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DOT 142-08
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Contact: Brian Turmail
Tel.: (202) 366-4570
U.S. Transportation Secretary Announces Latest Driving Data, New Funding to
Improve Intercity Passenger Rail
RICHMOND, VA – As Americans continue a historic cut back on driving and turn to
other forms of transportation like rail and transit, a new approach to funding
intercity passenger rail projects will lead to improved service and better
on-time performance across the country, announced U.S. Transportation Secretary
Mary E. Peters today.
The Secretary released new data today indicating that Americans drove 3.6
percent less, or 9.6 billion miles fewer, in July 2008 than July 2007. Since
last November, Americans have driven 62.6 billion miles less than they did over
the same nine-month period last year. Meanwhile, she said, transit ridership is
up 11 percent, and in July, Amtrak carried more passengers than in any single
month in its history.
“At a time when transit and rail are seeing record growth, the very way we
finance these systems is at risk. That is because our transit investments come
from the same source as our highway investments – federal gas taxes,” Secretary
Peters said. “Federal transportation policies that rely almost exclusively on
gas taxes are failing our state and local governments.”
So as part of a new plan to improve intercity passenger rail service nationwide,
the Secretary announced the Department is providing $30 million to match local
investments in 15 rail capacity enhancement projects across the country. These
federal-state partnerships will support projects designed to reduce delays and
expand capacity on existing intercity passenger rail routes and help establish
new services where none exist today.
Until now, she said, there has been no way for states to qualify for federal
funds to match local investments in rail capacity as all federal funds have gone
directly to Amtrak.
But, the Secretary warned, comprehensive reform is needed across the
transportation system. In July, the Secretary unveiled a new proposal to reform
and target transportation investments where they can best reduce congestion and
improve infrastructure, while beginning to move away from relying exclusively on
unstable gas taxes to finance transportation investments in the future.
“A few weeks ago, we saw the folly of our antiquated federal transportation
policies when the highway trust fund almost ran out of money. If we don’t evolve
our policies, we will leave a sad legacy of old roads, crowded highways, and
unfulfilled transit ambitions,” Secretary Peters said.
To view more detail on the VMT data, please visit:
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ohim/tvtw/08jultvt/index.cfm.
The 15 intercity passenger rail grants the Department is awarding will support
planning and construction projects in Arizona, California, Illinois, Maine,
Minnesota, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and
Wisconsin. Projects include:
Arizona: EIS Tucson to Phoenix, $1 million
Description: The planning study would conduct a Phase I EIS for new
intercity passenger rail service in the Sun Corridor between Phoenix and Tucson
(140 miles). The service would operate trains at speeds up to 125 mph with as
many as 15 stations. New track would be needed, existing tracks upgraded, and
improved made at many public and private highway-rail grade crossings. The Phase
I EIS will complete a majority of the environmental analysis necessary for
project development and result in a selection of alternatives for further design
and feasibility studies.
Benefits: There is no daily, punctual rail service in this corridor today
(the unreliable Amtrak Sunset Limited is tri-weekly). Modern rail service is
projected to carry approximately 1.2 million passengers annually. This service
could ultimately interlink with commuter rail programs.
California: San Joaquin Corridor – 4.5-mile double tracking, Kings Park, $5
million
Description: The project involves the conversion of 4.5 miles of running
side track to a second main line, construction of side tracks, the addition of
two #24 crossovers and other turnout improvements, as well as related signal and
highway crossing improvements. Completion of the project will result in 9.5
miles of continuous double track that will allow trains to pass each other at
maximum track speed of 79 mph. This location has been identified as one of the
worst congestion points in the corridor and a priority for capacity enhancement
on the BNSF sections of the San Joaquin service route operated by Amtrak.
Benefits: The project would connect existing sections of double track.
With the recently completed Shirley to Hanford project to the north, the Kings
Park project would result in a continuous 9.5 mile section of double main track.
Operations analysis indicates that the project would reduce Amtrak train delays
by 5 hours per week and increase average speeds of the San Joaquin service by
1.3%.
Illinois : Installation of Centralized Traffic Control and Cab Signals from
Joliet to Mazonia, $1.55 million
Description: Replace the existing Automatic Block System (ABS) with a
Centralized Traffic Control (CTC) and Cab Signal system on a 24.7 mile segment
on the Chicago to St. Louis high-speed rail corridor from Joliet to Mazonia
(Dwight).
Benefits: Project will upgrade train operations from Joliet to Mazonia on
the Chicago to Springfield/St. Louis corridor with centralized train control
technology and cab signals to improve the safety and reliability of train
service between Chicago and Joliet. The upgraded signal system will provide for
a 30 minute reduction in delays, currently experienced with operations over the
existing signal system. Project will also upgrade circuitry at grade crossings
along this route. Ultimately, the installation of CTC and cab signal technology
will enable Amtrak to increase train speeds up to 110 mph in sections of this
corridor capable of supporting high speed operations.
Illinois : Installation of Cab Signal Technology from Mazonia to Ridgeley
(Springfield) $1.85 million
Description: Install Cab Signal system and Advance Activation System on
118.4 route miles between Mazonia (Dwight) and Ridgley (Springfield) on the
Chicago to St. Louis high-speed rail corridor.
