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High Speed Rail Enactment Urged by Four Organizations
- December 6, 2000
Rail Bill Gathers Momentum in Senate - September
18, 2000
Alan M. Yorker, New NARP President - September
13, 2000
Jack Martin, 64, President of NARP for Over 21 Years,
is Dead - September 2, 2000
Rail Passengers Honor New Jersey's Senator
Lautenberg - April 26, 2000
Rail Passengers Honor Ohio's Senator Voinovich - April 26, 2000
Burch Safety Award Goes To Amtrak Chef Allan
Thomas - April 25, 2000
NARP Statement on Amtrak's "Network Growth
Strategy" - February 28, 2000
NARP Supports Clinton Rail Request -
February 7, 2000
NARP Hails Boston Electric Trains - January
31, 2000
NARP Statement on Amtrak Reform Council Report
- January 24, 2000
HIGH SPEED RAIL ENACTMENT URGED BY FOUR ORGANIZATIONS
December 6, 2000
Washington -- The American Passenger Rail Coalition (APRC), High Speed
Ground Transportation Association (HSGTA), Railway Progress Institute (RPI)
and National Association of Railroad Passengers (NARP) renewed their call
for enactment this year of the High Speed Rail Investment Act (HSRIA),
which allows for bond-financed passenger rail investments over ten years.
The HSRIA (which passed the House as part of its tax bill) garnered
167 sponsors as freestanding H.R.3700; the Senate bill, S.1900, has 57
sponsors (not counting Senate Finance Chairman William Roth who strongly
supports it). Support has come from across the political spectrum. The
impressive list of HSRIA supporters -- public officials, newspapers, and
other organizations -- is at
<http://lautenberg.senate.gov/highspeed/letter.html>.
Discussions about just what to enact this month are continuing. The
key players are: Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-MS) and Minority
Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD); House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) and Minority
Leader Dick Gephardt (D-MO); White House Chief of Staff John Podesta; and
OMB Director Jacob Lew. These people need to hear from their colleagues
about the importance of doing the rail bond bill this month.
The HSRIA may be the only practical way to secure a reasonable level
of passenger rail capital investment in the next few years. Amtrak's FY
2001 capital budget is so tight that expenditures on heavy overhauls of
rolling stock will be dramatically reduced from the FY 2000 level.
Meanwhile, a public disillusioned with overburdened air and road facilities
is turning increasingly to trains -- even trains that are slow
by world standards. Amtrak just completed its fourth consecutive year
of ridership growth nationwide. On the Pacific Northwest "Cascadia" corridor
(top speed: 79 mph), ridership has grown 180% from 226,400 in 1993 to an
estimated 633,000 this year.
HSRIA capital investments will produce substantial economic benefits,
expanded business opportunities and new jobs in states and regions around
the country.
Enacting the HGSRIA is a critical step towards achieving the truly balanced
passenger transportation system in the U.S. that Americans eagerly await.
The bill will enable planning by the states and Amtrak to move forward
now.
The bill would let Amtrak sell $10 billion in bonds over ten years,
to be invested in partnership with states. The Department of Transportation
must approve projects, and states must provide a 20% match. Bondholders
get tax credits in lieu of interest payments; the Joint Committee on Taxation
estimates the cost to the federal government over 10 years at $3.26 billion.
RAIL BILL GATHERS MOMENTUM IN SENATE
September 18, 2000
Washington -- Chairman William Roth (R-DE) of the Senate Finance Committee
today indicated that he plans to ask his committee on Wednesday to approve
incorporating the High Speed Rail Investment Act as part of H.R. 4923,
the Community Renewal and New Markets Act of 2000. The House has already
passed its version of H.R. 4923. The rail bill provisions generally track
those in S.1900 and H.R. 3700. They allow for bond-financed passenger rail
investments over ten years. S.1900, the High Speed Rail Investment Act,
has 54 Senate sponsors; a House companion bill, H.R.3700, has 155.
"Railroad passengers appreciate the continuing commitment shown by Chairman
Roth to passenger rail," said NARP Executive Director Ross Capon. "It is
important that this bill be enacted this year so that planning by the states
and Amtrak can move forward now for the stronger, more effective passenger
rail network that Americans eagerly await." The bill would let Amtrak sell
$10 billion in high-speed rail bonds over ten years, for passenger rail
capital investment. Of the funds, 90% would be for lines designated as
high-speed rail corridors; the Northeast Corridor could get no more than
30%. The Department of Transportation must approve projects, and states
must provide a 20% match. Bondholders get tax credits in lieu of interest
payments; the Joint Committee on Taxation estimates the cost to the federal
government over 10 years at $3.26 billion.
