail Program

Preserving and improving those portions of the rail freight transportation network in New Jersey that support and promote economic development are an NJDOT priority. This program provides rail funding assistance to preserve the transportation infrastructure, rehabilitate or improve assistance and rail and intermodal facility construction.

609.530.8026
Freight Planning
Statewide Freight Plan

The New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) completed technical work on a Comprehensive Statewide Freight Plan in 2005. The plan examines all modes of freight movement as a complete system; highlighting issues trends, challenges and opportunities. Rather than focusing solely on capital needs, the plan suggests ways to improve the integration of freight within the NJDOT planning and project development process, and to improve coordination amongst other government organizations and private industry. The plan identifies strategies and critical projects that capitalize on freight as an economic engine and leverage it to support attainment of New Jersey's quality of life goals.

Liberty Corridor
The Liberty Corridor starts at the ports of Newark and Elizabeth in North Jersey and stretches down the New Jersey Turnpike (NJTP) towards the port areas around Camden. The corridor is envisioned as a region where people can take ideas from inception through manufacturing and all the way to the global marketplace. SAFETEA-LU has earmarked over $100 million in seed money to fund the planning coordination, and construction of improvements associated with realizing the Liberty Corridor vision.

Portway Program
The Portway Program seeks to improve access to and between the Newark-Elizabeth Air/Seaport Complex, intermodal rail facilities, trucking and warehousing/transfer facilities and the regional surface transportation system. These facilities and their access routes are the front door to global and domestic commerce for New Jersey. The Program has two elements: Phase One Projects and the Portway Extensions Concept Development Study.

Phase One of Portway consists of eleven independent NJDOT projects designed to increase safety and support seamless connections by separating heavy truck traffic flows from other traffic flows. The projects are located in the counties of Union, Essex, Hudson and Bergen and the municipalities of Elizabeth, Newark, Bayonne, Jersey City, Kearny, Secaucus, North Bergen, Little Ferry and Ridgefield Park.

The Portway Extensions Concept Development Study identified container/goods movement issues beyond the original Phase One projects. It recommended infrastructure, operational, ITS improvements and developed a prioritized implementation plan.

Portway Program Goals
  • to increase safety and support seamless intermodal and roadway connections
  • to address current high levels of congestion and assist in meeting the growing furtre demands resulting from increased activity at port facilities, rail yards and distribution centers.
  • to promote economic development, create jobs, and improve the environment.
  • to improve access to brownfields sites and facilitate their re-use as value-added processing centers and other goods movement logistics purposes.
609.530.2852

Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
225 Park Avenue South, 15th floor
New York, NY 10003
212.435.7000
973.961.6600

Chairman Anthony R. Coscia
Executive Director Kenneth J. Ringler
   
  Facilities
Aviation

John F. Kennedy International Airport
Newark Liberty International Airport
La Guardia Airport
Teterboro Airport
Downtown Manhattan Heliport

Port Commerce Port Newark
Elizabeth-Port Authority Marine Terminal
Port Authority Auto Marine Terminal
Brooklyn Piers
Red Hook Container Terminal
Howland Hook Marine Terminal
PATH Journal Square Transportation Center
Harrison Car Maintenance Facility
Consolidated Maintenance Facility
Running Repair Shop
MacMillan Bloedel Facility
13 PATH Stations
WTC Power Sub-Station
Morton Street vent shaft
   
Facilities
Volume
Port Authority Bus Terminal
56,652,000 passengers
2,144,000 bus movements (2005)
George Washington Bridge
53,612,000 vehicles*
(G. W. B.) Bus Station
5,271,000 passengers,
313,000 bus movements (2005)
Lincoln Tunnel
21,794,000 vehicles*
Holland Tunnel
16,982,000 vehicles*
Staten Island Bridges
Goethals Bridge
14,037,000 vehicles*
Bayonne Bridge
3,849,000 vehicles*
Outerbridge Crossing
15,593,000 vehicles*
 
Employees
6,009 PANY/NJ
971 PATH
Total
6,980
* 2005 eastbound  
 
Go to NJDOT home page Contact Us | Privacy Notice | Legal Statement | Accessibility Statement  Go to State of New Jersey home page
  department: home | about | NJ commuter | in the works | business | engineering | freight, air & water | capital | community | data | links | index
  statewide: NJ Home | about NJ | business | government | state services A to Z | departments

  Copyright © State of New Jersey, 2002-2013
  Department of Transportation
  P.O. Box 600
  Trenton, NJ 08625-0600
OPRA - open public records act

  Last Updated:  April 24, 2007