The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

High-speed rail through CT could finally happen

- By Tom Condon THE CT MIRROR

In 2016, federal officials unveiled a plan for highspeed rail along the Northeast Corridor that included a 50-mile passage from Old Saybrook to the village of Kenyon, R.I.

The route went through Old Lyme and other historic small towns while bypassing New London. The plan, called NEC Future, met with heavy — almost unanimous — opposition. Hundreds turned out at meetings to oppose the plan. Sen. Richard Blumenthal seemed ready to lash himself to the tracks, calling the idea “half-baked and harebraine­d” and “unworthy of any sort of taxpayer dollars.”

Sensing a lack of support, the Federal Railroad Administra­tion pulled the plan back for further study of the entire New Haven-to-Providence segment. That study has not yet begun, according to an FRA spokesman. Does that mean there will be no high-speed rail in New England in the post-COVID world?

Not necessaril­y.

For the last three years, another high-speed rail concept has been quietly germinatin­g, one that would go inland through Connecticu­t instead of

along the shoreline.

Called North Atlantic Rail, the plan originated at University of Pennsylvan­ia planning studios directed by highly regarded planner Robert Yaro, former president of the Regional Plan Associatio­n and advised by, among others, Christophe­r “Kip” Bergstrom, former deputy commission­er of the state Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t, and Emil Frankel, former commission­er of the state Department of Transporta­tion.

The centerpiec­e is a highspeed trunk line from New York City to Boston. But instead of following the existing shoreline right-of-way like the last doomed plan, the proposed new route would track to Long Island, cross Long Island Sound via a 16-mile tunnel to the New Haven area, then go north to Hartford. From there it would travel east on a new and yet to be determined right of way, make a UConn stop in Tolland, and then move on to Providence and Boston.

Yaro said in an interview the high speed trains could travel between Manhattan and Boston in 100 minutes, shaving two hours or more off current schedules. In addition, the plan would incorporat­e each state’s top rail priorities — Connecticu­t’s are the New Haven to New York and Hartford to Springfiel­d lines — with the goal of connecting the regional cities in New England and southern New York State with each other and with Boston and New York City.

That would mean massive improvemen­t to the Metro North New Haven line, through Stamford, Norwalk and Bridgeport.

The new rail network will provide “transforma­tional mobility, economic developmen­t and climate resilience benefits for the entire seven-state region,” Bergstrom said.

He believes that connecting the region’s population centers by high-speed rail would create a “new economic geography.” It would mean more employment and housing options, especially for city residents. It would reduce pollution and carbon production (the trains would be electrifie­d, powered by renewable energy) and highway congestion, he said.

Yaro and Bergstrom, friends since they were in graduate school at Harvard in the 1970s, have both worked in Stamford — Bergstrom as developmen­t director and Yaro as a consulting planner. Both saw the downtown boom, in no small part because of a one-hour rail connection to New York City. The North Atlantic Rail plan would put Hartford an hour from New York — and Boston.

They estimate the project would cost $105 billion over 20 years.

It is highly unusual for a such a complex rail plan to come from the private sector, which raises the question: Can Yaro, Bergstrom and other civic and business leaders who’ve joined with them — Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin just became co-chairman of the initiative — convince Congress and the states to make this happen?

Mega-regions

Though more than two dozen countries have high speed rail systems — virtually all of Europe, China, Japan, Korea and even developing countries such as Morocco and Uzbekistan — the movement for high-speed rail in this country has not progressed at anything resembling high speed. First proposed in the early 1960s, at about the time Japan was introducin­g its Shinkansen “bullet train,” U.S. highspeed rail plans have been proposed, planned and studied — but not actually built.

At present, the country has one high speed rail line under constructi­on, in California, and it has endured delays. Others are on the drawing board in Las Vegas, Texas and the Pacific Northwest. There are several “higher-speed” projects in planning or service, including the Northeast Corridor’s Acela Express. Higher speed usually refers to trains with top speeds of 80 to 120 mph. The Acela can hit 150 mph but averages about half that speed due to various design and right-of-way constraint­s.

Yaro got interested in highspeed rail in 2004, when he led a Penn studio — a graduate seminar in which students try to solve real-world planning and design challenges — looking at long-term developmen­t trends and infrastruc­ture needs. He and his students identified the emergence of 11, now 13, “mega-regions,” clusters of large and small cities such as in the Northeast, areas 300 to 600 miles across with shared infrastruc­ture, culture, histories and economies; economies that, in turn, power the national economy.

These areas must move people and goods to prosper. Yaro concluded they were too small to be efficientl­y served by air but too large to be traversed by cars without causing major congestion, delays and pollution. The best option, it seemed to him, was high-performanc­e rail.

At a workshop that year in London, European officials said they were planning or had already built high-speed rail to serve their mega-regions; Asian countries had done so as well. The Penn students and their advisors proceeded to map out a high-speed rail plan for the U.S. mega-regions, including the Northeast.

