D.P. Roberts
Conductor
How much of this proposed route (especially choosing Columbus as the eastern terminus) is due to:
1) Columbus being a growing city (vs. Cleveland & Cincinnati)
2) Existing tracks/ host to Ft. Wayne
3) No Amtrak passenger service to Columbus
4) A larger market of commuters between these destinations
I can see #1 being true, and I don't know enough about freight rail to comment on #2. But as for #3... Cleveland does have 2 trains to Chicago, but they're both in the middle of the night. Cincinnati only has the Cardinal, only 3 days a week, and it's in the middle of the night. Cleveland serves 50,000 Amtrak riders per year (about 140 per day), Cincinnati only 15,000 per year - or only 41 per day. So, I really don't see why "existing passenger service" is going to have much relevance on a high-speed line through Ohio.
Secondly, although I have not been able to figure out how many flights exist between each city pair each day, a brief look at travel sites showed twice as many flights from Cincinnati to Chicago (two dozen a day) as from Columbus (a dozen a day).
So, it seems to me that if they want to run multiple trains per day, the current rail offerings shouldn't be a factor, and they should consider the current air traffic between the city pairs instead.
1) Columbus being a growing city (vs. Cleveland & Cincinnati)
2) Existing tracks/ host to Ft. Wayne
3) No Amtrak passenger service to Columbus
4) A larger market of commuters between these destinations
I can see #1 being true, and I don't know enough about freight rail to comment on #2. But as for #3... Cleveland does have 2 trains to Chicago, but they're both in the middle of the night. Cincinnati only has the Cardinal, only 3 days a week, and it's in the middle of the night. Cleveland serves 50,000 Amtrak riders per year (about 140 per day), Cincinnati only 15,000 per year - or only 41 per day. So, I really don't see why "existing passenger service" is going to have much relevance on a high-speed line through Ohio.
Secondly, although I have not been able to figure out how many flights exist between each city pair each day, a brief look at travel sites showed twice as many flights from Cincinnati to Chicago (two dozen a day) as from Columbus (a dozen a day).
So, it seems to me that if they want to run multiple trains per day, the current rail offerings shouldn't be a factor, and they should consider the current air traffic between the city pairs instead.