The Denver Post

Leaders rally for rail linking Denver, Boulder and Fort Collins by 2027

- By Bruce Finley bfinley@denverpost.com

LONGMONT>> Colorado leaders ramped up their efforts to launch a passenger train system linking Denver, Boulder, Longmont, Loveland and Fort Collins within three years, riding a ceremonial first train Thursday afternoon.

“We’re going to get it done,” Gov. Jared Polis declared before boarding the Amtrak Superliner at Denver’s Union Station and rolling for 44 miles in about 90 minutes to Longmont.

“It will mean getting where we want to go quicker — without having to deal with congestion in traffic,” Polis said, noting that Colorado residents on average spend 54 hours a year stuck in car traffic.

The intensifyi­ng state push focuses on securing federal funds, from the $102 billion bipartisan infrastruc­ture pool, approved for “intercity” rail transit. State lawmakers, Colorado Department of Transporta­tion directors, Regional Transporta­tion District officials, Amtrak’s president and U.S. Department of Transporta­tion railway administra­tors tasked with awarding funds came along for the ride and saw scores of aficionado­s huddled outside train windows at multiple points waving and taking photos.

Polis in recent interviews has cast the push for passenger train service as a “one-time opportunit­y” to seize federal support, which likely won’t be available in the future.

He said Colorado won’t succeed without a commitment from state lawmakers to contribute funding, and Colorado Senate President Steve Fenberg told The Denver Post he will introduce legislatio­n in the coming weeks seeking $50 million a year.

State lawmakers in 2021 created a Front Range Passenger Rail District, which received $1.5 million for “site developmen­t” along rail routes, toward a goal of eventually establishi­ng passenger train service along 160 miles of the I-25 corridor from Fort Collins to Pueblo. Polis says that can be done within a decade. This first, northern part of the system has won initial federal approval.

Federal funding in the “hundreds of millions” will be necessary, Polis said Thursday, sitting with Fenberg as the train approached Westminste­r and highway traffic thickened before rush hour. Success also will depend on RTD funding. That amount hasn’t been specified.

If lawmakers commit, “what I am looking at is about a threeyear implementa­tion” of the rail service linking Denver, Boulder and Fort Collins, Polis said.

 ?? ERIC LUTZENS — THE DENVER POST ?? Gov. Jared Polis delivers remarks before boarding a passenger train going from Union Station in Denver to Longmont during an inspection and demonstrat­ion trip of the Front Range Passenger Rail Train on Thursday.
ERIC LUTZENS — THE DENVER POST Gov. Jared Polis delivers remarks before boarding a passenger train going from Union Station in Denver to Longmont during an inspection and demonstrat­ion trip of the Front Range Passenger Rail Train on Thursday.

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