Amtrak wants to use operating profits from the Northeast
Corridor for major construction projects on the corridor, instead of
subsidizing long-distance trains elsewhere in the nation.
Revenues from passenger operations on the 453-mile corridor
between Washington and Boston will exceed operating costs by about $290 million
next year, Amtrak president Joseph Boardman said in a letter Tuesday to
congressional leaders.
Boardman asked that Amtrak be allowed to use that operating
surplus to help pay for $735 million in capital costs on the corridor,
including new railcars, station improvements, and rail and signal upgrades.
He said the full operating deficit of long-distance trains -
expected to be $618 million this year - should be paid from the federal budget.
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The Northeast Corridor carried 11.4 million passengers last
year, about 36 percent of Amtrak's total national ridership of 31.6 million.
Boardman said that the Northeast Corridor is in dire need of
a major overhaul, and that without a significant increase in capital funding,
Amtrak is "vulnerable to a bigger, costlier, and far more damaging failure
than anything we have seen."
"The nation cannot afford to let a railroad that
carries half of Amtrak's trains and 80 percent of the nation's rail commuters
fall apart; the economic consequences would be devastating," Boardman
wrote.
Amtrak is seeking $1.62 billion in federal funding for
operating and capital costs nationwide in fiscal 2015, an increase of 16
percent from this year's federal appropriations.
And Amtrak is expected to ask for about $2.5 billion the
next year, driven by a doubling of the costs of construction projects in the
Northeast Corridor, according to the congressional letter.
The heavily used corridor, with its century-old bridges and
outdated equipment, cannot be maintained "at today's financing levels or
with today's policy instruments," Boardman said.
He urged Congress to give Amtrak multiyear capital funding
guarantees, instead of annual appropriations that limit the railroad's ability
to carry out expensive improvements.
"Only this type of commitment will allow us to plan and
undertake major multiyear projects like bridge and tunnel replacements,"
Boardman wrote in his letter to House Speaker John Boehner and Senate President
Joseph Biden.
Source: Philly.com
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