New Jersey Transit train derails at New York's Penn Station

Evening rush hour commuters look at the departures board while at Penn Station, Friday, April 14, 2017, in New York. A New Jersey Transit train with about 1,200 passengers aboard is stuck in a Hudson River tunnel between New York and New Jersey. Authorities say the Northeast Corridor train became disabled Friday due to an Amtrak overhead power problem. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

At least one car of a New Jersey Transit train derailed at Penn Station in Manhattan at about 8:55 p.m. Thursday.

About 100 people were on board the train. The FDNY said no one was seriously hurt.

New Jersey Transit rail service is suspended in and out of Penn Station. The PATH train system is cross-honoring NJ Transit passes and tickets at 33rd Street, Hoboken, and Newark.

Penn Station is the nation's busiest train station.

Problems have plagued the station and the related infrastructure in an around Manhattan along the Northeast Corridor. The incidents have included power outages, signal problems, and derailments.

Amtrak, which owns the tracks, has promised to begin a major overhaul of the tracks and the switches. That will require shutting down several tracks at the station, creating what Gov. Andrew Cuomo dubbed the "summer of hell" for railroad commuters.

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