The Denver Post

TheWest’s iconic trains head for the sunset

- By Forrest Whitman

If you see a train, better get on it. The California Zephyr, the Coast Starlight, the Empire Builder, the Texas Eagle and my favorite, the Southwest Chief, may soon be headingWes­t for one last ride. Back in my railroad days, when a brakeman died, someone would announce at sign-in: “He caught the last westbound.”

Of course, it’s all about money. The budget President Donald Trump submitted to Congress looks like it was written by the Heritage Foundation, a group that thinks the government has no business “subsidizin­g” anything, except for the military. Amtrak may cover 94 percent of its budget almost entirely from ticket sales, but still, that’s not enough for those purists.

What a loss to theWest these iconic trains will be. They are not only part of ourWestern history, but they are also symbols that somebody still cares about the ruralWest. Trains say you can still get out of town even when a blizzard is moving in. Trains say to the handicappe­d person that she can have mobility. Trains say to a senior that he doesn’t have to beg a ride from family or a friend but can get down to the station and make his own way. It’s the train that stops downtown that says to a littleWest­ern community: “You have value beyond what any Harvard Business School teacher would assign.”

It would be tragic to see the brand-new Union Station in Denver bereft of longdistan­ce passenger service after all these years. But that loss would also be true of small towns whose names not everyone recognizes. Places like Raton, N.M.; Libby, Mont.; Lamy, N.M.; Trinidad; Cleburne, Texas; Ephrata, Wash.; andWinnemu­cca, Nev. are not likely to appear in the Sunday New York Times travel section. Still, they depend on the Chief or the Eagle, the Empire Builder, the Zephyr or the Coast Starlight.

Many people in these small towns voted for the Trump campaign, believing Trump’s promise that a trillion dollars would be poured into infrastruc­ture. Now, those trillion dollars have evaporated.

It was money from what was called a “TIGER grant” that helped save the Southwest Chief. All the small towns along its way chipped in hard-earned cash to keep that train going. The grant was matched by funds from three states — Kansas, Colorado and NewMexico — and the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad. Trump’s budget called for no more TIGER grants.

Some of the cuts in the transporta­tion budget seem particular­ly nonsensica­l. Elaine Chao, our new secretary of transporta­tion, wants to cut the California high-speed rail initiative. That could potentiall­y kill 9,600 good jobs. Maybe California can do the project anyway, but the federal contributi­on was a part of the plan. What an irony that this is coming from a “job-creating” administra­tion.

The economic arguments for cutting ourWestern trains make no sense. The budget cutters will spare “money-making” Amtrak trains on the Northeast Corridor. But of the 31 million Amtrak riders last year, 19 million never set foot in the Northeast. Those people rode ourWestern trains, and in addition, these longdistan­ce trains funnel passengers to the Northeast. The sad fact is that this new budget leaves 144.6 million Americans with no train.

More funding ironies abound. Since 1947, $600 billion has been poured into our highways over and above what the gas tax brings in ($141 billion has been added since 2008). When conservati­ve lawmakers fume over “subsidies” to Amtrak, they ignore the gusher of money flowing into highways. Of course, we do need to support all our transporta­tion modes, but to single out trains as “money losers” is silly.

I was standing on the platform in Raton when a young couple rode up on their bikes. One of them said, “We’ll catch that train this summer, for sure.” I hope they can. The Chief was rolling in, so we didn’t have time to chat, but I hope to finish our talk in the observatio­n car this summer.

Losing our trains cuts the heart out of theWest. I hope we’ll call, write letters and let Congress know what it means to us if ourWestern trains are forced to

catch the last westbound.

Forrest Whitman of Salida is a contributo­r toWriters on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News.

 ??  ?? The eastbound Southwest Chief heads into Lamy, N.M., in 2010.
The eastbound Southwest Chief heads into Lamy, N.M., in 2010.

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