The Need for Expanded Rail Service Grows
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The News & Advance
Published: July 10, 2008
With the General Assembly stymied over how to pay for a $1.1 billion shortfall for transportation, a proposal to add rail passenger service from Lynchburg to Washington, D.C., makes more sense every day.
Representatives of localities along the Piedmont Rail Corridor held news conferences earlier this week to show demand for the rail line and to drum up support for the $1.9 million it would cost the state annually. That’s a paltry sum considering that the same amount of money wouldn’t even cover the construction costs of a decent highway interchange these days.
Amtrak has proposed the line, which would make daily runs from Lynchburg to Washington and back with stops in Charlottesville, Culpeper, Manassas and Alexandria. An Amtrak study estimates the line would serve 33,000 passengers in its first year.
The proposed daily Amtrak line would leave Lynchburg at or about 5 a.m. and arrive at D.C.’s Union Station at or about 8:40 a.m. Southbound, the train would leave Washington around 5 p.m. daily and arrive in Lynchburg by 8:30 p.m. It would layover here for servicing, according to Amtrak’s report.
Lynchburg has had a 50 percent increase in ridership between 2004 and 2007 on the current Amtrak passenger train that travels through the city on its way from New York to New Orleans. But local officials along the route say that train is rarely on time and that tickets are tough to get.
Meredith Richards, head of the Piedmont Rail Coalition promoting the new passenger service, said the trains coming through Charlottesville “are typically booked solid.”
In a recent letter she wrote to Gov. Timothy M. Kaine on behalf of the coalition, Richards said that Amtrak has recommended the new service be implemented “as soon as possible.” She added that the Piedmont corridor service “would be very cost effective and could have a major impact on transportation in Virginia.”
Amtrak has identified the Piedmont region as the most under served in the state as far as rail passenger service is concerned.
At Lynchburg’s news conference on Monday, Vice Mayor Bert Dodson said “there’s a groundswell of support for this. It’s up and down U.S. 29.”
Del. Shannon Valentine, D-Lynchburg, called rail an important part of the state’s transportation solution and said she was anticipating completion of a new statewide rail study. The preliminary results of that study are expected to be released later this month.
“The rail system,” Valentine said, “is economically sound and environmentally sound. It’s part of the solution to our energy crisis” and our transportation crisis.
Putting more people on trains and getting their vehicles off the highway not only conserves gasoline, but it saves wear and tear on the roads, something the state is having an increasingly tough time paying for.
Dodson suggested at the news conference here that the proposed line could ultimately attract more people to Lynchburg. He said that telecommuters could live here and use the train to travel to Washington and its suburbs in Northern Virginia.
Let’s face it. With the price of gasoline rising out of sight, taking the train to Washington and back would be a far more efficient use of existing energy supplies. It would also take some traffic off U.S. 29, stretching the life of that roadway in these money-short times the state faces maintaining its highways.
The Piedmont Rail Coalition has been on the right track for some time now. It’s time for the legislature to get on board to make the rail transportation alternative available to Lynchburg and the rest of the Piedmont corridor.
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Posted by ( Cosmo Wafflefoot ) on July 12, 2008 at 5:40 am
It’s almost hard to believe the stupidity of our so called leaders who are advocating this nonsense. Anyone with even a passing knowledge of Amtrak knows full well that if they “estimate” it will cost $1 in the end it will cost $10. They “estimate” $60 worth of taxpayer subsidy for EVERY rider! Are you kidding me? PLUS the price of the ticket? The N&A;calls $1.9 million per year (estimated) [“a paltry sum considering that the same amount of money wouldn’t even cover the construction costs of a decent highway interchange these days.“] Correct me if I’m wrong, but we only pay for interchanges once. Not to mention the fact that never ending subsidies have nothing to do with road construction. Here is the question I want answered. Why should taxpayers foot the bill for people who want to live hundreds of miles from where they work? What does the public gain from this subsidy? How, where and when does this investment pay off for the public? We, as a people subsidise education, research and other adventures that are clearly expected to pay off far more than taxpayers pay in. When they don’t we call them mistakes. We call them “boondoggles” and that is exactly what this fiasco is. Americas energy future CAN NOT be in the business of “promoting” stupid behavior! Asking taxpayers to pay for your ride to work because you “choose” to live too far away to afford it on your own is nothing less than insanity. If you want to take your grand children to D.C. to visit the museums… WHY SHOULD I PAY? Now, don’t get me wrong, this does have an “up” side. The union coal shoveler who gets to keep his job, benefits and pension despite the fact that nobody has shoveled coal on a train for decades will just love it. Anybody else who thinks this is a good idea should have their head examined.
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Posted by ( luv2bliberal ) on July 11, 2008 at 6:23 am
Cosmo,
I agree with you. It appears that you have finally come to your senses. Government subsidized ANYTHING is idiodic. Healthcare, farms, corporations. If D.C. had their way, we would still be subsidizing the buggy-whip manufacturers.
Let the market decide. Let the people keep the money they worked for.
I’m still waiting on that heart thing.
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Posted by ( Cosmo Wafflefoot ) on July 11, 2008 at 5:30 am
$1.9 million annually in taxpayers dollars so that people from Lynchburg can make an 8 hour commute, back and forth to D.C. Obviously, this is the answer we have been looking for. Using the figures provided it adds up to almost $60 per ride, per passenger in taxpayers subsidy. On top of the cost of the ticket every time someone takes the ride we taxpayers kick in $60. I guess they expect to (as the old joke goes) make it all up on volume. Call me crazy, but, wouldn’t it make more sense for people working in D.C. to just LIVE closer to D.C.?
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