Greenwich Time

As Biden eyes infrastruc­ture, Murphy touts Northeast Corridor

- By Brianna Gurciullo

GREENWICH — As President Joe Biden eyes infrastruc­ture as the “next priority item” on his agenda, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy sat down with state transporta­tion and MetroNorth Railroad officials Monday.

During a round-table discussion at Greenwich Town Hall, Murphy noted that the Northeast Corridor is the only rail corridor in the nation “that has any chance of making money.”

“But that’s jeopardize­d by this current pandemic, which has created real budget crises for our operators, and is threatened in the long run by an atrophying infrastruc­ture that’s increasing transit times and making a lot of people think twice about locating themselves in Connecticu­t,” Murphy

said.

Murphy outlined some of the money for transporta­tion that was included in the American Rescue Plan Act, a pandemic aid package that Biden signed into law earlier this month. The law sets aside about $30 billion for transit grants, $970 million for Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor and $350 billion for state and local government­s.

Meanwhile, Biden is expected to release a major infrastruc­ture proposal this week. Murphy said he hopes that a bipartisan package will be possible, but he noted “there’s a big outstandin­g question as to whether we can agree on revenue sources for transporta­tion.”

Still, Biden “has been successful in pushing Congress to enact his priorities thus far,” Murphy said. “And my hope is that he’s going to put just as much focus on infrastruc­ture as he did on the Rescue Plan.”

Murphy and fellow U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal signed onto a letter to Biden last week requesting that the president’s infrastruc­ture proposal include $55 billion or more for the Northeast Corridor over 10 years.

Murphy is a member of the Senate subcommitt­ee that drafts an annual appropriat­ions bill for the U.S. Department­s of Transporta­tion and Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

Among the attendees of Monday’s roundtable was Catherine Rinaldi, the president of Metro-North. She said “at the height of the pandemic,” the railroad’s ridership was down by about 95 percent. Now, it’s down about 79 percent.

“We are now definitely on the upswing,” Rinaldi said. “We had a bit of a lull during the holidays when … COVID started up again. But really, since January, we’ve been seeing improvemen­t pretty much every week.”

She said while there may be fewer “traditiona­l commuters” taking trains during the pandemic, “intermedia­te travelers” — for instance, those who catch a train in Bridgeport and hop off in Stamford — are still riding the railroad.

Since last June, MetroNorth has been operating at about 63 percent of its prepandemi­c service levels, Rinaldi said.

Joseph Giulietti, the commission­er of the state Department of Transporta­tion and a former president of Metro-North, said federal funding has been critical to continuing rail service in the state.

“Your funding right now

has put us in a position that I can safely say we’re OK to go for the next two years, and we have the projects in line to go in and fix up and increase the speeds on this

corridor for both Amtrak and Metro-North,” Giulietti said.

He also said he is optimistic about more infrastruc­ture spending in the

near future.

“If I can impress nothing else in this meeting it’s that never have I felt that the stars have been more aligned than they are right

now in terms of investment in infrastruc­ture, in terms of relationsh­ips,” he said, referring to connection­s on both the regional and federal level.

 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., left, and Greenwich First Selectman Fred Camillo speak at a roundtable discussion regarding transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture needs at Town Hall in Greenwich on Monday.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., left, and Greenwich First Selectman Fred Camillo speak at a roundtable discussion regarding transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture needs at Town Hall in Greenwich on Monday.

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