adron posted on May 10, 2009 20:06

This report from the Federal Transit Administration shows some interesting information which I'll use in a coming blog entry.  With that in mind I’ve posted it here.  Portland is at #7 in this list, which amounts to TriMet basically.  The really shocking thing though, is the massive drop off after the top 5.  I also find it somewhat shocking how much lower San Francisco is than New York in trips per capita.  The last bit I’ll mention is how amazed I am that Honolulu, Hawaii is in the top 5!  I wasn’t aware they even had a notable transit system, but this could be because of other underlying facts, such as that it is an island.  The original Excel Spreadsheet can be downloaded by right clicking and selecting save as.

UZA NAME AREA (SQ MI) POPULATION 2006 TRANSIT
UNLINKED
PASSENGER TRIPS
(MILLIONS)
TRANSIT
UNLINKED
PASSENGER
TRIPS PER
CAPITA
New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT 3,353 17,799,861 3,556.9 199.8
San Francisco-Oakland, CA 527 3,228,605 420.2 130.1
Washington, DC-VA-MD 1,157 3,933,920 461.0 117.2
Honolulu, HI 154 718,182 71.7 99.8
Boston, MA-NH-RI 1,736 4,032,484 386.7 95.9
Chicago, IL-IN 2,123 8,307,904 610.7 73.5
Portland, OR-WA 474 1,583,138 107.5 67.9
Philadelphia, PA-NJ-DE-MD 1,800 5,149,079 342.0 66.4
Seattle, WA 954 2,712,205 168.6 62.2
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA 1,668 11,789,487 700.4 59.4
Baltimore, MD 683 2,076,354 108.5 52.3
Las Vegas, NV 286 1,314,357 67.7 51.5
Denver-Aurora, CO 499 1,984,889 86.6 43.6
Salt Lake City, UT 231 887,650 38.6 43.5
Atlanta, GA 1,963 3,499,840 148.5 42.4
Pittsburgh, PA 852 1,753,136 71.7 40.9
Cleveland, OH 647 1,786,647 70.2 39.3
Austin, TX 318 901,920 35.4 39.2
Milwaukee, WI 487 1,308,913 50.7 38.7
Madison, WI 114 329,533 12.3 37.3
San Diego, CA 782 2,674,436 96.1 35.9
Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN 894 2,388,593 85.2 35.7
Miami, FL 1,116 4,919,036 162.7 33.1
San Antonio, TX 408 1,327,554 42.7 32.1
San Juan, PR 892 2,216,616 71.1 32.1
Reno, NV 119 303,689 9.0 29.5
Charlotte, NC-SC 435 758,927 21.2 27.9
Spokane, WA-ID 143 334,858 9.1 27.1
Houston, TX 1,295 3,822,509 102.5 26.8
San Jose, CA 260 1,538,312 40.9 26.6
Syracuse, NY 180 402,267 10.5 26.1
St. Louis, MO-IL 829 2,077,662 52.3 25.2
Sacramento, CA 369 1,393,498 34.7 24.9
Tucson, AZ 291 720,425 17.8 24.7
Buffalo, NY 367 976,703 23.8 24.3
Albany, NY 284 558,947 12.9 23.0
Phoenix-Mesa, AZ 799 2,907,049 64.3 22.1
Orlando, FL 453 1,157,431 25.3 21.9
Fresno, CA 139 554,923 11.9 21.5
