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Oct
17

Chicago South Shore earns ASLRRA 'President's Award' for safety

Rail News Home Short Lines & Regionals 10/17/2018 Rail News: Short Lines & Regionals
The award was presented to CSS at the 2018 ASLRRA Eastern Region meeting in Vermont earlier this month.Photo – anacostia.com

Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad (CSS) has been awarded the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association's (ASLRRA) President's Award for "outstanding safety achievements" in 2017.

The award was presented at the 2018 ASLRRA Eastern Region meeting in Vermont earlier this month. Presented annually, the award recognizes short lines and regionals that post the best safety rate as reported by the Federal Railroad Administration.

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Oct
17

Amtrak's Acela seats to be upcycled into luxury bags

Rail News Home Amtrak 10/17/2018 Rail News: Amtrak
The railroad is working with People for Urban Progress to produce about 2,500 bags over the next 10 to 12 months.Photo – People for Urban Progress blog

Amtrak has partnered with People for Urban Progress (PUP) to repurpose Acela Express seat covers into luxury leather bags.

An Indianapolis-based nonprofit, PUP expects to roll out about 2,500 bags over the next 10 to 12 months as the seat coverings are repurposed. The first products will include tote bags, backpacks and "dopp kits" or toiletry bags. PUP designers are hand-crafting all the bags.

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Oct
17

Schumer wants railroads to notify locals when transporting hazmat

U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) this week called on Canadian Pacific, CSX and other freight railroads to provide more information to county emergency management authorities and first responders when trains are transporting hazardous materials through local communities in New York.

Specifically, Schumer urged better state-local coordination and "proactive" and detailed information sharing when trains loaded with hazmat operate through their areas.

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Oct
17

LA Metro starts tunnel dig for Purple Line subway

The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) on Monday began subway tunneling under Wilshire Boulevard for the Purple Line Extension.

The agency has launched two tunnel boring machines that will dig the twin tunnels, Metro officials said in a blog post yesterday.

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Oct
17

California High-Speed Rail Authority OKs EIR for Fresno-Bakersfield segment

Rail News Home High-Speed Rail 10/17/2018 Rail News: High-Speed Rail
The route will run from Shafter east toward State Route 99 and the existing Union Pacific Railroad tracks before ending in downtown Bakersfield.Photo – California High-Speed Rail Authority

The California High-Speed Rail Authority's (CHSRA) board yesterday certified the final supplemental environmental impact report (EIR) for the Fresno-to-Bakersfield section of the state's plan to build a high-speed rail line between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

The board also approved a high-speed rail alignment between Poplar Avenue in Kern County and the F Street station in downtown Bakersfield. The moves enable CHSRA to take additional steps toward advancing major work on the overall project, agency officials said in a news release.

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Oct
17

CSX reports 'strong performance' in Q3

CSX Corp. yesterday reported third-quarter net earnings jumped 95 percent to $894 million, or $1.05 per share, from $459 million, or 51 cents per share, in the same period a year ago. The per-share earnings beat analysts' estimates for the quarter.

CSX's operating ratio of 58.7 percent set a company third-quarter record. A year ago, CSX posted a third-quarter operating ratio of 68.4 percent.

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Oct
17

Severe weather, proposed tariffs generate uncertainty among tie suppliers

Wood-tie suppliers began 2018 with inventories below optimal levels to meet demand, said Railway Tie Association’s Jim Gauntt.Photo – Gross & Janes Co.

By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Associate Editor

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Oct
16

Metra PTC project prompts Rock Island schedule changes

Metra yesterday released a proposed revision of its Rock Island Line schedule to accommodate service changes related to positive train control (PTC) implementation.

With PTC in place, train crews must initialize the system before each individual run. The process includes compiling information about the size and makeup of the train, along with any other details about route conditions that could affect train operations.

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Oct
16

Twin Cities' Metropolitan Council to study local travel behavior

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/16/2018 Rail News: Passenger Rail
The council will survey 7,500 households across 19 counties, including Hennepin County.Photo – Metropolitan Council

The Minneapolis-area Metropolitan Council this month is launching a survey to gauge how locals travel across the greater Twin Cities region.

Working in partnership with the Minnesota and Wisconsin departments of transportation, the council will survey 7,500 households across 19 counties starting this month through October 2019.

