Amtrak,
what passes for America’s national railroad, has some big plans for the
future. The problem is finding any
consensus, let alone the money, on what those plans should be.
Before
we detail their vision for the year 2030, here’s a snapshot of
how Amtrak operates today. Amtrak runs
46 trains a day through Connecticut serving 1.7 million passengers annually. New Haven, the busiest station in the state,
is also the 11th busiest in the nation.
Amtrak’s
flagship, Acela, running from Boston to Washington, also stops in Stamford (and
once-a-day in New London), while the slower “Northeast Corridor” trains serve
Bridgeport, Old Saybrook and Mystic with branch-line trains running from New
Haven to Hartford and Springfield.
Amtrak
is also hired by the CDOT to run Shore Line East commuter trains between New
London and New Haven.
Unlike
the rest of the Northeast Corridor, Amtrak does not own or control the tracks
from the New York state line to New Haven.
Those tracks are owned by the CDOT which pays Metro-North to maintain
them and the overhead power (catenary) lines.
Amtrak pays a flat fee (far too low, says CDOT) to run its trains on
“our” tracks, plus a little bonus money to the state for prioritizing its
schedule over that of the commuter lines.
Connecticut’s
section of the Northeast Corridor contains more miles and serves more stations
than any other state from D.C. to Massachusetts. And it includes several 100+ year-old bridges
crossing the Thames, Niantic and Connecticut Rivers, crucial to inter-city
service. It’s old and expensive to
maintain.
It’s
hard to run a true high speed railroad on a century-old right-of-way. In fact, Acela goes no faster than
Metro-North (90 mph) between NY and New Haven and cannot engage its tilting
mechanism on the many curves.
So,
as Amtrak looks to the future, it’s thinking of building an entirely new line
through Connecticut to connect New York City and Boston. Rather than following the coastline (parallel
to I-95) it envisions an inland route (parallel to I-84).
As
the last phase of its 2030 – 2040 “Next Gen” high speed rail, 220 mph Amtrak
bullet-trains (faster than the current French TGV) would bypass Stamford, New
Haven and New London and instead zip through Danbury, Waterbury and
Hartford. “Super-Express” service would
be non-stop thru Connecticut while “Express” trains would make brief stops in
those inland Connecticut cities.
Northeast Corridor service would continue along the coast as either
“Shoreline Express” or “Regional” trains.
Needless
to say, Governor Malloy and the CDOT are not happy with Amtrak’s plan,
especially given Connecticut (and the Feds’) investment in the New
Haven to Hartford high(er) speed corridor.
They want the existing coastal corridor to New Haven to be served by the
super-Acela service which could then continue north through Hartford to
Springfield before heading east to Boston.
Put the trains where the people are, is their argument.
Amtrak
thinks the coastal corridor is too old, has too many curves and would be too
expensive to operate. They think it
would be cheaper to build a new line from scratch, and they’re probably right.
We
are so lucky that, a century ago, a four-track rail line was built along
Connecticut’s coast. It was
state-of-the-art for its time and could never be built today. But for the 21st century, this
line is obsolete. Every serious high
speed railroad in the world operates on a new, dedicated right-of-way, not some
hand-me-down from the past.
So,
good for Amtrak for bold planning for our future. It’s time for our Governor and CDOT to get on
board. A new, inland high-speed route is
the best way to go.
2 comments:
Sorry, I agree with the Governor. Go where the people are. Bypassing New Haven is just silly. We need a way to easily get from New Haven to Hartford by rail before shooting up to Boston. That plan makes the most sense.
Not only is the New Haven railroad line from New York to New Haven obsolete, but so is parallel I-95. Connecticut should rebuild both at the same time, creating a true superhighway with a super railroad running down the median.
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