The Lehigh Valley being my new home, where I moved to from Eastern Maine, I have taken an interest in passenger rail developments in this area.
The area used to have good rail service to Philadelphia until the early 1980s when the former Reading RR services were dropped due to lack of interest in funding their operation by the local governments. Segments of the lines have been allowed to be abandoned and some of them have become trails.
There is an effort underway to study alternative rail options. So far there are 5 options being studied. 2 for LV to New York, 2 for LV to Philadelphia, and one for LV to Reading.
A recent article in the online "Lehigh Valley News" outlines the current status of these studies.
Excerpt:
The article included a chart of the 5 alternatives and cost estimates:
It is encouraging there is action although as is usual with these types of projects, the timelines are long and those of us at a certain age may not live to see them come to fruition.
The area used to have good rail service to Philadelphia until the early 1980s when the former Reading RR services were dropped due to lack of interest in funding their operation by the local governments. Segments of the lines have been allowed to be abandoned and some of them have become trails.
There is an effort underway to study alternative rail options. So far there are 5 options being studied. 2 for LV to New York, 2 for LV to Philadelphia, and one for LV to Reading.
A recent article in the online "Lehigh Valley News" outlines the current status of these studies.
Excerpt:
The Lehigh Valley Transportation Study hosted a special meeting Wednesday to reflect on the long-awaited “first step” passenger rail study, released in March.
While no votes were taken to confirm the direction the committee, which oversees transportation planning for the region, wishes to move in — the next steps were laid out.
Officials noted that actions confirming their support for moving forward, followed by finding a project sponsor and allocating funds for a feasibility study, would be what is required to get things moving.
From there, a travel demand analysis would help the group identify one of the five examined corridors presented — two to Philadelphia, two to NYC, one to Reading — to pursue.
Lehigh Valley Planning Commission Executive Director and LVTS secretary Becky Bradley said further official discussion and potential action items can occur at the earliest during the transportation study's July meeting due to federal obligations related to the Transportation Improvement Program in June and other required work.
But a sense of urgency was still felt among some officials present despite the estimated 10-12 year timeline.
“I think our goal would be to get something on the docket as it relates to the next step for rail in July, knowing that there's a huge amount of work that we're doing as the transportation study between now and then, as it relates to the TIP approvals,” Rick Molchany Director of General Services said.
The article included a chart of the 5 alternatives and cost estimates:
It is encouraging there is action although as is usual with these types of projects, the timelines are long and those of us at a certain age may not live to see them come to fruition.