The Florida House voted in favor of high-speed rail (on April 22),
then reversed itself
the very next day. On the first vote, the House rejected a bill (HJR
309), supported by Gov. Jeb Bush
(R.), to ask voters to repeal the high-speed rail constitutional amendment
that was approved by
voters in 2000. The vote was 61-57, a simple majority, but the bill
needed 60% support to pass.
Then on April 23, the House voted 75-40 to erase the first vote, after
the sponsor of HJR 309 said he
had not intended for his bill to be voted on so quickly.
The Tampa Tribune said, "The House's top supporter of the high-speed
rail system, Rep. Dennis
Ross, R-Lakeland, said the only reason for the reconsideration was
pressure from Bush. 'I am very
discouraged,' Ross said. 'The governor was twisting arms pretty hard.'
What had been a nonpartisan
debate dissolved into a near party-line vote, with Republicans supporting
Bush's plea."
The latest state where Amtrak service in doubt is Oregon. A budget
proposal released by
the co-chairmen of the Legislature's Ways and Means Committee on April
17 would cut $9.3 million
from the two-year budget for 2003-05 by eliminating two daily Cascades
round-trips between
Portland and Eugene (leaving only the Coast Starlight there).
However, the budget proposal
released April 18 by Gov. Ted Kulongski keeps the funding for the trains.
Oregon residents should
tell their legislators to fund the trains.
The outcome of near-term funding support for existing trains in Vermont
still in doubt. Thus, the
Oregon situation reinforces the suspicion that implementation of the
Bush Administration's policy of
relying even more heavily on states to fund passenger rail amounts
to a policy of killing trains.
Two Congressional hearings on passenger rail next week are April
29 in the Senate
Commerce Committee, and April 30 in the Railroads Subcommittee of the
House Transportation and
Infrastructure Committee. NARP Executive Director Ross B. Capon will
be a witness at the second
one.
Several Amtrak stations that lost daily service hours and checked
baggage service a
year ago will regain it on April 28. These include Houston,
El Paso (Sunset Limited); Lamy, La
Junta, Raton [summer only], San Bernardino (Southwest Chief);
Lincoln, Grand Junction (California
Zephyr); Columbus, La Crosse, Winona, Fargo, Grand Forks, Minot,
Williston, East Glacier Park
[summer only], Pasco (Empire Builder); Salinas (Coast Starlight);
Greenville, Meridian (Crescent);
Champaign (City of New Orleans). On the Sunset route,
Maricopa gets checked baggage service for
the first time; Tucson had service restored in December. Austin (Texas
Eagle), Newton (Southwest
Chief), Hammond (City of New Orleans), Mount Pleasant
(California Zephyr), and Ann Arbor are
shown in error in the timetable (various places) as getting checked
baggage April 28. Meridian is a
second restoration -- it had baggage service restored last September
and then eliminated again
shortly thereafter.
A notable contraction of checked baggage service is Amtrak's new Federal,
which replaces the
Twilight Shoreliner on April 28. That means the end of all such
service at New Haven and
Providence, and Boston's only baggage-service train is the Lake
Shore Limited to/from Albany. Also,
the Northeast is left with only two routes offering unboxed bicycle
carriage (Adirondack and
Downeaster), where just two years ago that service was growing.
The new timetable shows the Federal with unreserved coaches,
but reservations actually are
required.
Baggage lockers at Chicago Union Station will be reopened April
30, for the first time in over a
year. Day-check storage has already been reopened.
An interesting profile of Amtrak President David Gunn appeared
in the April 21 Washington
Post.
Gunn has held that position for nearly a year.
Starting April 28, Amtrak's top Acela Express fare between Boston
and New York/Newark
will be $99 ("shoulder" [see below] $92, off-peak $85). The top fare
had been $127 to New York,
$132 to Newark. The fee for upgrading to first class will drop to $50.
Also, fares will be lower for
many intermediate markets, upgrade charges lower for all such markets.
