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Category: Fact Sheets
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A nationwide passenger rail network will provide travel choices. Choices
are critical in an emergency.
- After a highway collapse shut down a major arterial route into San
Francisco, local commuter rail agencies were able within hours to add cars and
shift schedules and get people moving the next business day with minimal
disruptions (Source: San Francisco Chronicle, “The Maze Meltdown: Easy Does It:
Once again, commute is faster than expected,” May 2, 2007.)
Choices ease family pocketbooks.
- Cities with the greatest transportation choices pay the fewest dollars for
transportation per household. For example, families in auto-centric Houston
spend 20 cents of every dollar on transportation, while those in
transit-friendly Baltimore spend 14 cents. (Source: Surface Transportation
Policy Project, “Driven to Spend”, June 14, 2005.)
Many communities have no choice today.
- Even in its truncated state today, Amtrak serves 174 communities, mostly in
rural areas, that are outside the service areas of even the smallest “hub”
commercial airports. Amtrak’s long distance trains serve 51 communities without
intercity bus service. (Source: Comparison of Amtrak schedules to FAA data and bus information from Greyhound’s website and Strayhound.com
People demand choice.
- One in five Americans age 65 and older does not drive. The number of people
aged 65 and older is expected to more than double between 2002 and 2030. This
may be why AARP calls on Congress to “support nationwide passenger rail
service…and establish a dependable funding mechanism that ensures continuing
broad-based nationwide passenger rail service.” (Source: AARP studies and policy
documents, including “Community Mobility Options: The Older Person’s Interest”
(2005), “Reimagining America; AARP’s Blueprint for the Future. “ (2005) “The
Policy Book: AARP Public Policies 2007.”)
- A
pre-9-11 Boeing study found one in three Americans afraid of or anxious
about flying
- Nearly 80% of adults would like to see an increasing share of travel by
commuter or intercity rail, and almost two thirds say their communities need
more transportation options. (Source: Harris and Wirthlin polls)