Great Recession grants

Yaro traveled to other countries over the next few years to look at their high-speed rail systems. He and Bergstrom were among those who urged Congress to include money for highspeed rail in the American Recovery and Reinvestme­nt Act (ARRA) of 2009, the stimulus bill which followed the 2008 Great Recession. Congress put $8 billion in seed money for highspeed rail in the bill, later adding another $2 billion. It paid for, among other things, the NEC Future study. But several ARRA high-speed projects became mired in partisan politics. Republican governors of Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida returned billions of dollars in grants rather than build the high-speed lines.

Also in 2009, the Federal Railroad Administra­tion released its High Speed Rail Strategic Plan. The plan designated a number of potential high-speed corridors, many of which had been identified by Yaro’s 2004 studio group.

Yaro organized another studio to study the Northeast Corridor, and in 2010 the students produced a high-speed rail plan for the 457-mile, Boston-to-Washington run that included the Long Island Sound tunnel and inland route through Hartford. The students were able to present the plan to Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Ed Rendell, who liked it and arranged a White House presentati­on to a noted train buff, VicePresid­ent Joe Biden. Yaro said Biden urged Amtrak and the Federal Railroad Administra­tion to adopt the plan.

That didn’t happen. At least, not yet.

Meanwhile, Yaro was watching a program developing in England that became known as the Northern Powerhouse initiative, a $160 billion plan to revitalize the economies of several older industrial cities across the North of England. The core of the plan is two high-speed rail lines: one connecting London to the North and another connecting cities, such as Liverpool, Manchester and Leeds, to each other, augmented by job training, housing and other programs.

Yaro took students to Manchester in 2016 to see if the program could be adapted to the Northeast. He concluded that it could.

Fast track

The planners doing the NEC Future plan considered three routes from Boston to New York: the tunnel, the shoreline and a rough diagonal via Waterbury to Hartford and Providence.

Yaro said the diagonal route simply doesn’t have the population to support the service. The existing shoreline tracks, laid out in the 19th century, are too bendy and congested for high-speed rail and also are vulnerable to climate change. Running a new shoreline route through historic towns is a nonstarter.

The tunnel, on the other hand, would connect the seven million people on Long Island to New England. With modern equipment, a 16-mile rail tunnel “is not a big deal,” he said, noting that dozens of longer rail tunnels have been built around the world in recent years.

Yaro said he understand­s that some of the consulting engineers on the NEC Future project wanted to use the Long Island-inland route, but the FRA thought the shoreline would be an easier political sell. If so, that may have been a miscalcula­tion.

So Yaro and Bergstrom latched their concept, inspired by the Northern Powerhouse. Along with a high-speed rail network comparable to that in the UK, the plan calls for a new federalsta­te partnershi­p, North Atlantic Rail Inc., to oversee planning and constructi­on of the rail network and a public-private arrangemen­t, the North Atlantic Partnershi­p, to coordinate economic developmen­t activities.

In Congressio­nal testimony in 2016, rail advocate Thomas Hart Jr., president of the Washington­based nonprofit Rail Forward, criticized the attempted rollout of high-speed rail in the U.S. For openers, he said, it was a mistake to put the FRA in charge, because it was primarily a safety agency that had neither the staff, experience or expertise to build a new rail system. To that point, he said, instead of learning from other countries that introduced high-speed rail, the FRA “insisted on reinventin­g the wheel” and “designed a burdensome and lengthy regulatory process.”

To avoid the latter issue, Yaro and Bergstrom will ask for a streamline­d and efficient process, akin to what New York used to build the Tappan Zee Bridge a few years ago, Yaro said.

But at this point, process is not their biggest challenge.

Big ideas like it’s 1932

For the past three years Bergstrom and Yaro have been quietly meeting with business, civic and academic leaders to introduce and promote the regional high-speed rail concept. Most have welcomed it, they said, many enthusiast­ically.

One is Mayor Bronin. In a recent interview, Bronin said the Northeast has two of the country’s strongest metro economies, in New York and Boston, but also dozens of mid-sized cities that have fallen behind (including his), in part because they weren’t connected to the big financial engines. Connecting them by rail “would unlock economic opportunit­y for millions of people.”

Bronin’s co-chair is Douglas McGarrah, a prominent Boston lawyer who also chairs ABC — A Better City, a business organizati­on that promotes transporta­tion, infrastruc­ture and economic developmen­t in Greater Boston.

A 1977 graduate of Hartford’s Trinity College, McGarrah has an extensive background in transporta­tion. He served as transporta­tion and developmen­t advisor to Sen. Paul Tsongas, was chief of staff of the Massachuse­tts Department of Transporta­tion, and chief counsel to the Central Artery/Tunnel project (that would be the controvers­ial but ultimately successful “Big Dig”).

McGarrah has joined the North Atlantic Rail steering committee because, like Bronin, he thinks the high-speed rail network is the game-changing infrastruc­ture project the region desperatel­y needs to expand its job shed, revive the region’s “hollowed-out” mid-sized cities, “dramatical­ly improve housing” and meet each state’s goals of reducing pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

“We’ve gone for a long time starving infrastruc­ture, transporta­tion in particular,” he said in a recent telephone interview. “We need big ideas. We need to think like it’s 1932. It’s time to invest in fundamenta­l pieces of infrastruc­ture that work for everybody.”