A successful committee "mark-up" Wednesday could set the stage for enactment
of the rail provisions this year, possibly as part of a big "omnibus" bill.
Another chance to improve the national passenger rail network in a way
that provides much needed relief to the beleaguered highway and aviation
networks may not come again soon. American travelers can't afford the wait
that a failure to act this year likely would cause.
ALAN M. YORKER, NEW NARP PRESIDENT
September 13, 2000
Washington--Alan M. Yorker of Decatur, Ga., is the fourth president
of the National Association of Railroad Passengers. The Association's
executive committee elected him to serve until April 2002, completing the
term of Jack Martin, who died September 1, after 21 years of service as
NARP president.
Yorker, 52, has served on the NARP Board since 1986, and on its executive
committee since 1996. The NARP Board elected him to be one of four
association vice-presidents in April. Yorker is president of Georgians
for Transportation Alternatives and the Georgia Association of Railroad
Passengers.
A retired family therapist, he served 15 years on the board of directors
of the Georgia Association of Marriage and Family Therapists. From
1986 to 1991 and from 1998 until last month, he chaired that association's
legislative affairs committee. From 1991 to 1998, he served on and
then chaired the Georgia Composite Licensing Board for Social Workers,
Professional Counselors, and Marriage and Family Therapists, a position
to which he was appointed by then-Gov., now U.S. Senator Zell Miller. He
is also the Past-President of the Columbia University Alumni Club of Atlanta.
He is a passionate believer in the need for more and better passenger
trains of all kinds. He is the father of three children, Ben, 28,
Margaret, 21, and Jonathan, 15. He is a member of the Steamship Historical
Society of America, the Ocean Liner Museum in New York City, and the Southeastern
Railroad Museum in Duluth, Ga.
Yorker says he is determined to build on the "legacy of strength, integrity,
clarity and commitment, not to mention pure brilliance" that Jack Martin
left and which he says "will serve as a guiding light to further our journey
towards the day when America's passenger rail system is the truly world-class
network it deserves and needs to be."
JACK MARTIN, 64, PRESIDENT OF NARP FOR OVER 21
YEARS, IS DEAD
Saturday, September 2, 2000
Washington -- John R. “Jack” Martin, who served as president of NARP
since April, 1979, and board member since 1975, died in Atlanta yesterday
morning. He had quadruple bypass heart surgery in San Jose on August 8,
and returned home on August 29. In his memory, all Amtrak locomotives will
sound their horns at 5:00 pm (Eastern) tomorrow, time of the memorial service
at H.M. Patterson & Son Funeral Home in Atlanta.
Though a volunteer officer, he devoted countless hours to the passenger-train
cause, particularly after his early (voluntary) retirement from The Coca-Cola
Company in 1995. He was Senior Counsel there when he retired. His train
efforts included both NARP-specific work and work as an informal (again
volunteer) consultant to Amtrak. His level of knowledge about trains was
matched by the dignity and poise with which he chaired board meetings.
He earned a degree in mechanical engineering (from Georgia Tech) and worked
two years as a DuPont engineer while getting his law degree from Temple
University. He worked as a DuPont lawyer, then joined Coca-Cola in 1966.
During his college years, he took summer jobs in operations with three
different railroads.
He was also a member and former chairman of the Georgia Rail Passenger
Authority, a state agency created to develop passenger rail service in
Georgia. He is survived by his wife, Faye; two sons, Mark and Matthew,
of Atlanta; and a daughter, Mimi Addy, a Chicago attorney. The family asks
that contributions in his memory be made to NARP and/or the Atlanta Chapter
of the National Railway Historical Society, whose address is P.O. Box 1267,
Duluth, GA 30096-0023.
RAIL PASSENGERS HONOR NEW JERSEY'S SENATOR LAUTENBERG
April 26, 2000
Washington--The National Association of Railroad Passengers tomorrow
will present the George Falcon Golden Spike Award to Senator Frank R. Lautenberg
(D-NJ). The award will be presented at the Association's annual Washington
reception, at the Columbus Club in Union Station, on Thursday, April 27,
at about 6:30 pm.
This is the first time that the Golden Spike has gone to the same person
twice: Lautenberg also received it in 1988. The plaque which will
be presented to him tomorrow honors "a long, distinguished career of successfully
and significantly increasing federal funding for passenger rail." The plaque
continues, "He has also been a consistent leader in seeing that both New
Jersey and the entire nation received a much stronger passenger rail system
than would have been possible without his efforts."
