Houston Chronicle

Rail officials push 15-year plan to boost Northeast Corridor

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON — As Congress eyes an infrastruc­ture package, a coalition of transporta­tion agencies and Amtrak on Wednesday released a 15-year plan of rail improvemen­ts for the congested Northeast Corridor that would boost daily train routes and significan­tly speed travel on Acela express lines.

But the roadmap by the Northeast Corridor Commission, created by Congress in 2008 and comprising eight states and the Transporta­tion Department, is contingent on Congress passing a big spending package.

Amit Bose, deputy administra­tor of the Federal Railroad Administra­tion and a co-chair of the commission, described the plan as a “mobilizing force” for transit change. He said the proposed upgrades along the 450-mile rail corridor would not only create 1.7 million new jobs but also support new travel patterns away from greenhouse gas-emitting cars “as our economy returns to full strength.”

It’s unclear how much of the $66 billion proposed for rail in the Senate bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal ultimately would cover the $100 billion, 15-year regional plan, though analysts believe it could be a good start. The bipartisan deal, backed by President Joe Biden, falls short of his original proposal of $80 billion for rail over eight years, of which $39 billion would have gone to the corridor.

Senate Democrats’ companion $3.5 trillion budget agreement announced late Tuesday did not include extra money for rail.

“The corridor supports more than 800,000 daily passenger trips between the greater Washington D.C. and Boston regions,” said Kevin Corbett, president & CEO of NJ Transit, also a commission co-chair. “It is imperative that together we seize this once-in-ageneratio­n opportunit­y to replace aging assets, add rail capacity, improve performanc­e.“

Under the plan, many longsought projects aimed at unclogging traffic and improving safety in the busy corridor would be fasttracke­d to begin constructi­on by 2025, including an $11 billion effort to repair and rehabilita­te the century-old Hudson River tunnels into New York City, which typically see 200,000 Amtrak and New Jersey Transit passengers each weekday. The tunnels have seen notable deteriorat­ion after Superstorm Sandy flooding in 2012.

Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg has already signaled support for the project, which had been blocked by the Trump administra­tion as too costly, after touring the aging tunnels last month.

Also on the list is the 148-yearold Baltimore & Potomac Tunnel, a major chokepoint for MARC and Amtrak trains near Baltimore Penn Station. Trains must slow to a crawl at 30 mph in the two-track, 1.4-mile tunnel, where a high saturation of water in the soil beneath often causes its aging floor slabs to sink. Under a $4 billion plan by Amtrak and Maryland, new replacemen­t tunnels would allow trains to travel up to 100 mph.

Other projects include expansions to stations in Washington, D.C., Philadelph­ia, New York City as well Providence, Rhode Island; Stamford, Connecticu­t, and along Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia’s rail line, to meet projected growth in passenger traffic.

All told, the commission’s plan by 2035 would add 60 million new rail trips annually, boost daily Amtrak service by 33 percent and commuter railroads by up to double, and reduce travel time on Acela from Washington to New York by 26 minutes and New York to Boston by 28 minutes.

It estimates travel time savings valued at nearly $140 million annually in the Northeast Corridor, while also reducing greenhouse gas emissions by the equivalent of 2.9 million car trips annually between New York and Los Angeles.

“The investment­s in infrastruc­ture laid out in this plan will lead to more modern, reliable, and faster trains, expanded service, and a better customer experience — that will benefit customers, economies and local communitie­s along the entire Northeast Corridor and beyond,” said Stephen Gardner, Amtrak’s president.

Amtrak has stressed the wider benefits of upgrading the corridor as it seeks to build out its nationwide service. Currently one-third of all Amtrak trips pass through New York City, making it an important gateway for new routes to other parts of the U.S.

The commission has welcomed Congress’ proposed spending so far as a starting point, stressing that saved travel time and environmen­tal benefits accrue from the synergies of completing its over 150 proposed projects — not just a few big ones if money runs short.

Jeff Davis, a senior fellow at the Eno Center for Transporta­tion, said he expects many of the commission’s initial projects will get the money it needs. He notes that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has pledged to find congressio­nal money for the over $11 billion Hudson River Tunnel project, while another $20 billion or so under the bipartisan compromise deal is likely to go to the Northeast Corridor.

 ?? Mel Evans / Associated Press ?? Officials pitch the proposed 15-year plan along the 450-mile rail corridor as not only creating 1.7 million new jobs but also supporting new travel patterns away from greenhouse gas-emitting cars.
Mel Evans / Associated Press Officials pitch the proposed 15-year plan along the 450-mile rail corridor as not only creating 1.7 million new jobs but also supporting new travel patterns away from greenhouse gas-emitting cars.

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