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Rail Overhaul, Investment Vital to Northeast Corridor and Nation
By Richard Stowe, a REP member in Connecticut, published in the Philadelphia Inquirer on May 9, 2008. Reprinted in the New Haven (CT) Register and Stamford (CT) Advocate.
Home
to 56.3 million people, the nation's capital, and powerful financial,
media and academic institutions, the Northeast region produces 20
percent of America's GDP and 27 million jobs, but is only 2 percent of
the nation's landmass.
The mega-sprawlopolis
is most clearly defined by the intensity of its sky glow at night,
light pollution symbolic of the profligate energy consumed by
short-haul flights and millions of automobiles.
Amtrak owns and operates the Northeast Corridor from Washington to
Boston. The energy-efficient electrified corridor generates half of
Amtrak's riders nationwide and serves 80 percent of America's
commuter-rail passengers.
In all, 540,000 passengers travel daily on Long Island Railroad (LIRR)
and Metro-North Railroad (MNR) from suburban region-to-city center
(including reverse commute); 440,000 passengers board seven other
commuter-rail lines daily.
Amtrak, which carries 32,000 passengers daily, accounts for 50 percent
of corridor train miles and 10 percent of corridor trips.
Therein lies the paradox: Amtrak, a quasi-private corporation, owns and
operates all but 15 percent of track miles on the Northeast Corridor
without transparency, public accountability, or a dedicated funding
stream, but generates only 4 percent of Northeast Corridor riders.
Over its 37-year history, Amtrak has been the recipient of declining
rates of congressional subsidies, increasing politicization, and no
aggressive growth strategy plan.
In this vacuum of vision, local rail agency fiefdoms engage in poor
planning, Amtrak provides compromised service, expansion of
commuter-rail service is stymied, and rail freight movements into New
York and New England are thwarted.
That calls for a transfer of ownership, oversight and management of the
Northeast Corridor coupled with a sound strategic vision that focuses
on Amtrak's strengths, commuter-rail growth, and rail freight shipments
through the Trans-Hudson Express tunnels.
To achieve that: Transfer ownership of track, infrastructure and
right-of-way to the eight corridor states - Maryland, Delaware,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island and
Massachusetts - and the District of Columbia. Management should operate
under a joint power authority and include regional stakeholders such as
Amtrak, commuter-rail operators, state governments, District of
Columbia, rail freight carriers, and members of the public. The
authority would establish a corridor master plan; oversee procurement
and operation contracts, which conform to and exceed the highest green
standards; set policy (provide bicycle parking on trains) and monitor
measurable goals.
Providing four-city Acela Express service (Boston, New York,
Philadelphia, Washington) without 15-minute Penn Station layovers,
low-cost New Haven-originated commuter trains running nonstop or
one-stop from Penn Station to Washington, and express commuter-train
service from Philadelphia International Airport to Penn Station would
allow a much-needed shift from congestion-choking and delay-inducing
short-haul air trips to fast, high-speed rail trips.
Rail investment helps reduce oil imports, global warming, overcrowded
skies, and traffic-related deaths. A vibrant Northeast Corridor is
critical to our national interest.