Amtrak: Infrastructure bill would help boost service
WASHINGTON — Amtrak announced it would enhance rail service in Connecticut and add new lines across the country after President Joe Biden revealed his infrastructure bill would award the corporation $80 billion over eight years for improvements.
Biden’s American Jobs plan, which he unveiled in Pittsburgh Wednesday, calls for massive spending on transportation, clean energy, school construction, the senior care-giving industry and research and development, paid for by corporate tax increases. The plan is Biden’s strategy for helping the economy recover from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Democrats intend to march the bill through Congress by midsummer and if passed, it would unleash billions of dollars for rail improvements, as well as other transportation investments.
According to a map produced by Amtrak, the rail company would enhance service all along the Northeast Corridor, which parallels I-95, from Washington, D.C. through New York, Connecticut, Boston and up to Brunswick, Maine. It would also enhance service along its north-south routes between New Haven. and St. Albans, Vt. and New York City up to Montreal. A spokesman for Amtrak declined to define exactly what “enhanced service” entailed on Thursday.
In the region, it would also add new services between Boston and Albany, Boston to Concord, N.H., along the length of Long Island, between Rutland and Burlington, Vt. and Brunswick to Rockland, Me. Across the country, Amtrak would add up to 30 potential new routes serving 160 new communities — including Las Vegas, Nashville, Louisville, Duluth, Columbus and Scranton — by 2035.
Amtrak is also expected to complete the long-awaited Gateway Tunnel project that would carry Amtrak trains under the Hudson River in New York City and allow authorities to repair damage caused in existing tubes from Hurricane Sandy in 2012. The Gateway Project alone could cost as much as $10 billion, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal said Thursday.
Amtrak would also rehab the East River Tunnels and New York Penn Station, Amtrak CEO Bill Flynn said in a statement.
Repairs and improvements by Amtrak in any part of the Northeast Corridor could help trains throughout the region, including Metro-North commuter trains that ride the same rails, said Sean Jeans-Gail, vice president of Policy and Government Affairs at the Rail Passengers Association.
“There are a number of real physical, capital intensive projects that are lined up ready to go and need the money,” Jeans-Gail said. “We would be talking about increased reliability, increased average speeds, which when you are talking about a corridor as extensive as the Northeast Corridor that means increased capacity.”
The American Jobs Plan would award Amtrak for the next eight years five times the average funding funding it usually gets in a year, Jeans-Gail said. But it remains to be seen if this money would be wholly supplemental or if Congress would later respond by cutting annual funding for Amtrak, the National Passenger Railroad Corporation.
“The Northeast Corridor could absolutely absorb 90 percent of that [10 billion a year]. That will not happen because of the way the Congress generally represents the entire country,” Jeans-Gail. “When you spread $10 billion across the United States of America, it spreads a little thin.”
Biden’s $2 trillion American Jobs Plan also includes $85 billion to modernize public transit and meet ridership demand, an investment that is also expected to benefit rail.
It’s unclear how much direct aid might flow to Metro-North. Metro-North is operated by the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority of New York, under contract with the Connecticut Department of Transportation. A congressional aide said Thursday Democrats intend to tailor the legislation to ensure transit authorities like MTA can access this funding.
“I know a big priority for Gov. (Ned) Lamont has been faster trains, having a quicker experience into New York,” said Catherine Rinaldi, the president of Metro-North, told WTNH-8 Thursday. That level of investment will really help us transform the customer experience, and we hope bring new and more customers back to our trains
U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, DConn., hailed the proposed rail funding as a “big deal” for Connecticut.
“Modernizing the Northeast Corridor is critical to our state’s economic competitiveness and will help relieve congestion from our highways and roads,” he said. “The American Jobs Plan also includes this funding over several years, which means states like Connecticut can finally plan longterm when it comes to modernizing our rail system.”
Of course, Congress must pass the American Jobs Plan to turn any of these proposals into reality and the sweeping legislation faces significant opposition already from Republicans. Democrats may try to pass the plan without any Republican votes through a process called reconciliation.
Republicans support transportation investments, but they have already objected to the corporate tax increases that Biden proposed to pay for the plan. Others said the plan was too expensive and they objected to the climate measures included in the bill.
"Raising taxes in the middle of an economic crisis is incredibly misguided,” said Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho, the top Republican on the Finance Committee. “Hastily changing the tax system purely for purposes of raising revenue will bring back inversions and foreign takeovers of U.S. companies, cost jobs, shrink domestic investment and slow down wage growth, ultimately crushing ordinary workers and the middle class.”
Blumenthal said passing the plan would be an “uphill fight,” but expressed confidence Democrats could do it even without Republican support on Thursday.
“We have an uphill fight because what we are proposing here is reversing the Trump tax cut,” he said, referring to the 2017 GOP tax law that was passed unilaterally by Republicans under President Donald Trump.
The American Jobs Plan directs about $450 billion toward road, bridge, rail and airport construction, including $174 billion to put more electric cars on the roads. Under Biden’s plan, intercity rail alone would receive a 400 percent boost in funding, according to the Rail Passengers Association.
Biden is sometimes nicknamed “Amtrak Joe” because he rode the train for years from his home in Delaware to Washington, D.C. as a senator.
“The American Jobs Plan will build new rail corridors and transit lines — easing congestion, cutting pollution, slashing commute times, and opening up investment in communities that become connected to the cities, and cities to the outskirts where a lot of jobs are these days," Biden said. “You and your family could travel coast to coast without a single tank of gas onboard a highspeed train.”
Even before the pandemic, Amtrak and Metro-North have long sought more funding to improve the bridges it crosses — like the Connecticut River Bridge in Old Saybrook — straighten out tracks and implement safety technology.
But like with other forms of public transportation, rail travel has declined during the pandemic and the lack of ridership has resulted in budget crises for some rail operators. The American Rescue Plan — the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill passed by Congress last month — already included about $30 billion for transit grants and $970 million for Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor to help.
Rinaldi, the Metro-North president, said “at the height of the pandemic,” the railroad’s ridership was down by about 95 percent. Now, it’s down about 79 percent.
Rail travel in Connecticut and the Northeast could be slow to bounce back because so much of its demand is business travel, Jeans-Gail said.
“[That’s] probably going to take longer to return to pre-pandemic levels,” he said. “People are really re-assessing the get on a train, spend a day in New York and then hop back... I think people are going to be hanging onto Zoom a little bit longer before they open up the business expense accounts again.”
The American Rescue Plan also includes $213 billion for housing investments, $111 billion to upgrade drinking water systems, $100 billion to improve broadband coverage and $100 billion for workforce development. It also makes huge investments weatherizing buildings, investing in renewable energy research and infrastructure and encouraging purchasing of more low-emission energy and transportation options. It would allocate $400 billion to expand access to home and community-based care for seniors and the disabled and allots $137 billion to upgrade public schools, community colleges and build more child care facilities.
All this construction will be done by union workers, Biden said, who included in the package a proposal to bolster the right to organize.
Biden proposes paying for these investments over 15 years by corporate tax changes. Those include raising the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent, setting a global minimum corporate tax, taking steps to block off-shoring of jobs and increasing tax enforcement against companies.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said she hopes to pass the American Jobs Plan by July.