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX 1,407 4,145,659 86.0 20.7
Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN 672 1,503,262 29.3 19.5
Hartford, CT 469 851,535 16.3 19.2
El Paso, TX-NM 219 674,801 12.4 18.4
Dayton, OH 324 703,444 12.9 18.3
Rochester, NY 295 694,396 12.6 18.2
Providence, RI-MA 504 1,174,548 21.2 18.0
Richmond, VA 437 818,836 14.3 17.5
Louisville, KY-IN 391 863,582 15.0 17.4
Springfield, MA-CT 309 573,610 9.9 17.3
Virginia Beach, VA 527 1,394,439 24.0 17.2
Bakersfield, CA 110 396,125 6.6 16.6
New Haven, CT 285 531,314 8.8 16.5
Riverside-San Bernardino, CA 439 1,506,816 22.7 15.1
Stockton, CA 74 313,392 4.7 14.9
Albuquerque, NM 224 598,191 8.8 14.6
Flint, MI 231 365,096 5.3 14.6
Grand Rapids, MI 257 539,080 7.5 13.8
Columbus, OH 398 1,133,193 15.0 13.2
Jacksonville, FL 411 882,295 11.7 13.2
Detroit, MI 1,262 3,903,377 51.3 13.1
Toledo, OH-MI 202 503,008 6.2 12.4
Oxnard, CA 76 337,591 4.2 12.4
Akron, OH 308 570,215 7.0 12.3
Des Moines, IA 140 370,505 4.5 12.2
Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL 802 2,062,339 24.9 12.1
Memphis, TN-MS-AR 400 972,091 11.7 12.1
Modesto, CA 86 310,945 3.7 12.0
Scranton, PA 159 385,237 4.6 11.8
Concord, CA 176 552,624 6.4 11.6
Bridgeport-Stamford, CT-NY 465 888,890 10.1 11.4
Kansas City, MO-KS 584 1,361,744 15.2 11.2
Raleigh, NC 320 541,527 5.9 10.9
New Orleans, LA 198 1,009,283 10.7 10.6
Nashville-Davidson, TN 431 749,935 7.9 10.5
Allentown-Bethlehem, PA-NJ 290 576,408 5.6 9.7
Baton Rouge, LA 281 479,019 4.6 9.6
Cape Coral, FL 192 329,757 3.1 9.3
Chattanooga, TN-GA 290 343,509 3.1 9.0
Indianapolis, IN 553 1,218,919 10.0 8.2
Knoxville, TN 339 419,830 3.4 8.2
Worcester, MA-CT 250 429,882 3.4 8.0
Colorado Springs, CO 197 466,122 3.5 7.5
Lancaster, PA 199 323,554 2.3 7.3
Sarasota-Bradenton, FL 270 559,229 3.9 6.9
Harrisburg, PA 208 362,782 2.5 6.8
Little Rock, AR 206 360,331 2.4 6.7
Charleston-North Charleston, SC 231 423,410 2.8 6.5
Omaha, NE-IA 226 626,623 3.9 6.3
Columbia, SC 269 420,537 2.5 6.1
Birmingham, AL 392 663,615 3.7 5.5
Poughkeepsie-Newburgh, NY 265 351,982 1.9 5.5
Wichita, KS 179 422,301 2.3 5.5
Tulsa, OK 261 558,329 2.7 4.8
Youngstown, OH-PA 228 417,437 1.7 4.2
Oklahoma City, OK 322 747,003 2.9 3.9
Pensacola, FL-AL 219 323,783 1.2 3.8
Palm Bay-Melbourne, FL 220 393,289 1.5 3.8
Mobile, AL 211 317,605 0.9 3.0
Augusta-Richmond County, GA-SC 232 335,630 1.0 2.8
McAllen, TX 314 523,144 0.06 0.11
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adron posted on March 18, 2009 19:30