Benefits: Enables the State and Amtrak to increase train speeds to 80 and
110 mph in sections of this corridor capable of supporting high speed
operations, providing for a 24-minute reduction in travel time through this
segment. Includes the installation of an Advance Activation System for safer
operation of high speed trains through grade crossings and supports cab signal
technology already installed on UP freight locomotives.
Maine: Portland Area Track Improvments, $500,000
Description: The Northern New England Passenger Rail Authority (NNEPRA)
proposes to undertake a state-of-good-repair track improvement project on rail
lines owned by Pan Am Railways in the Portland, ME area. These include tracks
extending from the Portland station to the layover facility, including a wye.
The only passenger service using these tracks is the State-supported Downeaster
service, which currently operates at five freqencies per day. A portion of the
track to be improved is not currently used for revenue operations, and the wye
is now out of service for turning of passenger train consists.
Benefits: The quantified anticipated benefits relate primarily to the
renewed ability to turn locomotives and trainsets on the wye, a procedure which
the applicant regards as necessary when locomotives are bad-ordered. The
applicant also asserts that the current inability to do this requires that a
protect locomotive be held in reserve in Portland, and that the net present
value of the cost of the protect locomotive over the 15-year life of the
proposed improvements would be $6.5 million. Prior to submitting the
application, however, the applicant told the FRA that the long-term intent of
the project would be to accommodate an extension of Downeaster service to
Brunswick, which would use the improved track for revenue movements.
Minnesota: PEIS Twin Cities to Duluth High-Speed Rail, $1.1 million
Description: The planning study is to to prepare a Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) for new passenger rail service from
Minneapolis to Duluth where there is currently none. The PEIS would address
proposed rail infrastructure improvements to support high speed rail service up
to 110 mph along the BNSF line, for a distance of about 150 miles. A feasibility
study was completed for the proposed service that describes a range of rail
improvements from conventional 79 mph service to 110 mph service requiring a
full train control system. Capital improvements are estimated to range from $75
to $400 million (2006 dollars).
Benefits: Completion of the PEIS would advance the project to be ready
for implementation steps. A PEIS would set the stage for discrete capital
projects that could be completed over time as the service is introduced and
expanded. The proposed project would introduce intercity passenger rail service
where there is none today. In 2009 a commuter rail service is planned to start
along the Minneapolis end of the route and both services would terminate at the
same station and connect with transit.
Missouri: Siding Extension, St. Louis-Kansas City, $3.3 million
Description: Missouri DOT proposes the construction of one 9,000 ft.
passing track (near California, MO), and completion of preliminary engineering
for a second (in Knob Noster, MO), on Union Pacific's (UP) Sedalia subdivision
between Jefferson City and Kansas City, to be used by the State-supported Mules
and Anne Rutledge services (two frequencies per day). These new tracks would
eliminate two existing 20+ mile gaps between passing tracks on a primarily
unidirectional line.
Benefits: The applicant states that completion of these projects would
eliminate up to an average of 6 minutes of delay per train due primarily to
freight train interference. These estimates are supported by an extensive
simulation study performed by the University of Missouri which identified
capital investment projects which would improve OTP on the cross-Missouri route.
New York: Albany Station Track and Signal Improvements, $1.25 million
Description: New York State DOT proposes to perform full engineering of a
significant multiphased reconfiguration of the interlockings in and around
Albany-Rensselaer Station. The station serves the Empire Service, Lake Shore
Limited, Ethan Allen Express, and the State-supported (north of Albany)
Adirondack. The proposed project includes installing a station track on the
currently-unused east face of the east island platform, the addition of pocket
tracks, and the reconfiguration of the Post Road connection used by the Boston
section of the Lake Shore Limited.
Benefits: The full implementation of the reconfiguration will allow for
improved speeds approaching and departing the station resulting from the
improvement of signal aspects through the installation of track circuits and the
realignment of tracks to allow for non-diverging moves to and from the inboard
island platform faces. The project represents the first comprehensive
reconfigurations of one of the busier station interlocking in the U.S. since the
time it was first cobbled together in the late 1960s.
Ohio:Cleveland-Columbus-Dayton-Cincinnati Planning and Alternatives Analysis,
$62,500
Description: Ohio has contracted with Amtrak to assess the feasibility of
initiating a start-up service of two round trips per day between Cleveland and
Columbus and possibly to Cincinnati (which together define the "3C corridor").
The planning project would complement the Amtrak assessment and advance the
analysis of alternative 3C routes and station locations that will most
effectively serve the corridor - both in the short-term and the long-term. The
tasks include: program management, coordination with Amtrak and oversight of
Amtrak train operations analysis; drafting purpose and need; and long term
alternative route analysis.
Benefits: The planning objectives are to support the state initiative for
start-up service in the short term by conducting short-term/long-term planning
analysis of 3C corridor requirements. This will help to align any short-term
actions with the long-term needs, planning and environmental documentation. It
is expected that the project would: 1.) Support a State-supported Amtrak startup
service; 2). Advance the conceptual engineering and analysis of alternative
routes and station sites and facilities; and 3.) Clarify a long-term corridor
development strategy.
