WoodyinNYC
Conductor
I take your point. I'd keep Food Stamps, or Obamacare, over LD trains if I had to make that hard choice. But that isn't the only choice: How about restoring the estate tax so that spoiled brats like the Koch Brothers would pay a fair share for running the country when they inherit a $30 Billion oil company from their daddy.I love it. Passenger rail has been a losing proposition for over 50 years. Ever hear if a concept called Utilitarianism? Do the greatest good for the greatest number. Don't blame Trump for the fact that a tiny fraction of the population use LD service. Or the losses. Come up with false analogies that govt programs don't have to make money. Of course they don't. Food Stamps don't make money. Tanks and missiles don't either. However our voters and politicians decided they are necessary social and safety expenditures. For selfish reasons I'd want LD to continue. My life will be negatively impacted. So will yours, I get it. Yet I can think of hundreds of higher ranking priorities.
The steady drumbeat of propaganda from the tax-avoiders is that this country is somehow short of funds. Nonsense. We've had a lousy economic policy under Bush and Obama. But if we still have money to prepare to invade more Middle Eastern countries or build another $11 Billion aircraft carrier or cut taxes on the richest among us, then surely we can afford to invest more in passenger rail.
Meanwhile I have not signed on to support losing money forever. Over the past 15 years or so -- following the introduction of the Acela as a turning point -- Amtrak has gotten better. More passengers, more revenue, flat or lower losses, better farebox recovery, even better On Time Performance and customer satisfaction scores. Amtrak is a turnaround business story, but it needs more investment to keep getting better.
Over the past 10 years or so -- following the windfall investment from the Stimulus -- Amtrak has gotten better even faster, with upgrades to the infrastructure and especially to its fleet. Almost 100 wrecked cars resting at Beech Grove maintenance center were rescued, rehabbed, and put back to work on the tracks. New electric locomotives on the NEC. New diesels for the Midwest and California corridors. Four more Talgo trainsets. And a small order for new baggage cars, diners, and sleepers for the Eastern long distance trains, as well as a small order for bi-level coaches for the Midwest corridors; both orders have missed many deadlines, but that doesn't seem to be Amtrak's fault, and eventually the new cars will arrive. Not to forget an order placed for Avelia Liberty trains to replace the Acelas, faster, cheaper and easier to operate, 40% more capacity, and enuff cars to allow more high speed trains during rush hour.
Before the end of this year, we should see the biggest Stimulus rail projects completed. By this time next year, Amtrak ridership could be up 500,000 riders from the handful of upgraded corridors, especially the showcase project St Louis-CHI, but also Detroit-CHI, Seattle-Portland, Charlotte-Raleigh, New Haven-Hartford-Springfield-Vermont, and a stretch of tracks south and west of Albany. Together these projects will improve ridership totals and revenues, but also improve On Time Performance and average speed for Amtrak trains.
When Amtrak grows, it benefits more riders while reducing its 'costs per' -- costs per passenger, cost per train, costs per hour, costs per dollar of revenue, etc. More investment leading to more growth can fix most of Amtrak's problems and start to reduce its losses every year.
If Congress would appropriate $4 Billion a year for capital investment as Obama repeatedly requested, we could begin work on one or two more corridor upgrades every year. Consider St Paul-CHI, Cincinnati-Indianapolis-CHI, Philly-Pittsburgh, Omaha-Des Moines-Quad Cities-CHI, Memphis-CHI, Baton Rouge-New Orleans-Mobile, Springfield-Worcester-Boston, and others. Upgraded corridors greatly help the Long Distance trains as well. And Amtrak needs large new orders for both single-level and bi-level coaches and other cars for renewing and expanding its fleet.
The cure for what ails Amtrak is more Amtrak.
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