Today's departure began at 5:24pm.  I boarded the Blue Line MAX at 5:26pm after leaving the office.  I got the slow elevator so it took a whole 2 minutes to get to Pioneer Square West Bound Stop.  I saw the MAX coming to the stop before at the mall, so I walked toward that stop and boarded there.  This one stop difference enabled me to grab a seat and start ye' ole' blog entry here instead of having to wait until the WES.

...there was however a catastrophic catastrophe at the end of the trip.  I restarted my laptop thinking I had saved the blog entry...

...and I forgot what else I wrote.  I'll try to recreate some of it tomorrow, needless to say, I've VERY disgruntled that I lost it, easily having written another two dozen paragraphs worth of material.

Mood:  Pissed.

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adron posted on November 19, 2008 07:05

After reading this blog entry I had a few immediate thoughts.  I always have a spot that churns inside whenever I hear about something like this.  Nobody needs to lose their life in the movement of goods.  It can be dangerous sometimes and things like this will, unfortunately, take place.

As the saying goes, "It'll get worse before it gets better".  Here's why.

Already most of the trucking industry is completely unfeasible in an economic sense.  They don't pay the majority cost of the roads, they have little infrastructure responsibility, and this gives them a MAJOR advantage of the freight railroads.  However after getting a free ticket from Government subsidization and other road users paying the majority of their way, trucking is going to start needing to cough up more of the bill.

Freight rail already is vastly more cost effective.  I believe it comes out to about 40-50 cents charge for a freight rail delivery for every $1.15-$1.50 it costs to move the same thing via a truck.  This is the cost, with the freight railroads covering almost 100% of their costs on society.  They sometimes get a subsidy here or there, but overall their infrastructure is paid by them, their equipment is bought by them, their engines and railcars are bought by them and the respective industries.  Trucking rarely pays full road costs, rarely covers the damage it does to cities or other areas either, often receives gas subsidies, and other things of this nature.  Even with that lopsided subsidy taking place they still are about 2x as expensive as freight rail.

No matter what happens in the coming years, this lopsided environment will most likely continue as Government is ill equipped to make an intelligent change and stop doing this.  Aside form that roads are considered open access and an increase in taxes on truckers would never pass, even if advertised as them covering their costs to society.

But the environmental impact and related problems are now getting more heat from the Federal Government, and even Canada's & Mexico's.  In addition to this with the recent economic collapse, how much longer do we want immediate receipt of things if we're paying 2x as much to get them?  There are massive savings to be had on billions of dollars on items if we move shipped items from road to rail.  This could translate to cheaper in store items, greater price cuts in grocery stores for canned or commodity type items like grain, bread or other, and the list goes on.

But until the Government's either stop these absurd subsidies and put the onus of cost back on the respective shipping modes, the consumer will continue to choose trucks for their speed and versatility because the costs are largely suppressed and hidden by subsidies.

Will they stop?

Go check out the blog sasha on the street.

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adron posted on November 17, 2008 07:02

Amtrak carried a record 28.7 million passengers this year.  Amtrak has saved money and operated in a more business and market oriented way over the last 8 years.  Out of necessity as much as any other reason.  Will Kummant's departure lead to another Amtrak CEO that wants a more market & customer oriented approach, or will he shirk that responsibility and head back to the Government for more money and push the Amtrak entity back to a more beggarly entity as it was in the past?

Amtrak needs to be competitive, something it has become for the first time in its history.  Kummant has a lot to do with this.  He injected a much better attitude into the passenger railroad.  I am concerned now that it will falter from its gains and become a lifeless, faceless, Government entity as it had been in the past.

But let's play the optimist.  Maybe with funding and Obama's lively exuberance he gives much of America, that he and the board of Amtrak will be able to place another lively and exuberant CEO in charge of Amtrak!  With Obama and Biden in the big White House we have for the first time in Amtrak's history a change for the railroad to become something more, something better.  Hopefully, we'll actually get that from this administration.  Emphasis on hopefully.

For More Info:

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Adron posted on November 12, 2008 07:08

Recently I made a hard core search effort to find and identify numerous web sites related to transit and passenger transportation.  These are my finds.

  • http://www.floridabullettrain.com/ Bullet Train News - This site keeps up with rail news from around the country and of course about prospective Florida Bullet Train News.
  • http://www.floridabullettrain.com/ National Association of Railroad Passengers - This is the number one organization political support of passenger rail, but namely Amtrak.
  • http://www.sehsr.org Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor - From Washington DC to Charlotte, NC.  This site has some interesting links and information.  It focuses on the south eastern United States but primarily between the dense Washington DC are to Charlotte.
  • http://www.aar.org Association of American Railroads - Group dedicated the freight rail.
  • http://www.s4prc.org/ States for Passenger Rail Coalition - Coalition dedicated to promote the development, implementation, and expansion of intercity passenger rail services.
  • http://secorridor.fra.dot.gov/ Southeast Corridor Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) - Site, I suppose maintained by the FRA that outlines the various corridors in the south east.  Mostly along the eastern edge of the south east though.
  • http://www.fra.dot.gov Federal Railroad Administration - I'm not the biggest fan of some of their work, but they definitely have a ton of work and materials.  So check out their sites.
  • http://www.bytrain.org/ North Caroline Department of Transportation Rail Division - Everything you need to know about North Caroline Passenger Railroads.
  • http://midwesthsr.org/ Midwest High Speed Rail Association - Medwest - high speed rail.
  • http://www.cahighspeedrail.ca.gov/ Califronia High Speed Rail
  • http://www.texasrailadvocates.com/ Texas Rail Advocates - Yes, people in Texas actually do support rail service!  Surprise!