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Oct
16

Operation Lifesaver taps Puchala for communications, marketing role

Rail News Home Railroading People 10/16/2018 Rail News: Railroading People
Jessica PuchalaPhoto – Operation Lifesaver Inc.

Operation Lifesaver Inc. (OLI) has hired Jessica Puchala as director of communications and marketing.

She has more than 20 years of experience in communications and project management in the corporate, nonprofit, state government and media sectors.

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Oct
16

LA Metro marks design milestone on Airport Metro Connector

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/16/2018 Rail News: Passenger Rail
The Airport Metro Connector will provide transfers between local light-rail lines and Los Angeles International Airport's planned automated people mover system.Photo – LA Metro's blog

The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) is 60 percent finished with design plans for the new Airport Metro Connector station, agency officials reported in a blog post yesterday.

The station will provide transfers from the Green Line and the future Crenshaw/LAX light-rail line to Los Angeles International Airport's new $4.9 billion automated people mover system.

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Oct
16

EDA grant to aid BNSF-served Port of Pasco industrial park

Rail News Home Intermodal 10/16/2018 Rail News: Intermodal
The U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA) has awarded a $7.1 million grant to the Port of Pasco in Washington to improve roads and install stormwater management systems that will aid the operation of Big Pasco Industrial Park.The improvements will enable multimodal transportation to "continue unabated in the face of future snow melts," said U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in a press release.Located in Pasco, Washington, the park provides barge, rail and road service. Its capacity to serve businesses was affected by the winter snowmelt in 2017.BNSF Railway Co. provides the park's rail service and switching.

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More News from 10/16/2018


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Oct
16

CN unveils new centerbeam rail car

CN has begun to roll out the first of its new centerbeam rail cars ordered earlier this year from National Steel Car Ltd.

CN received the first of 350 new centerbeams in August. The new builds are 73-foot riserless centerbeams with a maximum load capacity of 286,000 pounds, CN officials said in a website post.

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Oct
16

MTA orders 65 flat cars from Harsco

Rail News Home Maintenance Of Way 10/16/2018 Rail News: Maintenance Of Way
The cars will be designed to transport track maintenance machinery and other heavy equipment.Photo – MTA New York City Transit/Marc Hermann

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has awarded a $40 million contract to Harsco Rail to build and deliver 65 flat cars by the end of 2021.

The flat cars will consist of a frame mounted on a pair of trucks, and will be designed to transport track maintenance machinery and other heavy equipment, materials and supplies, according to a summary of MTA's Sept. 26 board meeting.

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Oct
16

Short Line Safety Institute awarded $2.4 million grant

Rail News Home Short Lines & Regionals 10/16/2018 Rail News: Short Lines & Regionals
Short Line Safety Institute Executive Director Tom MurtaPhoto – Short Line Safety Institute

The Federal Railroad Administration has awarded a $2.4 million grant to the Short Line Safety Institute (SLSI).

The grant will enable the institute to enhance and improve safety practices at short lines and regionals, according to an institute press release.

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Oct
16

Progressive Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Pennsylvania, Texas, & Washington

Part 5 : Progressive Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Pennsylvania, Texas, & Washington

Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority

SEPTA is the nation’s sixth largest public transportation system with an extensive network of fixed route services that include bus, subway, trolley, trackless trolley, high-speed and regional rail serving a 2,202-square-mile service region. That service region includes five Pennsylvania counties (Philadelphia, Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery) and extends to Trenton, New Jersey and Newark, Delaware. SEPTA employs 9,000 workers, making the agency one of the region’s largest employers.
Service launched: heavy rail, 1968; light rail, 1969; commuter rail, 1983. SEPTA was created by the Pennsylvania Legislature in 1964 to consolidate private regional public transportation operators. SEPTA’s predecessor rail agencies began providing passenger service in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The dates shown here reflect the years that SEPTA began operating those modes.
Route miles per mode: Light rail, 42; heavy rail, 47; commuter rail, 280
Rolling stock: locomotives, 8 (average age 27 years); rail cars, 404 (average age 30 years); light-rail vehicles, 167 (average age 35 years)
Cars/locomotives on order: 45 cars, expected delivery 2022; 13 locomotives, expected delivery fall 2018
Annual ridership: light rail, 24,720,500; heavy rail, 93,524,700; commuter rail, 34,355,300
Operating budget: $1.45 billion (FY2018)*
Capital budget: $727.2 million (FY2018)*
Stations: light rail, 8; heavy rail, 75; commuter rail, 154
Major capital improvement projects underway:
• Southwest connection: SEPTA has designed a series of infrastructure improvements near the University City Station. The project includes replacement of 80-year-old catenary, construction or rehabilitation of four interlockings, retiring an interlocking, tie and surface renewal, and signal improvements along a 3-mile segment of SEPTA railroad that’s adjacent to the Northeast Corridor. The improvements are designed to have a positive impact on service on SEPTA’s Airport, Wilmington and Media lines, and will be constructed between now and 2020. In summer 2018, SEPTA performed a two-week shutdown of the commuter railroad to install major interlocking components.
• Elwyn to Wawa service restoration: SEPTA will restore revenue service on the Media-Elwyn Regional Railroad Line from its current terminus at Elwyn Station to Wawa, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. (Service beyond Elwyn was discontinued in the 1980s.) An early action phase to stabilize embankments on sections of this line was completed in 2010. The second component of this 3-mile service restoration started in spring 2018. This phase will involve significant infrastructure renewal, including retaining walls; the rehabilitation of 9 bridges; and the replacement of track, catenary and structures, and signals. The final component of this project is the construction of a new station, a 600-car parking deck and an intermodal connect.
• Substation program: SEPTA has initiated a multiyear program to rehabilitate the 80-year-old traction power substations that provide electricity to propel vehicles on the Regional Railroad. The first substations to be addressed in this program are under construction and include Lenni and Morton on the Media/Elwyn Line and Jenkintown and Ambler (Main Line). Fourteen additional substations will be overhauled or replaced as part of this program. SEPTA also will be constructing a new substation on the West Trenton Line.

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Oct
16

Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: New Jersey, New York, Ohio & Oregon

Part 4 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: New Jersey, New York, Ohio & Oregon

New Jersey Transit

New Jersey Transit is the nation’s largest statewide public transportation system providing more than 944,000 weekday trips on bus, light-rail, commuter-rail and Access Link systems.
Service launched: Commuter rail, 1979; light rail, 1930s
Miles: 1,001 (commuter rail)
Rolling stock: 188 locomotives, average age 16 years; 1,098 rail cars, average age 20 years; 93 light-rail vehicles, average age 16 years
Locomotives on order: 17 ALP 45A dual powered locomotives; first vehicle to be delivered in December 2019; manufacturer is Bombardier
Ridership: commuter rail, 85.4 million; light rail, 23.7 million
Annual operating cost: $2.35 billion budget (systemwide)
Annual capital cost: $1.46 billion budget (systemwide)
Stations: 62 light rail, 165 commuter rail
Major capital improvement projects: Positive train control installation continues; Raritan River Bridge Replacement Project, to advertise this year; Long Slip Fill and Rail Enhancement Project, to advertise this year.

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Oct
16

Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia and Illinois

Part 3 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia and Illinois

Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority*

The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Agency (WMATA) was created in 1967 for the purpose of creating and operating a public transit system serving the District of Columbia and areas in Virginia and Maryland. WMATA operates Metrorail.
Miles: 118
Rolling stock: 1,200 rail cars
Cars/locomotives on order: 748 rail cars (7000 series), of which 548 have been delivered
Ridership: 44.9 million (Metrorail, Q1 FY2018)
Operating budget: $1.9 billion (FY2019 budget)
Capital budget: $1.3 billion (FY2019 budget)
Stations: 91
Major active capital projects: Several major capital projects are underway, including the 7000 series rail-car acquisition; construction of the Andrews Federal Center Bus Maintenance and Storage facilities; the Radio and Wireless Infrastructure project, which will facilitate wireless communication in the underground segments of the rail system and upgrade radio communications systemwide; and construction of Silver Line Phase 2 to Dulles Airport and Loudoun County, for which WMATA is providing technical support.

