The Selkirk Hurdle is the term used by urban planners, railroad employees, politicians, and others to describe the route that must be taken by freight trains traveling between New York City and other points in downstate New York that are east of the Hudson River, and locations in the United States to the south and west.[citation needed] There are no rail freight bridges or tunnels that cross the Hudson River south of Selkirk, which is 10 miles (16 km) south of Albany and the home of Selkirk Yard, a major CSXclassification yard. As a result, trains from Long Island and New York City (except for the borough of Staten Island which has a rail bridge to New Jersey) must travel 140 miles (230 km) north to cross at Selkirk before continuing on their way.[1] Advocates claim that this detour and the inefficiencies that result force New York City to rely more heavily on relatively-inefficient trucks than most parts of the United States, where freight trains are more common. However, at least for traffic to and from the west, this route was touted for its efficiency as the "Water Level Route" by the New York Central Railroad because trains using it did not have to climb over the Appalachian Mountains, and it is still used by the New York Central's successor, CSX, for traffic to both sides of the Hudson River.
The only alternative to the Selkirk Hurdle is for rail cars to be floated across Upper New York Bay: an operation run until 2006 by the New York Cross Harbor Railroad and currently run by New York New Jersey Rail, LLC, now owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The Port Authority is investing in improvements to its decayed infrastructure, much of which was washed away by Hurricane Sandy. As trucking has become more prevalent, rail float operations across the bay have dwindled and freight operations on the Bay Ridge Branch have decreased from 600,000 railcar loads per year to less than 3,000 carloads per year.[5] The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey hopes some day to transport as many as 25,000 cars annually.[6]
^"Using Barges To Revive A Rail Route", The New York Times, May 4, 1986. Accessed January 3, 2008. "That is because in recent years virtually all rail traffic between Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island, at one end, and points south, at the other, has traveled over the Selkirk Hurdle, a 280-mile (450 km) loop that extends up the eastern bank of the Hudson River to a bridge at Selkirk, New York, near Albany, then down the western side of the river."
^Negroni, Christine. "A 21st-Century Makeover for a 19th-Century Wonder", The New York Times, April 24, 2009. Accessed March 20, 2022. "When it opened in 1889, the Poughkeepsie-Highland bridge was the first Hudson River rail crossing north of New York City, intended as a more direct route to move freight between New England’s industrial center and the Midwest’s agriculture. At one time as many as 50 trains a day used the bridge, said Fred Schaeffer, a Poughkeepsie lawyer who heads the bridge renovation committee, Walkway Over the Hudson."