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» Visit the Official NARP Website Flag Stops: Revisiting Old AssumptionsFriday, August 27, 2010
—Malcolm Kenton Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: 2010 elections, amtrak, atlanta, bruce selcraig, chattanooga, editorial, empire builder coalition, high-speed rail, nashville tennessean, rail coalition, rails-to-trails, scott walker, wisconsin, wisconsin governor(2) Comments Flag Stops: Getting At the True CostMonday, August 16, 2010The Federal Railroad Administration released a summary of the applications received for the next round of high(er)-speed intercity passenger train funding—$8.5 billion requested by 25 states, with only $2.3 billion available. These applications drive home the error Congress is making in reducing next year’s funding figures for the high speed rail program. Former Rep. Al Swift and the American High Speed Rail Alliance share NARP’s sense of urgency that Congress must increase the available funding if we want a train network that will help us meet our mounting energy and mobility challenges. Fortunately, it’s not too late to make your voice heard—the full Senate has yet to finish its version of the 2011 transportation spending bill, and the measure will likely go to a conference committee once the Senate acts. Other noteworthy stories: —Malcolm Kenton Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: al swift, american high speed rail alliance, bridge over the valley, congress, gary friedly, high-speed rail, portland press herald, public transportation, save money, take action, transportation funding, us dot(2) Comments Trains: Enhancing Freedom of MobilityFriday, August 13, 2010Washington Examiner editorial page editor Mark Tapscott claims that we train and transit advocates want to use “government power to force the rest of us to accept less mobility and convenience.” On the contrary, expanding train and transit service gives people more mobility and convenience by not tethering them to one mode of transportation. Many prefer not to have to worry about where to park or having to go get gas when out on errands or taking a leisure trip across town or across the country. Taking public transportation also saves money, and may even save your life—over 42,500 people are killed in car accidents each year, 50 times more than die on railroads and 180 times more than die on transit annually. But those of us who would rather leave the driving up to someone else are left with less mobility and less convenience because public funding priorities are so overwhelmingly skewed towards highways. Tapscott also compares the “freedom” the car offers to that afforded by smartphones. But what good is a smartphone when you have to spend all your travel time keeping your eyes on the road? When you use trains and transit, you have the freedom to spend your travel time however you choose, including by using your smartphone, without posing a safety hazard. Mobile devices can also increasingly help you get around without a car just as easily as they can give you driving directions. Balancing out the U.S. transportation funding scale to provide frequent, dependable train (and bus) service would give people the freedom to choose not only when and where to travel, but also how to travel, and the freedom to choose a mode of travel that takes a lighter toll on the pocketbook and the planet. It’s advocates of the highway-happy status quo who want to limit your freedom of mobility. —Malcolm Kenton Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: automobiles, cost savings, freedom, highways, mark tapscott, mobile devices, mobility, safety, smartphones, trains, transit, washington examiner(0) Comments Szabo: Higher-speed Passenger and Freight Trains Can CoexistTuesday, August 10, 2010A recent article in the Economist magazine discusses some freight railroads’ concerns that higher-speed passenger trains on their tracks would hamper their business. Federal Railroad Administrator Joseph Szabo—whose agency has proposed guidelines that railroads accepting public funds should meet regarding passenger service levels—wrote the following unpublished letter to Economist in response:
Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: federal railroad administration, freight railroads, grant agreements, high-speed rail, infrastructure, public benefits, public funds, trains, transportation, us dot(1) Comments Acela Should Be the Mold for Modern American TrainsMonday, August 09, 2010I am aboard an Acela Express from Newark to Washington and am amazed at the lack of enthusiasm for these trains from policymakers and even rail advocates, except for this pile of passengers that pay good bucks to use them. These are not all businesspeople traveling on their employers’ dime. Acelas are maligned because they “only” do 150 mph for the twelve miles in Rhode Island and no faster than that, but it is a fine 125-135 mph product right down to the on-board service people and crews. Passengers seem delighted with it. It has clean restrooms, big windows and, with the wide vestibules, a joy for those with special needs. I know no two are alike due to modifications and that Amtrak must hire special talent to maintain them, these problems cured with ongoing new equipment procurement with extension options, which in the end requires a dedicated source of funding. Passenger train advocates should continue to pursue the running of Acela-type trains outside the Northeast Corridor on places where track conditions can accommodate them, pulled by diesels until the day we finally adopt electrification nationwide. I can only imagine the quality of service: modern long-distance trains with a sit-down diners and maybe even sleepers a la the Talgo equipment on Spain’s Renfe between Barcelona and Geneva. Canada’s VIA should be in on this as well. —James Churchill, NARP Director Editor’s Note: Amtrak says that the 130 new cars (sleepers, diners and crew dorms) being ordered for long-distance service will contain design elements borrowed from the Acela, including the large windows. Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: acela, amtrak, equipment, james churchill, long-distance trains, national network, northeast corridor, railcar design(1) Comments ©2010 National Association of Railroad Passengers | » NARP website |
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