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Oct
16

Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Amtrak, California, & Colorado

Part 2 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Amtrak, California, & Colorado

Amtrak*

Amtrak is the U.S. intercity passenger railroad. It is a federally chartered corporation, with the federal government as majority stockholder. The board is appointed by the president of the United States and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. Amtrak is operated as a for-profit company rather than a public authority.
Service launched: 1971
Route Miles: 21,400
Rolling stock: As of January 2018, active Amtrak-owned or leased passenger equipment includes 20 Acela Express high-speed trainsets; 1,242 passenger cars including Amfleet, Superliner, Viewliner, Horizon and other types; 80 baggage cars; 80 Auto Train vehicle carriers; 259 road diesel locomotives and 68 ACS-64 electric locomotives. Amtrak Cascades service primarily operates with six Talgo trainsets with cars owned by Amtrak and the states of Oregon and Washington. In FY 2017, Amtrak began receiving new single-level dining cars that are part of a larger 130-car order that also includes sleeping (pending) and baggage (delivered) cars.
Annual ridership: 31.7 million passenger trips (FY2017)
Total revenue: $3.3 billion (FY2017)
Operating earnings: $194 million (FY2017)
Capital and operating expense: $5.9 billion (FY2017)
Major capital improvement projects underway or scheduled to begin in one year:
Amtrak announced in August 2016 that it contracted with Alstom to produce 28 next-generation high-speed trainsets that will replace the equipment used to provide Acela Express service. The first trainset should enter revenue service in 2021, and all trainsets are expected to be in service by the end of 2022. In addition to the trainsets, Amtrak is investing in infrastructure needed to improve the onboard and station customer experience and accommodate increased high-speed rail service levels. Amtrak will invest in significant improvements at Washington Union Station; and Moynihan Station New York, as well as track capacity and ride quality improvements to the Northeast Corridor that will benefit all intercity and commuter customers. Amtrak will also modify fleet maintenance facilities to accommodate the new trainsets.

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Oct
16

Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Preface

Rail News Home Passenger Rail October 2018 Part 1 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Preface Part 2 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Amtrak, California, & Colorado Part 3 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia and Illinois Part 4 : Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: New Jersey, New York, Ohio & Oregon Part 5 : Progressive Progressive Railroading's Passenger Rail at a Glance 2018: Pennsylvania, Texas, & Washington Rail News: Passenger Rail

By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Senior Associate EditorIn first-quarter 2018, commuter-rail ridership in the United States ticked up 0.8 percent compared with Q1 2017’s total, with 14 out of 30 transit systems reporting increases, according to American Public Transportation Association (APTA) data. Some cities even reported double-digit ridership increases.At the same time, overall ridership on U.S. heavy-rail — subways and elevated trains — and light-rail systems fell by 3.8 percent and 5.6 percent, respectively, in the first-quarter compared with the same period a year ago.APTA officials attribute the ridership decline in part to the popularity of ride-share services such as Uber and Lyft. In response, several transit-rail agencies and passenger railroads are partnering with Uber, Lyft and similar companies to address the “first-and-last-mile dilemma,” which means helping riders get from their homes to the train station and back.Figuring out how to survive in a transportation landscape that’s in flux is just one major challenge that transit-rail agency leaders say they’re facing this year, according to survey responses they submitted to Progressive Railroading for the 2018 edition of “Passenger Rail at a Glance.” Several indicated their high-priority concerns were similar to those expressed in more recent years: keeping their trains and rail infrastructure in a state of good repair; continuing to build rail extensions to connect outlying communities to downtowns and employment centers; refurbishing and rehabbing rail stations; tightening security; improving safety; and completing implementation of positive train control systems.Overlaying all those issues is figuring out how to pay for it all. “Funding, funding, funding,” is how one transit official described their agency’s top concern. Other agencies’ leaders cited the general uncertainty over federal grant funding, particularly for new transit projects. To be sure, how that and other trends evolve will be closely watched by passenger-rail execs and their staffs over the coming year.Why isn’t my railroad listed?As in prior years, Passenger Rail at a Glance is created primarily from survey information submitted by transit-rail agencies. If your railroad is not included in the 2018 guide and you would like it to be included in the 2019 guide, please contact me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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Browse articles on passenger rail commuter rail ridership American Public Transportation Association APTA Passenger Rail at a Glance positive train control funding

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