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Texas Rail Advocates
Economically Efficient, Environmentally Compatible Transportation the Rail Way
800 Jaguar Lane * Dallas * Texas * 75226 * www.TexasRailAdvocates.org

February 2005 Newsletter

Sold-out South Central High Speed Rail Corridor Conference issues a call to action

(DFW Airport) -  Rail industry professionals addressed a sold-out conference at DFW Airport, Friday, January 28 to showcase the South Central High-Speed Rail Corridor and what should be done to develop it. The high-speed corridor, one of eleven designated by the U.S. Department of Transportation, has not yet received any attention. The corridor is “Y” shaped with one leg from Tulsa/Oklahoma City to the Dallas-Fort Worth area; another leg runs from Little Rock through Texarkana to Dallas-Fort Worth and the third leg extends from the DFW region to Austin and San Antonio. The corridor was designated by the USDOT in 2000.

Other corridors in the country are operating higher speed passenger and freight rail service, are now implementing improvements or are in the planning stage for development. The rail conference, sponsored by Texas Rail Advocates, brought together rail professionals; national, state, regional and local government agencies and representatives; rail advocates and leaders of business and industry to hear about the potential of the South Central Corridor.

Representative Tommy MerrittTexas State Representative Tommy Merritt (East Texas) spoke out for a dedicated rail division within the Texas Department of Transportation to coordinate all passenger and freight rail development in the corridor and to be a single voice for development of all rail projects in the state. Representative Merritt’s vision for Texas’ transportation future includes high speed passenger rail service. Representative Merritt believes that in order to reduce congestion and emissions from road vehicles, passenger rail is the only way to achieve these goals.

Opening remarks were delivered by Mike Sims, Senior Planner, North Central Texas Council of Governments. Mr. Sims urged all attendees to take note of this important corridor and urged that all parties need to unite to develop it.

NCTCOG Presentation

Mike Sims, NCTCOG

Those attending the all-day conference included representatives from U.S. Congressman Kenny Marchant and Eddie Bernice Johnson’s office. Both are on the U.S. House Transportation Committee. U.S. Congressman Joe Barton and Michael Burgess also sent representatives. The cities of Dallas and Fort Worth and DFW Airport were represented along with chambers of commerce from Dallas and Tarrant counties. Area mayors, city council members, county governmental agencies, mobility councils, rail advocates and business and industry decision makers also attended.

Gil Carmichael

Gil Carmichael, Chairman of the Intermodal Transportation Institute at the University of Denver, urged the conference to support the development of “Interstate II ” as he calls it, noting that the government helped build our national interstate highway system and now it is time that attention is called to our deteriorating rail systems.

Interstates of Steel Speech


Drew Galloway, Senior Director, Strategic Planning for Amtrak, spoke on the formation of Amtrak’s policies guiding rail corridor development and technical support. The Amtrak Strategic Plan calls for development of state corridor initiatives.

Amtrak Presentation

Drew Galloway

Joe KyleJoe Kyle from the Oklahoma Department of Transportation’s Rail Division spoke on the success story of the Heartland Flyer, which Amtrak operates from Oklahoma City to Fort Worth. The daily service has exceeded projections and has been growing in popularity with passenger increases since its inception. This corridor train though, is threatened with abandonment by September 2005 if state and federal legislators do not help fund this service. The Heartland Flyer operates on the north leg of the South Central High Speed Rail Corridor which could be upgraded to handle higher speed passenger trains up to 110 miles per hour. At present, the train operates at a speed cap of 79 miles per hour.

Kathy Batky-TarpleyKathy Batky-Tarpley from BNSF Railway (Burlington Northern Santa Fe) spoke about how the railroad engages in public/private partnerships, making it a win-win proposition for business, industry, the public and the railroad. BNSF Railway is the host railroad for the Heartland Flyer and consistently runs the train over their system with a high degree of reliability in on-time performance. Mrs. Batky-Tarpley is General Director, Public-Private Partnerships for BNSF Railway.

BNSF Presentation

John Cikota

John Cikota from the Federal Railroad Administration explained the national corridors and current development status along with the reminder that government agencies can not lobby for rail service.

