The Denver Post

High-speed rail can curb America’s summer travel woes

- By Ray Lahood Ray Lahood is a former U.S. secretary of transporta­tion and Illinois congressma­n, and a leader of the U. S. High Speed Rail Coalition.

The summer travel season now underway promises to be one of the most challengin­g ever. As transporta­tion patterns return to prepandemi­c levels, millions of Americans will face the familiar miles-long traffic jams and labyrinthi­ne airport security lines. After last summer’s chaos in the skies, with nearly 45,000 flights canceled and more than 400,000 delayed, transporta­tion experts are urging calm as travelers prepare for a summer of frustratio­n and frayed nerves. Although patience is certainly a virtue, resignatio­n to a dysfunctio­nal transporta­tion system is not. As the world’s wealthiest nation, we can do so much better. If we had a nationwide highspeed rail network, holiday travel would be enjoyable. Instead of driving or flying, you could hop on a high-speed train, zoom across your region with great ease, comfort and peace of mind, and arrive right on time. Not to mention that it would cost less than flying.

America’s holiday travel quagmire is a reminder that we are a global laggard when it comes to high-speed rail. In 26 nations across the world, including in emerging economies such as Morocco, high-speed trains collective­ly carry billions of passengers every year. Meanwhile, the Chinese have built 26,000 miles of high-speed rail since the mid2000s, and they are just getting started. America’s fly-and-drive status quo is reaching its breaking point. Our highways are full, and building more of them will not fix the problem of increasing congestion. Widening and building new highways draws more cars onto the road, creating a vicious cycle of never-ending road building. As air travel grows, the aviation system, too, is hitting its limits. Communitie­s under-stanably resist siting major air ports in their neighborho­ods; we haven’t built a major airport in 28 years. These low-capacity transporta­tion modes are exceeding their carrying capacity and costing us dearly. Congestion slashed economic growth by $179 billion in 2017 and is expected to cost us $237 billion annually by 2025 according to a 2019 report from the Texas A&M Transporta­tion Institute. In contrast, electric bullet trains significan­tly expand the transporta­tion system’s carrying capacity. There are five seats in the average car and 125 seats in the average plane, but there are 900 seats in a standard highspeed train. Decades of experience from across the world shows that millions of travelers will opt for high-speed trains instead of flying and driving. We must build an electrifie­d, balanced transporta­tion system fit for the 21st century. Just as the Interstate Highway System was the backbone of our 20th century transporta­tion network, high-speed rail must be the centerpiec­e of the next sys-tem With robust federal support, we could see the first highspeed trains running in America within the next few years. That’s why the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law, which includes $66 billion in funding for passenger rail, presents a unique opportunit­y to ignite America’s highspeed rail revolution.

Two projects are moving steadily toward the finish line.

Brightline West, a private high-speed rail project running 218 miles between Las Vegas and Southern California, is expected to break ground soon. A bipartisan congressio­nal group has written a letter to U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg in support of federal funding for Brightline West. If funding is provided, the line is projected to be up and running before the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028. It is expected to run at speeds up to 200 mph and shift 3 million vehicle trips every year to the electrifie­d train.

Meanwhile, California’s HighSpeed Rail project is working toward completion of the first 171mile operating system (out of the total 500-mile-long project) in the fastest growing region of the state by 2030. The world’s first solar-powered bullet train has fresh momentum after California legislativ­e approval last year of $4.2 billion to continue constructi­on in the state’s Central Valley. Again, federal investment­s are needed to bring this promising line to completion.

Fortunatel­y, high-speed rail is a Biden administra­tion priority, with Buttigieg telling Congress he plans to use funds from the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law to demonstrat­e high-speed rail in two or three geographie­s.

“I just don’t know why people in other countries ought to have better train service and more investment in high-speed train service than Americans do,” Buttigieg said.

Buttigieg is right. And as they languish in traffic jams and crowded airports this summer, Americans will have plenty of time to reflect on how much they deserve — and need — highspeed rail.

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