The FASTLANE program is for 5 years in the Transportation authorization, so it should be funded in the $700 to $800 million range each year. The Virginia award is the largest FY2016 grant at $165 million ...
The FASTLANE program is not aimed at intercity passenger rail in any way. ... any number of long stalled rail-highway grade separation projects could be funded by FASTLANE grants in the next few years.
Looking at the FY2016 list, I'm surprised that a Chicago CREATE project did not get selected, as the FASTLANE program is structured in part to help fund regional transportation system improvement projects like CREATE.
Some folks got carried away with hopes for the FASTLANE funding (All Aboard Ohio, for one). Considering that it NOT for intercity passenger rail, we did real well this year.
Apparently Congress reserved for itself a 90-day period to micromanage the awards. We can hope that Congress will continue its recent policy of doing nothing, not even negative things, while the 90-day clock runs out.
About a tenth of the proposed funding will help Amtrak. Buying the abandoned trackage Petersburg-Raleigh is the one big passenger rail item in the bag, and CSX will tell Congress that the deal is good for freight service as well.
Adding another 14 miles of track south of the Potomac Long Bridge also helps the freights, VRE's commuter trains, and several Amtrak Virginia Regionals (as well as the Palmetto, Meteor, Star, and Carolinian). Clearly most of the funds here will come from Virginia, and some from CSX, so even the haters will not have much to squeal about.
In Seattle, Amtrak is only one small part of it, wrapped inside a project to help BSNF, the Sounders, the state-supported Cascades, as well as drivers, bicyclists, and pedestrians who won't have to deal with the grade crossings after the overpass is completed..
Eliminating grade crossings is always good, and I figure chances are that many such projects will be on freight lines that also carry LD or corridor trains.
Maybe CREATE can get federal funding next year, or more likely, next governor. The previous CREATE projects enjoyed matching funding from the great state of Illinois, but it ain't so great at doing that job under the current ideology in Springfield.