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Read more at the Quad Cities Times-Update: Moline-Chicago passenger rail needs federal intervention
Gretchen Teske , Grace Kinnicutt Feb 27, 2023
The future of Moline's long-planned passenger rail to Chicago now appears to rest with Amtrak.
Moline Mayor Sangeetha Rayapati announced Monday that negotiations had broken down between the Illinois Department of Transportation and Iowa Interstate Railroad in the state's quest to access the rail line for Moline-to-Chicago passenger service.
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About $400 million in state and federal funding is committed to the downtown project, but it is contingent upon cooperation with Iowa Interstate Railroad, or IAIS. The stopper, the mayor said, is money.
The rail company keeps "moving the goal post" in negotiations with the state, the mayor said, adding, "It always comes down to money."
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The best hope for the project now is to get Amtrak, the passenger rail carrier, to go to bat for them, local and state officials said.
State Sen. Mike Halpin said at Monday's news conference that federal law gave Amtrak the authority to appeal the matter to the Surface Transportation Board.
"Passenger rail is supposed to have priority under federal law," Halpin said.
The federal law that allows this oversight has been in play for about 25 years, he said. Generally, Amtrak and the DOT prefer to meet and negotiate how federal and state governments can contribute to improving the project. Being called upon by public officials is unusual, he said.
“We have certainly offered to assist Illinois DOT in these negotiations,” Amtrak spokesperson Marc Magliari said. “We have made the offer several times.”
Asked whether the Illinois DOT had taken up Amtrak’s offer, Magliari declined to say.
A statement issued Monday afternoon by IDOT, however, indicates the agency has been in talks with Amtrak.
I'm not sure it makes sense to have the SW Chief serve the Quad Cities, but a Cal Zephyr routed to Moline would presumably continue on to Iowa City, Des Moines (as someone already posted) and Omaha rather than resuming its course across lightly-populated southern Iowa. If Ottumwa & company still want service, then a corridor train Chicago-Omaha serving those stops once or twice a day (Iowa Zephyr?) would suffice.Running the Zephyr and the Chief through Moline would require significant investment in infrastructure. Not only is there the segment from the BNSF line to Moline, the tracks that exist between the quad cities and Burlington and Fort Madison would also require investment. I am not sure which railroad owns those tracks, but I am sure additional sidings would be required as well as upgrades to 79 mph running.
The upgrades required to bring the Lincoln Service/Texas Eagle tracks up to "high-speed rail" standards certainly caused major disruptions in my part of Illinois while construction was ongoing. Amtrak apparently REALLY didn't like having railroad crossings at the intersection of 2 streets, so where those had occurred in Dwight, 1 of the 2 streets was "split" -- convenient for the railroad, but really odd for local motorists (and quite confusing for hubby's law firm clients from out of town, as their GPS navigation couldn't figure out how the streets had changed). And although the new station in Dwight looks nice, we really didn't need it, as the old one a few blocks away was still perfectly adequate for the level of ridership we had boarding/disembarking at Dwight.but I am sure additional sidings would be required as well as upgrades to 79 mph running.
I can, after spending some time in the Quad Cities during my working career dealing with an uncooperative cement plant control system. On my return trip to PA I planned to take the Broadway Limited but had to fly from Quad Cities to ORD rather than take a train which would have been my preferred way. Especially after the plane I was scheduled on had issues and the flight was scrubbed causing me to have to scramble for an alternative.Granted most people couldn't place Moline on a map
Of course, we'll have to get to Moline first...I'm not sure it makes sense to have the SW Chief serve the Quad Cities, but a Cal Zephyr routed to Moline would presumably continue on to Iowa City, Des Moines (as someone already posted) and Omaha rather than resuming its course across lightly-populated southern Iowa. If Ottumwa & company still want service, then a corridor train Chicago-Omaha serving those stops once or twice a day (Iowa Zephyr?) would suffice.
Both are examples of situations where the high population route is paralleled by an underloaded Interstate with bus service and has more cities with air service. It takes some careful study versus the lower population route that the railway dominates.It makes sense to go where the population is. I have to wonder how much it would cost to upgrade the former R.I. tracks. Certainly, if the upgrade is done, a Chicago-Des Moines train makes sense, too. Also, the former "North Coast Limited" route through southern Montana has a lot more people living there than the present Empire Builder route.
If Amtrak wanted to run through Moline then it wouldn’t be an issue, there’d be little hope the IAIS could afford to fight Amtrak at the STB. The issue this is a route Illinois wants. Amtrak seems to have no interest in the Quad Cities especially since they declined an opportunity to take over the Quad Cities Rocket back in the 70s. Times have changed but the constant is the line is in no shape to host passenger trains as of now.Of course, we'll have to get to Moline first...
Your fight is with IDOT, they’re the ones planning the route.We deserve better than Amtrak. The Quad cities train has been a decade of broken promises. Not all Amtraks fault but Amtrak is it’s own worse advocate and enemy combined in one. Granted most people have never heard of the quad cities but metro area here is around 400,000 with another 50,000 within a 30-40 min drive.
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