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» Visit the Official NARP Website Flag Stops: A Time of Great ExpectationsMonday, June 15, 2009Congress figures out how to pay for better transportation, ample discussion of the future of American travel and urban geography, and why train travel actually does make sense. All that and more in this week’s roundup of reports, reactions and ruminations on passenger rail and transportation policy. Chairman James Oberstar (D-WI) of the House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee is set to release his plan for this year’s much-anticipated transportation reauthorization bill on Wednesday. The question now is how, not if, federal surface transportation policy will veer from the status quo. One of the few most effective potential funding sources, however, has seemingly been taken off the table, but there are good reasons not to discount the idea of using the General Fund. Meanwhile, some members of Congress are finally starting to connect the dots between transportation and the climate bill. We are still working to gain cosponsors for two bills that set good policy objectives, and you can help! From Southern Pines, North Carolina’s daily newspaper, The Pilot, comes a sympathetic op-ed on Amtrak from the former editor of Passenger Train Journal, also a former Federal Railroad Administration economist. He explains why the national passenger railroad hasn’t been able to satisfy the expectations of politicians and the public, and why we now have an opportunity to get it right. “Expecting great things from Amtrak,” he aptly observes, “is like expecting a Triple Crown win from a horse that has not been fed,” but “with adequate and intelligent investment,” Amtrak can redeem itself. Also advocating the aggressive pursuit of high-speed passenger & freight rail: the man who headed the Federal Railroad Administration under George H.W. Bush. Gilbert E. Carmichael calls the next-generation rail network “Interstate 2.0.” Steps Carmichael would like to see taken first include a 25-percent tax credit for private railroads to build new capacity, state construction or leasing of high-speed track on existing rights-of-way, and upgrading the electric grid in preparation for railroad electrification. A detailed, behind-the-scenes report in yesterday’s New York Times Magazine underscores just how much the success of passenger rail in the near future, in the eyes of politicians and much of the traveling public, will ride on the degree to which the Golden State achieves its desired outcomes. The head of Alstom Transport told the autor, “If California is a success, ... I believe it will be the showcase [of next-generation passenger rail in the US]. But if it’s not working well? In the end it could be a failure for many years for this idea in the U.S. So it has to be very carefully done.” Our friends at TFA rightly point out that the author seems uninterested in incrementally improving existing service, essentially asking travelers (like himself) to bear with Amtrak as it is until CAHSR is complete. A Wisconsin newspaper editorializes against the reestablishment of Amtrak service between Milwaukee and Green Bay. Their objections (and our responses): If gas prices tripled and quadrupled, train travel might make sense. (Such increases are almost inevitable, so why not be prepared?) Finally, once you average out all the expenses of owning, maintaining and insuring a car, plus the costs to society from traffic accidents and tailpipe emissions, it becomes difficult to say that driving is “easy, convenient and cheap.” Richard Florida, a writer on economic geography warns that the current economic crisis means “the end of a whole way of life.” He argues that the United States’ ability to maintain its economic prowess in the years to come will depend on the ability of its urban megaregions to attract a “creative class” of professionals doing high value-added work that cannot be outsourced or done by machines, who “generate and transport ideas” instead of goods. “Positioning the economy to grow strongly in the coming decades will require not just fiscal stimulus or industrial reform; it will require a new kind of geography as well, a new spatial fix for the next chapter of American economic history.” This new geography will be built off of an efficient transportation system that will allow these megaregions to provide a high quality of life for large numbers of people. Building and operating the rail and transit networks that will drive the new economy will mean even more jobs to be had. Today, we need to begin making smarter use of both our urban spaces and the suburban rings that surround them—packing in more people, more affordably, while at the same time improving their quality of life. That means liberal zoning and building codes within cities to allow more residential development, more mixed-use development in suburbs and cities alike, the in-filling of suburban cores near rail links, new investment in rail, and congestion