FRA Presentation

Mario MedinaMario Medina from the Texas Department of Transportation took several questions from the audience. One question raised was to see if TXDOT would improve the Texas section of the Heartland Flyer to reduce travel times (ODOT has brought the speeds up from 50s to 79mph using federal funds). He discussed the proposed Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC), which does not expect to formulate plans for any rail service until after 2025. The only rail project on the horizon from TXDOT is the proposed Austin-San Antonio reroute of Union Pacific freight service. TXDOT has no other ongoing plans or direction to develop the South Central High Speed Rail Corridor at this time.

TXDOT Presentation

Editors Note: Please note that these are two separate projects and ultimately can compliment each other, but in reality, there is virtually no envisioned overlap. The first Federal step is a corridor study that information can be shared for planning the TTC without spending scarce State funds.

Fritz Plous Fredrick K. Plous of Chicago-based NewTrains Leasing System gave a very convincing presentation at lunch about the success of California’s system of 60 daily state-supported Amtrak trains.  This service has grown phenomenally in the past 10 years and in 2004 carried more than 4 million passengers on three routes.  Mr. Plous’s presentation focused on the 137-mile Capitol Corridor route connecting San Jose with Oakland and Sacramento. On the 90-mile core segment between Oakland and Sacramento, 12 daily round trips now carry nearly 100,000 passengers per month, up 9.9 per cent in the last year.  Mr. Plous suggested the Capitol Corridor be used as a model for development of intercity corridor passenger trains in Texas.  Mr. Plous made a second appearance when he concluded the Conference with a call to action, urging TRA members to make personal visits to their state representatives and senators to ask them to reach out to the Texas congressional delegation on behalf of a $2.2-million federal earmark to fund a study of the South Central High Speed Rail Corridor.

Plous Presentation

Tom JanakyTom Janaky of Colorado Railcar (a key conference sponsor) gave a very interesting presentation about the DMU (diesel multiple umit) just before lunch.

This multiple unit self propelled train is a successor to the Budd RDC (rail diesel car) wich was used by many railroads in the late '40s and through the '50s and 60's for passenger service on branch lines. The DMU is usually a two car train and has been widely used in the Alaskan terrain as a sightseeres preferred mode to enjoy the beautiful scenery.

The DMU comes in a bilevel configuration as well as single level. The state of Florida has purchased DMUs from Colorado Railcar intending to use them in commuter service. There is interest in the DMU for service in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. It would be ideal for use in service between Marshal/Longview and Dallas/Fort Worth.

Gary ThomasGary C. Thomas is President/Eexecutive Director of Dallas Area Rapid Transit. Thomas is responsible for a 13-city transit system over a 700-square mile area with bus, light rail, commuter rail, paratransit and high occupancy vehicle (HOV) lane services. He administers the goals and policies of the DART Board of Directors, including the largest public transit expansion in North America. He also directs the agency's top managers and 2,750 employees, emphasizing a strong customer focus to ensure that transit riders and taxpayers receive the best transit service available.

DART Presentation

Panel members answered questions about the economic benefits of rail from the standpoint benefiting industry as well as a passenger transportation perspective: regional passenger service interacting with local rail and bus transit. Panel members agreed that the Dallas/Fort Worth area has the potential to become the Southwest major rail transportation hub much like Chicago.
Gary Thomas, Curtis Morgan, Joy Smith, George Chilson
The panel was lead by (from L to R) Gary Thomas (DART), Curtis Morgan (TTI), Joy Smith (Amtrak), and George Chilson (NARP President).

Call to Action

At the conference close, a “call to action” was issued by Texas Rail Advocates. The four steps for action are:

  1. Continue to increase awareness - Public - Private - Governmental
  2. Coordinate with statewide rail planning efforts
  3. Engage all metropolitan areas
  4. Secure funding sources

Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison quote on rail


Conference Sponsors

Sponsors to the conference


Texas Rail Advocates Board

TRA Board Members
(L to R): Kevin Ruble, Paul Mangelsdorf, Taylor Sharpe, Dick Watkins, Beau Smith, John Radovich, and Peter LeCody.

Gloria Scala-Vance
Thank you to Ms. Gloria Scala-Vance for being our Mistress of Ceremonies


Conference Materials:

Brochure

 

 

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