The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)
Rollin’ on the rail line
Officials inaugurate new Hartford Line, hope for economic boost
ABOARD THE HARTFORD LINE — Riding the new Hartford Line train between New Haven and Springfield, Mass., will be free all weekend, but state officials and business people hope the new rail service will bring a lot of money into the state.
They already see businesses and residences starting to spring up along the line, which made a ceremonial run Friday, with trains rolling into Hartford from both ends of the 62-mile-long line, loaded with politicians, business people and mass transit advocates.
“You’re talking about two of the biggest, most successful predictors of the future, and that is mass transit being
available on bus systems, on train systems,” said Gov. Dannel Malloy after stepping off the CTrail train at Hartford’s Union Station. “We don’t have to talk about the Hartford market and the New Haven market being different job markets. They’re now the same. Because you don’t need a car to get back and forth. You don’t have to be tied up on (Interstates) 95 and 91 to reach a job that may be your next promotion. So it’s a game-changer for Connecticut.”
At a ceremony in the Great Hall of Hartford’s Union Station, Malloy said the $769 million high-speed train system, including $204.8 million in federal funds, cost less than it would have to add another lane to I-91. The train “will move people in a way that they want to be moved and link cities in a way that a highway simply can’t do.
“This is about the future,” Malloy said. “This is about who we are, what we are today because we built it. But (it’s) the future generations that will enjoy the reinvigoration of this form of travel. We should be proud as Connecticut citizens that our state made this investment. It speaks well of who we are and what we are at this moment, that we care more about the future than we do ourselves in the present.”
Plans for the project go back two decades but were “dead in the water 7½ years ago,” Malloy said. But, as U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, DConn., said, when Florida Gov. Rick Scott declined federal funds for mass transit, the money became available to Connecticut, which took advantage of the opportunity.
State Transportation Commissioner James Redeker said Friday’s opening came “14 years after conducting our first feasibility study … but just three years after first breaking ground” and called the Hartford Line “a defining moment in Connecticut’s history.”
Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin said the project wouldn’t have happened without President Barack Obama’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which was passed by Congress after the Great Recession.
“This is a big deal for the city of Hartford, the entire region and the entire state of Connecticut,” Bronin said, pointing to “the concentration of advanced research into one of the most talented labor markets in the entire country. Public transportation and especially rail is vital to economic development in the 21st century.”
Before the train rolled out of New Haven, New Haven Mayor Toni Harp congratulated Malloy who, when he first took office, “always seemed as if he were rushing to catch a train. … I want to congratulate the governor. I want to thank him for his vision, for the way he has fought for infrastructure changes and development throughout our state.”
10:32 a.m.: Leaving New Haven’s Union Station
“This is a lot of hard work by a lot of people,” said Carl Jackson, the Department of Transportation’s rail administrator, who said he has 60 employees in his division. “We’ve been putting time in for the last four years making sure this happens. This is a wonderful day.”
Jackson said getting the line up and running was a detailed process. “Once we got through construction, we had to negotiate upwards of 32 agreements with Amtrak and contractors. Finally, the agreement to lease the coaches and bring them on the service agreement” with TransitAmerica Services of St. Joseph, Mo., and Alternative Concepts of Boston, which formed a joint venture to operate the line.
10:36 a.m.: State Street station
Riding the train, Harp said the line will expand economic development in the Elm City. “We’re going to get workers into New Haven from the central part of the state. They won’t have to drive their cars,” which will reduce emissions, she said.
Ginny Kozlowski, CEO of the Economic Development Corp. of New Haven and REX Development, said the Hartford Line will “bring more people to New Haven to see our great cultural attractions, eat at our restaurants and see our beautiful city. More connectivity across the state is critical when we’re out recruiting and retaining companies. Transportation is critical.”
She said companies “need to get their folks to work and meeting with customers and suppliers, so ease of travel is a critical component and it needs to be fast and reliable. Reliability is a critical component here.”
10:52 a.m.: Wallingford station
State Rep. Mary Mushinsky, DWallingford, said, “I am so excited about this. I’ve been going down on my bike at night looking at the construction because I couldn’t wait for it to open.” A new station was built in her town for the line.
She said a monthly commuter ticket between Wallingford and Hartford, at $115.50, is just a quarter of the cost of driving.
11:10 a.m.: Meriden station
Former Speaker of the House Christopher Donovan, of Meriden, who left office in 2013, said, “It only took me 20 years, 25 years” to make the rail line a reality. Former Gov. M. Jodi Rell, a Republican, “was somewhat interested and then Obama said, ‘I have money for infrastructure’ and things fell into place. People said, ‘Oh, everybody drives,’ but when I take I-91 people aren’t driving, they’re sitting,” Donovan said.
11:22 a.m.: Berlin station
One sour note for the new line was the news that the restrooms would be locked until they could be made compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act. The 16 30-year-old cars have been leased from the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority and two are being retrofitted now, according to Jim Cameron, of Darien, founder of the Commuter Action Group.
Cameron said portable handicapped-accessible lavatories were installed at all the stations where they were needed.
Rail Administrator Jackson said, “Sometime in December we’ll be 100 percent ADA-accessible.”
11:40 a.m.: Hartford Union Station
Among the speakers at the Hartford ceremony was former U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who until 2017 was chief executive of the Motion Picture Association of America. “Projects like this don’t always happen,” he said. “We talk about them and try to start them but then events intervene and throw you off the tracks if I’m able to use that analogy. But this was a project that really did involve an awful lot of people.”
There will be 17 trains weekdays between New Haven and Hartford, at $8 one way and $168 for a monthly pass. Twelve will run between Hartford and Springfield at $6 and $126. But on this Saturday and Sunday, the trains will run free of charge.
“We don’t have to talk about the Hartford market and the New Haven market being different job markets. They’re now the same.”
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy