The battle that will determine the future of American passenger rail
TRANSPORTATION
The battle that will determine the future of American passenger rail
Amtrak has money to expand, but it doesnt own the railroad tracks. A stalled effort along the Gulf Coast is a test of its ability to grow.
By Luz Lazo
July 6, 2022 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
CSX tracks near Biloxi, Miss., looking West as a moveable bridge opens for a boat in 2021. (CSX)
Months after Washington approved billions to significantly expand Amtraks footprint across the country, an early attempt at growth has reached an impasse in a test case that could define the American rail network for a generation.
The escalating clash is playing out on the Gulf Coast, where Amtrak wants to restore service 17 years after Hurricane Katrina flooded the regions rail infrastructure. Amid fanfare over federal money as a president nicknamed Amtrak Joe watches from the White House, the passenger rail and the freight railroads that control the tracks are in mediation to resolve disputes over Amtraks proposed service levels.
At the core of the conflict is a
mandate that requires freight railroads to give passenger trains access to rail track and preference over other rail traffic. A federal board is weighing the fate of Gulf Coast passenger service in a triallike process pitting Amtrak against freight railroads. Because Amtrak operates mostly on tracks owned by others, the case could set precedent
as the passenger railroad embarks on a $75 billion expansion with bipartisan support.
This is the bellwether case for the expansion of any passenger rail in this country, said John Robert Smith, chairman of the policy organization Transportation for America. If the freights manage to kill this proposed service, it will send a chill through the rest of the nation aspiring for passenger rail.
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By Luz Lazo
Luz Lazo is a transportation reporter at The Washington Post covering passenger and freight transportation, buses, taxis and ride-sharing services. She also writes about traffic, road infrastructure and air travel in the Washington region and beyond. She joined The Post in 2011. Twitter
https://twitter.com/luzcita