NARP President John R. Martin, who will present the award, said, "The
nation is the better for Frank Lautenberg's 18 years of service as a U.S.
senator from New Jersey, and in particular for his persistence and his
hard work on behalf of passenger rail. As it becomes increasingly obvious
that roads and airports cannot by themselves meet our transportation needs,
the value of the senator's work on passenger rail likewise will become
more obvious to more people. We are pleased to honor a stalwart ally in
the fight for better passenger rail."
NARP is a non-profit, non-partisan membership organization that works
for more and better passenger train service in the U.S.
RAIL PASSENGERS HONOR OHIO'S SENATOR VOINOVICH
April 26, 2000
Washington -- The National Association of Railroad Passengers tomorrow
will present the George Falcon Golden Spike Award to Senator George Voinovich
(R-OH). The award will be presented at the Association's annual Washington
reception, at the Columbus Club in Union Station, on Thursday, April 27,
at about 6:30 pm.
Senator Voinovich will be honored because, quoting the plaque, he "has
worked hard to secure for states the right to invest their federal transportation
funds on intercity passenger rail projects. We appreciate his persistence
in getting S.1144 adopted in committee and in working for passage of the
bill."
NARP President John R. Martin, who will present the award, said, "Senator
Voinovich deserves praise for his hard work to secure for states a right
they should have been granted years ago. Three times in the past nine years,
the Senate has voted to give states this right and the House has blocked
final enactment. This is an idea whose time has come. We appreciate the
persistence of Senator Voinovich and remain hopeful that success in the
Senate this year will result in enactment, and thus mark an important step
forward in the quest for balanced transportation."
BURCH SAFETY AWARD GOES TO AMTRAK CHEF ALLAN THOMAS
April 25, 2000
Washington -- Allan Thomas, a chef on Amtrak's City of New Orleans,
on Thursday will receive the Dr. Gary Burch Memorial Safety Award for 1999.
The annual Award goes to the individual judged to have done the most to
enhance rail passenger safety. The award honors the memory of a victim
of a 1991 passenger train derailment in South Carolina. The Burch family
has funded and presented the award since its establishment in 1994. Again
this year, the award will be presented at the annual Washington reception
of the National Association of Railroad Passengers, at the Columbus Club
in Union Station. The reception is 6:00-8:00 pm; presentation is likely
around 6:30.
The selection committee noted the initiative shown by Thomas in the
area of safety. He has been the leader in arranging the last two Amtrak
employee safety fairs held in New Orleans, and worked as chef at them.
On his own time, Thomas participates in the City of New Orleans product
line safety committee. He put together a safety manual used by all of Amtrak's
Gulf Coast employees. He and the committee conducted an accident drill
with emergency response agencies in Jackson, Miss., and conducted community
outreach events in the Memphis, Tenn., and Greenwood, Miss., schools. [The
City of New Orleans runs daily between New Orleans, Jackson, Memphis, Fulton,
Carbondale and Chicago; more information at <www.amtrak.com>.
The Association is a membership organization that has worked since 1967
for more and better passenger train service in the U.S.]
NARP STATEMENT ON AMTRAK'S "NETWORK GROWTH STRATEGY"
February 28, 2000
Washington -- The National Association of Railroad Passengers believes
that Amtrak's effort to expand its route structure is long overdue. We
welcome that effort. We believe that Amtrak must become a much greater
factor in the movement of people throughout the United States, not just
in select corridors.
At 22,616 route miles, Amtrak's system is 23% smaller than the 29,433-route-mile
total intercity passenger rail network of 1978. There are numerous, significant
passenger markets that Amtrak does not serve today.
Without having seen Amtrak's final report, we cannot comment in detail.
We understand that Amtrak proposes to add new routes and services. Part
of the necessary equipment for this expansion is to come from repair of
existing cars which have long been out of service, and we applaud that.
Part of the equipment is to come from selective downsizing of existing
trains. We can support that only if such downsizing is temporary.
During the past five years, the size of Amtrak's long-distance passenger
car fleet declined, as Amtrak retired many old long-distance cars. This,
combined with the recognized need to expand the network, constitutes a
strong case for ordering new long-distance equipment. We urge Amtrak to
place those orders promptly.
NARP SUPPORTS CLINTON RAIL REQUEST
February 7, 2000
Washington -- President Clinton today unveiled a Fiscal Year 2001 budget
that would fund intercity passenger rail programs at the $989 million level
authorized for Amtrak. The request divides this amount between two programs.
The President's request for Amtrak is $521 million in general funds.