Vermont: Vermonter Route – One-Mile Rail Replacement/Bridge Redeckings,
$450,000
Description: The Vermont Agency of Transportation proposes a
state-of-good-repair project to replace one mile of rail and redeck four bridges
on the slow-order-laden New England Central Railroad (NECR) route of the
State-supported Vermonter, which operates at one frequency per day each way.
Benefits: The applicant states that the proposed project is anticipated
to result in the reduction of 12 minutes of slow-order delay per train.
Vermont: Ethan Allen Route - 2-Mile Track Reconstruction,$581,775
Description: The Vermont Agency of Transportation proposes a
state-of-good-repair project to rebuild 2 miles of slow-order-laden track on the
Clarendon and Pittsford Railroad near Rutland, VT, on the route of the
State-supported Ethan Allen Express, which operates at one frequency per day
each way. The project involves the installation of continuous welded rail, 2000
new ties, and renewal of the roadbed.
Benefits: The applicant states that the proposed project is anticipated
to result in the reduction of 10 minutes of slow order delay per train. However,
the project location's proximity to the Rutland Yard limits and Rutland station
calls into question whether speeds could fully attain the levels projected in
the application.
Virginia: Third Track south of Fredericksburg, $2 million
Description: Construction of a third track south of Fredericksburg
Station in Spotsylvania County. Project includes the rehabilitation of 3.1 miles
of existing track (currently used as a siding) to serve as a third track for
passing. Components of the project include an upgrade to the subgrade, track
structure, and interlockings, as well as the removal an obsolete industrial
siding. FRA funding of this project would support an offset project to design
the AM interlocking near Richmond Main Street Station, with a potential
extension of the design from the Main Street Station through Acca Yard to the
Staples Mill Station.
Benefits: Projected improvements include increased reliability, reduced
delays and improved OTP (by 4%) to 80%. Project will provide the only location
where a passenger train can over-take another train without opposition between
Richmond and Alexandria.
Washington: Point Defiance Bypass (D-M Street Tacoma), $6 million
Description: This project will provide for preliminary engineering,
environmental review, and right of way acquisition for the 1.2 mile D to M
street segment of the 19.5 mile Point Defiance Bypass project from Tacoma to
Nisqually. The D to M street segment will include new track and signal systems
on a realigned right-of-way in Tacoma, including a grade-separated railroad
crossing at Pacific Avenue. Ultimately, the Point Defiance Bypass Project will
redirect intercity passenger trains between Tacoma and Nisqually from the
circuitous BNSF freight line along the coast to a passenger oriented inland
route.
Benefits: The new routing will enable WSDOT to operate two additional
round trip Cascades trains from Portland to Seattle and SoundTransit’s Sounder
to extend service to Lakewood. The project will reduce travel time by 6 minutes
between Portland and Seattle as well as avoid freight traffic interference
through two single-track tunnels and port activities along the current route.
Ultimately, Amtrak services will relocate to the newly constructed Freighthouse
Square station in Tacoma providing direct access to SoundTransit’s Sounder
commuter rail, and Link light rail to downtown Tacoma.
Wisconsin: Chicago-Milwaukee Welded Rail (17.85 mi), $5 million
Description: The project will install 17.85 miles of continuously-welded
rail (CWR) in the Canadian Pacific right-of-way between Milwaukee and the IL/WI
state line, replacing the last sections of remaining jointed rail on the
Milwaukee-Chicago corridor. Project will include replacement of ties and other
related track materials, where necessary, as well as the reprogramming of grade
crossings for higher speeds.
Benefits: CWR will increase the reliability of passenger trains on the
Milwaukee-Chicago corridor by increasing speeds (from 70 to79 mph on downgraded
jointed track), reducing travel time (by 1.7 minutes), and eliminating delays
and slow orders associated with ongoing maintenance of jointed rail (by up to
70% or 4 minutes per 1000 train miles for jointed track). These improvements
will insure a greater on-time arrival into Metra territory, avoiding a potential
10-20 minute delay into Chicago. In addition, CWR will provide enhanced ride
quality for Amtrak passengers and equipment.
Wisconsin: Midwest Regional Rail Initiative* (MWRRI) Alternatives Analysis
and Planning (Phase 7) $297,000
Description: Continued planning for the Midwest Regional Rail Initiative
(MWRRI) including alternatives analysis, updating MWRRI system costs, equipment,
train control and operational plans, and the preparation of public outreach
materials. The project covers some program management, updating South of the
Lake alternatives analysis between Chicago, IL and Porter, IN, and preliminary
alternatives analysis in other corridors.
Benefits: This planning work is intended continue the MWRRI on a path
toward implementation by updating and refining key MWRRI plan elements and
public information materials and completing corridor alternatives analysis work
called for in the FRA Rail Corridor Transportation Plan Guidance Manual and
required to meet the requirements of the federal NEPA process for the
preparation of a programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for route selection
in MWRRI corridors. *MWRRI is a coalition of states and Wisconsin serves as the
administer of program funds.
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