Related to another thread about the ownership of Amtrak stations, I made a map showing the stations of Oregon and Washington, by ownership, including the Amtrak Cascades, as well as the Coast Starlight and Empire Builder.
View attachment 35651
As is often the case, the graphic design is in its first draft. I was also going to try to include information about the size of the station, before deciding that would make it too messy.
As I mentioned in another thread, ownership of a station might have a big impact on customer experience. If you are an employee of a small transit agency, such as Skagit Transit, which owns and operates the Mount Vernon Station, you are going to notice things like broken drinking fountains, in a way that the manager of a freight railroad will probably not notice! I also wonder if being owned by a transit agency is more likely to make a station multimodal.
It also makes me realize how complicated it is to expand---because say we were to put an Amtrak Cascades station in a place like Woodburn. It sounds like a good idea, but who exactly is doing that? Does the City of Woodburn want to spend the money to build a station, complete with ADA and safety compliance, as well as paying for insurance? Especially, why would the City of Woodburn do that if in 5 years, Amtrak might decide to cut service leaving a small city with the bill for a train station that isn't being used? So while these jurisdictional issues might be technical, I think they are important.