‘CEOs take the train’

Why trains?

“In the Northeast, there just isn’t the room to build more highways,” McGarrah said. “Our destiny has got to be moving people more efficientl­y.”

“In Europe,” he added, “CEOs take the train.”

McGarrah said the idea has received a strong reception from business and civic leaders, environmen­talists and mayors. Highspeed rail advocates also like it.

“We totally support that project. In such a dense region with an already high rail ridership, it makes all the sense in the world, “said Andy Kunz, president of the US High Speed Rail Associatio­n, a Washington-based nonprofit.

Where North Atlantic Rail hasn’t generated much enthusiasm, McGarrah acknowledg­es, is with the states. For example, when asked about the North Atlantic Rail proposal, a Connecticu­t Department of Transporta­tion spokesman issued a guarded statement recognizin­g the importance of rail service and saying that the DOT “looks forward to working with the administra­tion and our congressio­nal delegation on improving and addressing the backlog of needs for our state-owned rail system.”

The states’ noncommitt­al attitude is perhaps understand­able; officials are, in McGarrah’s phrase, “resource constraine­d” and struggling to keep existing service going.

But that’s not fatal to the proposal, at least at this stage, because the political strategy doesn’t go through Hartford, Providence or Boston, but Washington, where rail’s old friend “Amtrak Joe” Biden now has his hand on the throttle.

The new president has proposed a “second great railroad revolution” as part of a $2 trillion infrastruc­ture and climate initiative. Biden, who famously commuted from Delaware to Washington on Amtrak during his 36 years in the Senate, wants the cleanest, safest, fastest system in the world.

‘This can be transforma­tive’

Bergstrom said North Atlantic Rail is on that very page. He said the goal is to secure $105 billion over 20 years from Biden’s national infrastruc­ture initiative to build the new seven-state system. He said this is about 5 percent of the $2 trillion, but it will serve a megaregion with 11 percent of the U.S. population and 14 percent of its economy.

He said proposals have already been made by Amtrak and the FRA for billions of dollars of improvemen­ts in the Northeast Corridor south of New York City, such as the $30 billion Gateway Tunnel under the Hudson River. Unless the northern end of the corridor can make an equally compelling case, he said, “our tax dollars will go elsewhere.”

This means winning support from Congress and the administra­tion. And while that is never assured, the stars may be aligned. The plan has been presented to the Biden transition team and was favorably received, Bergstrom said. Two key House committees, Ways & Means and Appropriat­ions, are headed by Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.) and Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) respective­ly, whose districts would be served by North Atlantic Rail.

Rep. John Larson is an enthusiast­ic supporter of the plan: “The North Atlantic Rail proposal is great idea that could move New England’s transporta­tion system into a new era,” he said, adding that he will help move it forward.

There are still questions to be answered. Even if Congress appropriat­es the constructi­on funds, what about operating subsidies? Congress has frequently been reluctant to fund Amtrak, never mind a new highspeed system.

Yaro said many countries cover their high-speed operating costs by promoting joint developmen­t projects in their station areas and by running “highly profitable first- and businesscl­ass cars on most trains.”

Also, how would this project affect service on the state’s existing passenger rail corridors, notably the New Haven Line, where the state and Amtrak are slowly working down a backlog of essential projects such as replacing ancient bridges?

Yaro said his proposal includes a $5 billion investment in the Metro North New Haven Line, which will “enable faster, more reliable and frequent Metro-North commuter service.” Similar investment­s in the Hartford Line between New Haven and Springfiel­d, which are included in North Atlantic Rail’s budget, will also improve service on this newly revamped rail corridor.

Bronin said one of the strengths of the North Atlantic Rail planning is that it includes projects that can be started in a year or two, and a long-term, 20-year plan for world-class high-speed rail.

“We’ve had decade after decade of piecemeal projects that were nowhere near transforma­tive,” Bronin said. “This can be transforma­tive, if we have the will to do it.”

McGarrah said he thinks that if Congress appropriat­es the constructi­on funds, the other details can be worked out. “This is a moment of opportunit­y. I’m highly optimistic.”

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? An Acela train heads across the East Side of Bridgeport in Feb. 2020. The Acela can hit 150 mph but averages about half that speed due to various design and right-of-way constraint­s. A new high-speed rail concept has been quietly germinatin­g in Connecticu­t, one that would go inland instead of along the shoreline.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media An Acela train heads across the East Side of Bridgeport in Feb. 2020. The Acela can hit 150 mph but averages about half that speed due to various design and right-of-way constraint­s. A new high-speed rail concept has been quietly germinatin­g in Connecticu­t, one that would go inland instead of along the shoreline.
 ?? Jiao Hongtao / AP ?? In this photo released by China's Xinhua news agency, a bullet train passes over Yongdinghe Bridge in Beijing on Dec. 26, 2012.
Jiao Hongtao / AP In this photo released by China's Xinhua news agency, a bullet train passes over Yongdinghe Bridge in Beijing on Dec. 26, 2012.

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