Passenger Rail Sites

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So Obama has won.  This is something I've stated months ago and have spoken about recently on my other blog.  But what does that have to do with transit?  Well it has a TON to do with transit.

First off I just want to toss this out here.  If you're pro-auto, pro-oil, pro-sprawl, you drive to work frequently or always, you like to drive to work, you like the choice in cars you purchase, you don't care about fuel economy, you like big cars & trucks, you hate transit, you don't like transit oriented development, you don't like high speed rail, you don't like Amtrak, you don't like light rail, you don't like commuter rail, and you just want to live in a white picket fenced house with 1.2 kids a garage, a dog, 2 cars, and a big screen TV - YOU JUST GOT MAJOR SHAFTED.

Obama & Biden are probably the greatest Presidential ticket in history for transit oriented development, planned communities, highway management & maintenance, congestion pricing, pro-Amtrak, pro-Government controlled transit, pro-transit, pro-light rail, pro-alternative fueled buses, pro-streetcar, pro high speed rail, dense development, anti-single family home ownership, and more.

You might think I've gone off the seat, but seriously.  Both of these guys will push in major ways for these things at every turn they get.  They're cut subsidies for roads and other things of that nature, they'll expand Government control of the industry, and they'll push for more responsible infrastructure management and expansion.  The last of these things I'm 100% for.  Some of the other motives and means of implementation of this I bring into question.  The awesome thing about this though is Obama, mark my words, is smart enough to figure out a way to bridge the public and private fields in the industry and get something actually done.  The only question remains, is between him and Biden, will they be able to get to this necessity?  They have some very large issues to deal with right at the beginning, so it should be interesting to see if we get these things pushed through in the next 4 to 8 years.

I got my fingers crossed.  In a sense, I hope he can live up to the other Illinois Republican leader we had years ago.  Lincoln helped kick America into gear to become a world economic power, primarily through the encouragement and coaxing of the railroads to build out this mighty country.  If there is one thing that is without doubt, the railroads definitely followed through on that encouragement and accomplished what no other country has ever accomplished, even to this day nobody in the world holds a candle to the railroad development of the Guilded Age.  Nobody!

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Adron posted on October 10, 2008 12:13

The Overhead Wire (great blog, make sure to read it regularly) has an interesting pointer to a Street Railway Resurrection bill.  This bill would enable us to actually operate street railways again; i.e. streetcar, interurban, light rail, etc.  If this overrides or removes the monopolistic transit authority mandates that this country has created we could see a boom in street railway activity again.  Of course the bill is not for the whole country, but it could set a new standard for repealing our modern draconian transit & regulatory competition laws in the transportation marketplace.

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Adron posted on August 9, 2008 14:24

But not always.  I've been studying China, India, and other up and coming country's economies.  The one thing, of all the threats from these countries, is the sprawl.  These countries have sought American life styles in so many ways, they have sought our wealth and other such notions that they are mimicking our sprawl just as we're trying to remedy the situation.

All I can think is that America spewed the sprawl during the American party and now countries have seen the fun of the party, but aren't realizing the spew festival that awaits.  Fortunately China and India are spending tons on infrastructure at the same time, something the US has failed to do over the last 40-50 years.