While Amtrak and the Administration have said this so-called "glide-path"
figure would be enough to continue Amtrak's efforts to achieve operational
self-sufficiency by 2003, we have concerns that it will not be sufficient
to achieve that goal, and that such a low figure might even result in service
reductions. Furthermore, we are concerned that this level of funding would
not permit any meaningful service expansion, which is vital if passenger
rail is to become a more important component of the transportation market.
Another $468 million would be provided for a new "Expanded Intercity
Rail Passenger Service Fund," to be available to Amtrak and/or states.
This fund would draw from a small part of the $3 billion in gas-tax revenues
the federal government now projects that it will collect in 2001 in excess
of estimates used in TEA-21. Amounts from these excess revenues are called
"revenue-aligned budget authority" or "RABA." Under current law, RABA revenues
must be spent for highway programs that already got a huge boost from TEA-21.
The proposed use of RABA would require amendment of TEA-21.
We believe it would be sound public policy for Congress to make this
change in TEA-21. Many states are looking for a federal partner to develop
intercity passenger rail services as a means to complement their congested
highway and aviation systems. As currently written, TEA-21 provides such
a federal-state partnership for every form of surface transportation except
intercity passenger rail. By adopting the Administration's request, Congress
would alleviate this imbalance and provide resources to expand services
in a way that the Administration's general-fund Amtrak request does not.
Americans have called repeatedly for improved passenger rail service,
and have shown their willingness to use it when it is offered. Now is the
time to provide what state DOT officials call "adult federal money" to
accelerate the development of a passenger rail system comparable to the
systems already in place in other developed countries. The Administration's
budget request would be a step in the right direction, and we call on Congress
to support it.
NARP HAILS BOSTON ELECTRIC TRAINS
January 31, 2000
Today is a historic day in passenger railroading: the introduction of
Amtrak’s electric passenger train service to Boston. Four-hour Boston-New
York running times are possible with elimination of the diesel/electric
locomotive change at New Haven. This marks the start of Amtrak’s role as
a major player in another of the nation’s highest-volume air-travel markets,
giving harried travelers a much more comfortable travel choice, and providing
Amtrak with revenue that will improve its bottom line. The service is another
reminder of what rail can do, and strengthens the case for badly-needed
rail passenger investments across the nation.
Two "Acela Regional" round trips (one pair daily, one pair Monday-Friday)
today replaced two existing NortheastDirect round trips. The trains depart
Boston’s South Station at 6:15 am weekdays, 5:00 pm daily; and depart New
York eastbound 8:35 am weekdays, 4:55 pm daily. More four-hour schedules
will be added as new locomotives are delivered. Later this year, Amtrak
plans to add "Acela Express" trains that run Boston-New York in roughly
three hours using brand new trains that will hit 150 mph.
The Acela Regional trips just added serve Back Bay, Route 128, Providence,
New London, New Haven, New York (Penn Station), Newark, Philadelphia, Wilmington,
Baltimore, BWI Airport, New Carrollton (Capital Beltway) and Washington.
Three of the four trips serve Kingston, Metropark (Garden State Parkway)
and Trenton.
NARP STATEMENT ON AMTRAK REFORM COUNCIL REPORT
January 24, 2000
The National Association of Railroad Passengers released the following
statement in response to the First Annual Report of the Amtrak Reform Council.
At today's Council meeting, Chairman Gil Carmichael and Vice-Chairman
Paul Weyrich repeatedly made clear their desire to see Amtrak succeed and
add more routes. The report's tentative recommendation that Amtrak expand
its mail and express business seems consistent with that desire. The Council
is correct to condition this recommendation on confirmation that this business
is -- or soon will be -- profitable. In addition, Amtrak must reduce the
time added to schedules for handling this business, and the number and
extent of delays this business has caused.
However, we don not believe that the law requires Amtrak -- to meet
the "test of operating self-sufficiency" -- to cover depreciation and progressive
overhaul costs with commercial (or other non-federal) revenues. It will
be a significant challenge to reach operating self-sufficiency without
covering these two items. Raising the bar by $567 million (Amtrak's fiscal
2002 estimate for those items), as the report hints may be required, would
insure that Amtrak could not meet the test.
We obviously want Amtrak to be successful. We oppose changing the test
in a manner that likely rules out success. We appreciate that the report,
in the Council's words, "does not reach any conclusions," and that Chairman
Carmichael, in discussing depreciation this morning, said that the Council
"is not disagreeing with Amtrak." We urge the Council to lay the depreciation
issue to rest as soon as possible.
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