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Judge temporarily suspends order that Trump unfreeze tunnel funding

On Monday, a U.S. Judge in New York temporarily put her decision on hold. This forced the Trump Administration to lift the four-month-old federal funding freeze for the $16 Billion Hudson River Tunnel Project that connects New York City and New Jersey.

U.S. district judge Jeannette Vargas had on Friday ordered that the funding be reinstated. Justice Department warned that it would have to pay up to $200m in funding for the Gateway Tunnel project by Monday at 1pm (1800 GMT), unless Vargas' order was halted.

Vargas said that she would delay her order until Thursday, at?5 p.m., to allow the Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals to review the government's?urgent?request. She denied the government request for a prolonged halt. New York and New Jersey had demonstrated that the shutdown of operations caused by the funding freezing "would have an immediate, severe impact on the region's economic interest."

The?Justice Department argued that it would not be able to recover the money if government wins on appeal.

Gateway, USDOT and the White House did not comment immediately.

The Gateway project is a construction of a new commuter train tunnel between Manhattan, New Jersey and the East Coast. It will also repair an old tunnel that has been used for more than 200,000 passengers and 425 trains per day.

The Hudson Tunnel, which was severely damaged by Hurricane Sandy (2012) and requires frequent emergency repairs to prevent travel on the country's busiest passenger rail line.

The Gateway project has halted all construction and will resume once funding is restored.

States said that the Trump administration frozen funds as a "brazen act of political revenge" against Democratic leaders.

Gateway reported that the Trump administration has withheld $205 Million in reimbursements since October 1.

Trump reportedly asked that Washington Dulles Airport and New York's Penn Station renamed after him as a way to unfreeze the funds. This drew strong criticism from Democrats.

Former President Joe Biden allocated approximately $15 billion to the project. So far, nearly $2 billion has already been spent on this project.

(source: Reuters)