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Appeals court rules that Trump must pay for New York tunnel payments

After a 'court of appeals' ruled against the Trump administration on Wednesday, the U.S. will have to continue paying for the $16 billion New York Hudson Tunnel.

The Hudson Tunnel Project will build a new commuter train tunnel between Manhattan and New Jersey, and repair an existing tunnel that is used daily by over 200,000 people and 425 trains. The existing tunnel was heavily damaged by hurricane Sandy in '2012 and requires frequent emergency repairs. This disrupts travel on America's busiest passenger rail line.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has a three-judge panel. The Appeals Court of the Circuit ruled that if the temporary restraining orders were overturned pending appeal, then the U.S. Transportation Department could suspend payments in the future and tunnel construction sites would become inactive. This, they said, would pose a serious risk of injury and deterioration, which the states will be responsible for preventing at great expense.

The Justice Department asked the U.S. district judge Jeannette Vargas to put her decision on hold until the Justice Department appealed.

Construction halted in February, but was resumed in October after the Trump administration released funding of $235 million that it had withheld since October 1. The U.S. Transportation Department has not yet commented on the decision. (Reporting and editing by Chris Sanders; David Shepardson, reporting)

(source: Reuters)