For longer trips,
Boston-Metropark fares get a more moderate reduction, while fares are
unchanged for
Boston-Trenton and beyond. Also, Amtrak Guest Rewards members will
get double points for
Boston-New York/Newark (and intermediate points) Acela Express trips
until August 31.
For about a year, all Acela Express (and Metroliner) markets have had
three price levels: peak,
shoulder, and off-peak. (Metroliner fares generally are lower than
Acela Express fares, except in
certain short-distance markets.) Shoulder fares apply all day Monday-Tuesday;
off-peak fares apply
all day Saturday. Shoulder fares apply Wednesday-Friday where a travelers'
departure is between
9:00 am and 2:00 pm, and after 6:00 pm. Peak fares apply Wednesday-Friday
for departures before
8:59 am and between 2:01 pm and 5:59 pm. On Sunday, off-peak applies
before 1:00 pm and after
6:00 pm. Sunday shoulder fares are between 1:01 pm and 5:59 pm. There
are some holiday
exceptions.
Shore Line East will reduce some service, with the new April 28 timetable.
It is cutting all
service between Old Saybrook and New London, Conn., except for one
weekday train (and a Friday
train). However, some Amtrak trains will start carrying passengers
with Shore Line East monthly
passes between New London and New Haven. The reduction is related to
an agreement several
years ago between Amtrak and the State of Connecticut to cap train
frequencies over certain
moveable bridges, in order to minimize disruption to marine traffic
that might result from the
electrification project.
The limit is 34 trains a day -- including both Amtrak and Shore Line
East. The total hit 37 in January,
a violation of the agreement. Removal of three (of four) weekday New
London Shore Line East
round-trips brings the total back down to 31. Lee Carlson, president
of the Shore Line East Riders
Association, told the Connecticut Post that federal law gives marine
traffic right-of-way over
land-based transit -- "Four guys with fishing poles have the right-of-way
over a train with 300
passengers." However, a wire story said only about "two dozen" rode
the New London trains daily.
Other Shore Line East services remain in place.
California Zephyr passengers had to be bussed between
Emeryville and Sparks for two days
this week due to a Union Pacific freight derailment near Truckee, Cal.
The northbound Coast Starlight early on April 23 struck a Union
Pacific crane about 10 miles
south of Dunsmuir, Cal. The train did not derail, but sustained damage
to both locomotives and the
first three cars. The train was already nearly three hours late, was
held three hours at the accident
site until it could run to Dunsmuir to set out a car, and left Dunsmuir
about over nine hours late. It
terminated in Portland, over 17 hours late. According to a wire story,
UP admitted the crane was left
in a "bad spot" and that three employees were being investigated for
drug use.
Union Pacific will close part of the Coast Starlight route
in the Cascade Mountains to carry out a
tunnel repair project during June. Passengers will be put on buses
between Klamath Falls and
Eugene, Ore., during two periods -- June 1-10 and June 16-25. There
will be no sleeper on the
connecting train from Eugene to Seattle, and so first-class charges
have been recalculated
accordingly for those trips. Also, the occasional Coast Starlight
detour ending May 7 between
Sacramento and Klamath Falls has actually happened so seldom that Amtrak
has lifted it (though a
small chance of a detour for northbound trains through May 7 still
exists).
The city manager of Kirkwood, Mo., has organized a group of volunteers
to staff the Amtrak
station there, which was de-staffed as part of a recent state funding
cut.
Houston Metro released a draft long-term transit development plan
on April 25, that
includes 41 miles of light-rail lines tying into the Main Street line
(that will open in January), and a
25-mile commuter-rail line from the south end of the Main Street light
rail line (Astrodome) to
Rosenberg (mostly on the Sunset Limited route). The light rail
lines would open by 2025, and would
give Houston a rail link to one of its airports (Hobby). Bus improvements
are also foreseen. The plan
will be the subject of hearings in May and may be put before voters
in November.
NARP Region 8 meets in Shelby, Mont., on April 26; and Region
11 meets in Albuquerque,
N.Mex., the same day.