Ryan
Court Jester
Thanks for posing the question this way - it's finally got my head around what bothers me in this situation, but haven't been able to articulate in a reasonable fashion (and I may not be, but here goes).I understand why Amtrak management wants to focus on adding corridors. But there’s an obvious flaw in this - why should the federal government divert money from the long distance routes to pay money to setup corridors for states who refuse to invest in them when you have other states who are willing to setup corridors and provide the funding and are doing so now?
I don't see anything in any of Anderson's (or others at Amtrak) written or spoken comments that indicates that they are seeking to *divert* money from the LD trains.
My take is that there are two separate things at play here, first that Anderson and Amtrak are saying to Congress (correctly, IMO) "If you want LD trains to continue, you are going to have to commit to funding them in a way that we can continue to run them". You see this highlighted in one of the pitches that talk about a potential Superliner replacement and the fact that the window to ordering replacements is coming soon. This has been a request of Amtrak's since the Boardman era.
What has changed is the second bit, Amtrak starting to hype up expanded corridor service as a means to system expansion. If there are states that aren't willing to pony up the money for decent transit, I'm perfectly OK with my federal dollars going to support such a service. Let's throw the 750 mile rule away, and see where service can establish itself. More Amtrak (be it in the form of LD, state-funded corridors, or federal-funded corridors) is a good thing and helps to defray the massive capital costs that come with running a railroad. From what I've seen, Amtrak would be perfectly happy with a "both and" endgame, not the "either or" that rail fans seem to ascribe to Amtrak in general (and Anderson personally).
Why these two fronts for discussion have been merged into one and turned into a fabricated "war on LD trains" is a mystery to me. From what I can see of it, personal animosity towards an executive with airline and health care backround replacing a beloved railroader is rather a large part of it.