pricing for travel on our roads. One traffic-clogged American boomburg is looking towards a more livable future, staking its hopes for manageable growth on a soon-to-come subway line. On the other side of the Atlantic, new rail lines anchor French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s vision for a more integrated, sustainable Paris metro area. George Will is at it again. This time, he is citing Amtrak’s red ink as a reason why the government would be a poor manager for bankrupt General Motors. Let’see. Amtrak’s federal grant last year was $1.3 billion, of which roughly 2/3 was capital investment and debt service. Last year, GM alone lost $31 billion—that’s the subsidy from shareholders. Then there’s the various government subsidies to auto makers and users, ongoing and emergency, and to highways and aviation. The total federal grant to Amtrak buys (on average) about 10 miles of highway. Furthermore, Will’s assertion that “Legislators treat [Amtrak] as their toy train set?” is an insult to those of us who actually use those “toy” trains to get to real places. LCL: A Canadian economic development forum touts intercity rail as a solution to traffic woes and a “more civilized” way to travel, yet also “a tall political order;” despite some setbacks, the taxpayer money invested in Orlando-area commuter rail has not been wasted, as critics claim; city leaders in Dubuque, Iowa, get a can-do attitude towards Amtrak service to Chicago, which seems to be only a few years away; and Oklahoma hopes to get its piece of the Obama high-speed rail pie. —Malcolm Kenton Posted by NARPTags: amtrak, congress, editorial, funding, high-speed rail, opinion, smart growth, train travel, transportation, urban geography,Flag Stops: Emerging TrendsThursday, November 12, 2009Real-estate experts acknowledge a shift is afoot, Amtrak raises expectations, and even more advances on the other side of the Atlantic. The Transport Politic sizes up the implications of the results of last Tuesday’s elections in New Jersey, Virginia, Cincinnati, Chicago’s Indiana suburbs, Atlanta, Charlotte, Miami, New York City and Seattle on rail and transit interests. The Midwest High Speed Rail Blog highlights two ways that passenger railroads are, and should be, generating more interest in train travel: by transporting popular sports teams and taking advantage of movie tie-ins. —Malcolm Kenton Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: amtrak, development, equipment, europe, future, high-speed rail, housing, marketing, passenger rail, population density, procurement, ray lahood, real estate, ryan avent, smart growth, suburbs, survey, transit-oriented, trends,Transportation: A Public Health IssueWednesday, May 19, 2010If America switched to a non auto-centric transportation system, as much as $402 billion in healthcare costs, not to mention many lives, could be saved. This according to a just-released overview [PDF] of recent studies done by the American Public Health Association. Most Americans are familiar with the tragedy and suffering that occur daily in automobile accidents—making driving far more dangerous statistically than any other motorized travel mode—as well as the negative health effects of our sedentary lifestyles, partly a result of so many neighborhoods being inconducive to walking and biking. Yet researchers have only begun to quantify, in dollar amounts, how much these problems cost America. It is worth remembering that intercity passenger trains don’t just provide a safer and more enjoyable way to get from city to city; they also catalyze the development of walkable and bikeable neighborhoods, improving public health both by giving people exercise and by reducing air pollution. This graphic from the report encapsulates the concept well:
—Malcolm Kenton Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: development, exercise, healthcare, livability, neighborhoods, obesity, passenger trains, public health, smart growth, streets, transportation,The Debilitating Aspects of Auto DependenceWednesday, February 02, 2011
Here are excerpts from Erik Weber’s excellent piece for the DC-area smart-growth blog Greater Greater Washington, challenging the notion that an automobile-based transportation system increases freedom of mobility. The havoc wreaked on the nation’s midsection by the latest blizzard underscores the necessity of intercity passenger train service to keep people moving when cars and planes fail. The more people have the train travel choice available to them, the less we will be crippled by the hazards of increasingly severe weather (thanks to climate change), gas price fluctuations, and congestion on the roads and in the skies. —Malcolm Kenton
Posted by Malcolm KentonTags: auto dependence, development patterns, lexington ky, natural disasters, public transportation, smart growth, suburbia, transportation and land use, walkability, washington dc,©2010 National Association of Railroad Passengers | » NARP website |
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