The US barely has functional Interstate and Airport facilities anymore, the primary ones being overrun with needs that should not be met by the respective services.  i.e. - Commuting should not be a car based function in big cities and airplanes shouldn't be used for short hop corridor trips under 300 miles.  Even trips under 500 miles could be reduced with a decent rail system to handle high speeds.  All of these things the US has wastefully pushed and encouraged through massive subsidies over the last 50 years while neglecting the modes that would best handle daily city commuting and short hop corridor trips.  Trains in the US, the railroad industry in general, has been forced by monopolistic action of the Government, subsidized competition, and often mandates by cities and states so strict that our system is almost gone or completely destroyed.

Now we begin our rebuilding, slowly but surely, but China, India, and other countries now have a massive head start on this much needed infrastructure.  As our unions keep wages at a modicum that cannot be maintained while keeping the US even remotely competitive with China, India, and others we maintain one of the most expensive forms of transportation in the world as our primary mode; automobiles.

While these other countries emulate us, hopefully they'll learn from our miserable failings with Suburbia, our plummeting standard of living in many areas of the country, and realize that they should stick to the tried and true.

...here's to hoping we Americans and the Chinese, Indians, Pakistanis, and others can work together and get ourselves aligned so we can live well, keep and increase high standards of life, and above all - not destroy our planet.

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A Fix for Something that isn't Broken

First off, there are a ton of other Bloggers hitting this topic.  So I'll stick some links at the bottom of this write up.  There are also links to this bill and other information to track the status of it getting pushed through.

So first off, let's approach what this bill actually says and means, then we'll look at what it will most likely do from a functional perspective.  The bill is intended to remove antitrust protection the freight railroads supposedly have versus other transportation providers and businesses.  It is commonly mentioned in pro-HR 1650 literature that the protection is draconian and needs to be removed to hold the freight railroad liable to the same standards of the other logistical providers.

On the other hand the freight railroads point out the obvious, almost immediate effects that will take place.  First off, they've almost promised that new capitol investment will be gone.  The threats; current, potential, and unknown are so large with this bill that the small percentage of revenue that is allocated toward expansion of the freight system to keep up with increasing demand will be gone.  From my review of the bill I don't think maintenance and a large amount of the needed standard operating funds will be gone, but the railroads are not exaggerating when they say their investment money will disappear.

This leads me to the first and most obvious problem with this bill.  The elimination of capitol investment expenditures needed to keep up with a demand that currently the country as a whole cannot keep up with.  The Government has had multiple organizations, studies, and the railroads themselves point out that they are barely keeping up with infrastructure growth demands as it is.  So the question we're left with, with this demand by the Government and the economy as a whole, in order to stay competitive, to grow our rail infrastructure to meet future demand, is, "where will the money come from?" 

So Where Will the Money Come From for Growth?

The answer is simply, the Government and thus the taxpayers will have to start forking over billions to create the infrastructure growth that will be needed.  If US history and the experience of other nations is even remotely close to what will happen, we're looking forward to excessively growing infrastructure costs that the Government will incorrectly allocate funds for, arbitrarily increase the costs for, and specifically increase the costs that taxpayers will pay for this infrastructure.

Currently it is born in the products we use and not even a penny from our tax burden is used for its current maintenance.  But be warned, with this bill, that will change.  In the last decade hundreds of billions have been invested in the infrastructure, are we ready for that need to be shifted to the Government?  Are we ready to deal with the increased burden of this cost?  Do we want to pay more, just to meet need by disassociating responsibility for the infrastructure to us instead of directly to the users of the infrastructure?

[ocean] <- start section ->

The Impact to Passenger Rail

Somebody over on MetroRiderLA responded to a link back with a vehement hatred toward the freight rail industry for their theoretical "blocking" of passenger rail.  Many of us that are in the transit circles know about the various issues that the freight companies have with passenger rail, some of use know how it works intimately, some of us also know there is not a quick fix to it.  Especially anyone that has worked for Amtrak, BNSF, NS, UP, CSX, KCS, or any of the short lines that has to interact with passenger rail.

