Houston Chronicle

‘Amtrak Joe’ hails plans for big East Coast tunnel fix

- By Chris Megerian

BALTIMORE — Greeted by the cheerful blare of a train horn, President Joe Biden stood Monday before a decrepit rail tunnel that he estimated he’s been through 1,000 times — fearing for decades it might collapse.

“For years, people talked about fixing this tunnel,” Biden told a crowd in Baltimore. “Back in the early ‘80’s, I actually walked into the tunnel with some of the constructi­on workers . ... This is a 150-year-old tunnel. You wonder how in the hell it’s still standing.”

“With the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law, though, we’re finally getting it done.”

The president came to familiar terrain to promote his 2021 infrastruc­ture law, a bipartisan win that is just now ramping up the spending on major projects.

Biden said replacing the Baltimore and Potomac Tunnel could slash what’s now a 60minute Baltimore-to-Washington commute in half, giving daily riders extra time with family and friends.

As a senator, the president regularly journeyed home to Delaware on Amtrak through the tunnel. He rode “15% of the time with engineers,” he said, and had a key to get into the back of the trains.

The new tunnel will lead to 20,000 constructi­on jobs and cut down on auto traffic and pollution, he said, “jobs for folks I used to think about as I took the train home at night.”

The tunnel, first opened in 1873 when Ulysses S. Grant was president, connected Philadelph­ia and Washington by rail for the first time. But over time, it became more of a chokepoint than a lifeline. There’s only one tube, and trains need to slow to just 30 mph (48 kilometers per hour) to navigate a tight turn on the southern end.

Once completed roughly a decade from now, the new tunnel is expected to have two tubes, with up to four tracks total, and allow trains to travel more than 100 mph. It will be named for Frederick Douglass, who escaped from slavery in Maryland and became a prominent abolitioni­st. The total project, which includes related bridges and equipment modernizat­ion, could cost $6 billion.

Biden also announced labor agreements intended to smooth the tunnel’s completion and ensure good wages for union workers, according to the White House. Maryland has also agreed to commit $450 million for constructi­on.

No money has yet been awarded from the federal infrastruc­ture legislatio­n. However, the law signed by Biden includes $24 billion for rail improvemen­ts along the Northeast Corridor, and up to $4.7 billion could be provided for the Baltimore tunnel, covering the majority of its cost.

Even as multiple Maryland officials attended Biden’s speech, there is some local opposition to the new tunnel. The group Residents Against the Tunnels (RATT) opposes the project out of concern that the constructi­on, use of the tunnel for freight and noise and vibration from passing trains would be detrimenta­l to the neighborho­od located above.

But for those who know the president from his time on the train, the project reflects an approach hard earned over years of commuting challenges.

Gregg Weaver, 69, got to know Biden while working as a conductor during a 42-year career with Amtrak. When he was working the morning shift on a southbound train, sometimes they would have to hold at Baltimore Penn Station because of trouble ahead at the tunnel.

“How’s it look?” Biden would ask as he pondered his schedule on Capitol Hill.

 ?? Drew Angerer/Getty Images ?? President Joe Biden speaks at the Baltimore and Potomac Tunnel North Portal in Baltimore, Maryland, on Monday.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images President Joe Biden speaks at the Baltimore and Potomac Tunnel North Portal in Baltimore, Maryland, on Monday.

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