rickycourtney
Conductor
Some interesting reporting from the Trains magazine News Wire:
https://trn.trains.com/news/news-wi...on-with-operators-of-state-supported-services
If you closely follow the California state-sponsored services, this fight over Amtrak's opaque accounting practices is nothing new.
What is interesting is the head of the San Joaquin has been less afraid to "say the quiet part out loud" (Amtrak employs questionable accounting when it comes to state-sponsored services) and this marks the second time she's been willing to air that grievance in public (she also testified to Congress about a year ago).
Also new is that the heads of the Pacific Surfliner and Capitol Corridor are going on the record in support of the complaint about Amtrak's accounting.
https://trn.trains.com/news/news-wi...on-with-operators-of-state-supported-services
Trains also has copies of the letter to congress and Gardner's snippy response.The agencies overseeing state-sponsored Amtrak trains in California have asked Congress to address the national passenger railroad’s method of charging them for operations, focusing new attention on a long-simmering dispute.
A Nov. 30 letter by San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission Executive Director Stacey Mortenson, obtained by Trains News Wire, urges “that states only be charged their ‘direct’ cost of service by Amtrak on an avoidable cost basis, similar to what made for successful state partnerships in the past.”
The letter, also signed by directors of agencies that manage the state’s Pacific Surfliner and Capitol Corridor, was addressed to the Democratic chairmen and Republican ranking members of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, as well as its rail subcommittee.
In a Dec. 3 response, Amtrak President Stephen Gardner agreed “that it is time to reconsider Amtrak and the federal government’s contributions to these corridor services.” But he claimed to be “caught off-guard by your correspondence and disappointed by the tone and misleading accusations.”
If you closely follow the California state-sponsored services, this fight over Amtrak's opaque accounting practices is nothing new.
What is interesting is the head of the San Joaquin has been less afraid to "say the quiet part out loud" (Amtrak employs questionable accounting when it comes to state-sponsored services) and this marks the second time she's been willing to air that grievance in public (she also testified to Congress about a year ago).
Also new is that the heads of the Pacific Surfliner and Capitol Corridor are going on the record in support of the complaint about Amtrak's accounting.