Technically and directly there is no involvement of passenger rail in this bill.  There will however be negative impacts to passenger rail services around the country.  Without capitol investment funds to grow the rail network that means there will be that many less miles of track for prospective passenger rail use.  That also means that as demand increase the freight trains will also cause more blockage to passenger trains.  In primary corridors this might not be immediately obvious because the states will probably jump in to alleviate the issues to some degree.  On the longer routes though this could become drastic and abandonment of right of way might even become a way of the industry again.  This would absolutely be catastrophic for freight AND passenger rail.

Imagine UP without capitol investment or a very minimal cash flow, squeezed from the bill by forced price controls being placed on the network.  Just a mere 3-4 months ago there was a massive 2-3 mile long land slide over the route between Oregon and California.  This route is a pretty major route between the north and southern west coast.  UP had to literally move thousands upon thousands of truck loads worth of debris from the area.  They had to build a road into the area just to get it moved to load onto trains to get it out of the area.  Finally after almost 2 to 3 months of this effort the line is finally open.  A cash strapped UP would have NOT BEEN ABLE TO DO THIS!

Coast Starlight Permanently Canceled

If UP had been cash strapped the Coast Starlight would have been canceled for good.  UP has no motive interest in getting that line back in service if they are cash strapped.  It would have been logical to abandon the line and begin usage of further inland routes and delay most shipments by another day or two to compensate for the loss.  This would however make the west's Coast Starlight run impossible.

Hurricane Strikes, Cash Strapped Freight Railroads Abandon Thousands of Track Mileage

Imagine another hurricane Katrina hits the eastern or south eastern US.  This isn't really imagine, but a when will it hit question.  When it does hit, CSX will most likely just abandon thousands of miles of railroad.  At this juncture in time many miles between New Orleans and other areas just isn't worth the re-investment of a cash strapped railroad.  Maybe a further consolidation of certain CSX and NS lines would even occur.  The Crescent might even be canceled based on the fact that so much of the NS line is single track and would be slammed if CSX and NS had to utilize those lines.  They of course, as they did during hurricane Katrina, would share lines to compensate for the loss.  It would cause massive delays and other such issues.

The City of New Orleans might even need to be canceled for an un-determined amount of time.  With the Chicago to New Orleans line saturated with increased traffic if the western segments of Louisiana where knocked out.  Most of those lines, under these new price controls and other such mechanisms that some of these companies the Politicians will assuredly put in place, will either go under, lose mileage, or just plain abandon the service.

The Stupid Idea that Railroads Have Some This Mythical Advantage

Railroads do have some advantages; much more environmentally friendly, they are vastly more efficient than trucking, they cost almost a third to a half as much as hauling something via truck, and I won't even compare it to air freight.  All of those excessive functional advantages keep the system going in face of the harsh regulation, unfair monopolistic practices against the freight railroads by the Government, and other such insane notions that they operate in some theoretical open, free, fair, or other equal economy with shipping, trucking, or other methods of freight delivery.

Shipping receives legal advantages; the forced right of way on river, the clear docking advantages and forced access in cities with the facilities (heaven forbid we move things to places where costs and efficiencies could be brought down by multiples), and the list goes on.  Trucking also receives even more advantages; The vast majority of the roadways are NOT paid by them even though they do most of the damage to the roadways, they are not held responsible for most of the dangers and other notions on the roadways, they are and often utilize subsidized or price reduced fuel, they're even demanding for more of this lopsided political advantage by getting the Government to step in further to reduce fuel costs for them.

Of all these things the vast gulf of political treatment by freight railroads versus trucking versus shipping is massive.  If left to their own among an open economy that worked on a basis of fair and free commerce inside the country the logistical systems of this nation would be drastically different.  The HR 1650 bill acts only to increase this massive gulf between competitors even further.  It gives railroads even more reason to hate passenger rail, adds insult to injury with their place along the inefficient trucking industry, and places and even larger and growing burden upon the taxpayer.

There is zero reason this should become law.  There is zero reason to step in on the side of a certain group of customers to protect them against something that just isn't a problem.  The simple fact is some businesses want an unfair and uncompetitive advantage by removing their responsibility for their cost of the system they use.  They want to disassociate the costs that they should be held accountable for.  For too long this country has continuously pushed off responsibility for the usage of resources, transportation, and especially logistical movement around this country.  This bill is a step in the WRONG direction.  People, especially businesses, and the railroads all need to shoulder their responsibilities to the demands they put on the earth, the country, the infrastructure, and on each other.  The do not need to force arbitrary or excessive control on each other by Government force.  It is wrong in every possible way; logically, morally, environmentally, and logistically.

I have read the following links and I advise anyone with any say so in the matter or even a remote interest in the matter to read these.  Some are skewed, some are just the bill.  For more background read the history of the railroads in the US in the following books:  Nothing Like It In the World by Stephen E. Ambrose, Empire Express by David Haward Bain, and for some serious context on privatized rail operations from an ex-Amtrak employee check out End of The Line by Joseph Vranish. You might not agree with the last one there, not at all, but there are tons of facts that one CANNOT deny with denying reality itself.

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Adron posted on March 16, 2008 22:03

So you guys who say, "rail never supports itself", "passenger services can't operate at profit", "people just don't value it enough", "blahg blagh, rail is so great but we MUST beg for money for operations and capitol" are going to hate me pointing this out.  It's just such crude basic math.

Over in India, Indian Railways is working to raise what equates to $345 million from IPOs from three (ok, stop the presses, here it comes, OH @*#&$) profitable Indian Railways.  Provided of course the Government releases (because it still lays claim over most businesses in the country - they haven't quit got the "freedom" and "liberty" part of individuals running businesses down yet) 10% of the equity in the company.  They only want to get an IPO against 10% of the company!!!   Oh my god... imagine the prospects for growth in these up and coming countries where the companies - these "railroads" - are free operate profitably!  It could be the guilded age of increased standards of living with the modern technology we have today.  The limits are unknown.

I see things like this, and it comes as no surprise as I hear about one after another industry, technology, or other "thing" we Americans don't lead the world in anymore.  The sad part is unless we get the train back on the tracks we're screwed.  We're on our way to become a second rate, has been economy within my lifetime if someone doesn't take the helm and start making REAL strides against putting some power behind this country again.

Will it be Obama?  Will it be McCain?  I won't even mention the other one still in the running.  I've heard her spiel, she seemed to try diligently to completely ignore any relevant historical or modern argument that she would know what to do with America's crumbling infrastructure.  Let alone the fact that the Government didn't built it in the first place.

This makes me think - what would I do if I was given the helm of Amtrak to fix in this country?

Stay tuned, I got something coming along for that, and the interesting observations I made while in the north east corridor.  (Anybody realize that the burying of the 42nd street tracks, the building of Grand Central Station was done all with private monies?  Yup, by one of those mythical non-existent profitable passenger & freight carrying railroads.  Gasp!)

The article I found relating to the Indian Railways can be found at International Railway Journal under Latest News.

Also if one hits the Indian Railways home page and check out the budget highlights, they'll find the following points:

• Operating Ratio likely to improve from the budgeted 79.6 to 76.3 per cent –best in
last four decades.
• Return on Capital – an all time high of 21 per cent.
• Cash Surplus before dividend expected to be a record Rs 25,000 cr.
• Net Revenue expected at Rs 18,416 cr and surplus after payment of dividend expected
at Rs 13,534 cr.
• Likely year end fund balances Rs 20,483 cr – 27% more than budgeted target.

...and also of note....

Check out the railway budget speech.

"However, we take pride in the fact that our
achievement, on the benchmark of net surplus before Dividend, makes us
better than most of the Fortune 500 companies in the world.
"

There is of course plenty in there that some would argue, "more Government control", but they'd be missing the fact that even though this is a "Government" railroad it is by no means operated like a Government Department.  He even makes not of that in the speech.  It is operated at profit, for private investment stakeholders who of course demand this.  They continue to turn profit even after the stock pay outs!

If the FRA would get their act straight, we could have our service back.  It would easily take a decade or two to get it back, but as we exist now, the north east corridor being a prime testament, we'll NEVER have the level of service we had before without private operations and clearing the legislative mess from forward progress.

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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.
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