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Jun
09

UTA to purchase rail simulator with federal PTC grant

The Utah Transit Authority (UTA) will use a portion of the funds awarded by the Federal Railroad Administration and Federal Transit Administration for its positive train control (PTC) efforts to purchase a rail simulator.

 

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Jun
09

Union Pacific capital plan includes $24-million investment in Arizona rail infrastructure

Union Pacific announced plans to invest $24 million in its Arizona rail infrastructure as a part of its 2017 $31 billion capital plan.

The Class 1 will invest $21 million in railroad track maintenance and $2 million in bridges throughout the state. Key projects include:

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Jun
09

Union Pacific capital plan includes $24-million investment in Arizona rail infrastructure

Union Pacific announced plans to invest $24 million in its Arizona rail infrastructure as a part of its 2017 $31 billion capital plan.

The Class 1 will invest $21 million in railroad track maintenance and $2 million in bridges throughout the state. Key projects include:

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Jun
09

Union Pacific capital plan includes $24-million investment in Arizona rail infrastructure

Union Pacific announced plans to invest $24 million in its Arizona rail infrastructure as a part of its 2017 $31 billion capital plan.

The Class 1 will invest $21 million in railroad track maintenance and $2 million in bridges throughout the state. Key projects include:

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Jun
09

ASLRRA honors GE's Griswell

Gary Griswell of GE Transportation was honored with the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association's Thomas L. Schlosser Distinguished Service Award.

The award is presented on an annual basis to recognize an individual for long-term, significant service to the Association. Griswell is the first Associate Member recipient of the award, presented at ASLRRA's 2017 Connections convention held in Grapevine, Texas. It honors longtime ASLRRA leader Schlosser who passed away in 2011.

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Jun
09

ASLRRA honors GE's Griswell

Gary Griswell of GE Transportation was honored with the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association's Thomas L. Schlosser Distinguished Service Award.

The award is presented on an annual basis to recognize an individual for long-term, significant service to the Association. Griswell is the first Associate Member recipient of the award, presented at ASLRRA's 2017 Connections convention held in Grapevine, Texas. It honors longtime ASLRRA leader Schlosser who passed away in 2011.

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Jun
09

ASLRRA honors GE's Griswell

Gary Griswell of GE Transportation was honored with the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association's Thomas L. Schlosser Distinguished Service Award.

The award is presented on an annual basis to recognize an individual for long-term, significant service to the Association. Griswell is the first Associate Member recipient of the award, presented at ASLRRA's 2017 Connections convention held in Grapevine, Texas. It honors longtime ASLRRA leader Schlosser who passed away in 2011.

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Jun
09

Intermodal stakeholders gauge impacts of the Panama Canal expansion

Rail News Home Intermodal June 2017 Rail News: Intermodal

Last month, the COSCO Development container ship became the largest ship to pass through the Panama Canal.Photo – Panama Canal Authority — By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Associate EditorIn early May, the Port of Virginia welcomed the COSCO Development container ship, the largest vessel to call on the U.S. East Coast to date. Over the course of the ship’s 30-plus-hour stop at the Virginia International Gateway terminal, crews loaded and unloaded almost 2,000 containers.The Development, which has a carrying capacity of more than 13,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), came to the terminal after passing through the recently expanded Panama Canal. The ship’s arrival ushered in a new era for the port, Virginia Port Authority (VPA) officials said last month.“For years, we have been talking about the ‘next generation’ of vessels and the ‘big-ship era.’ This is what we have been preparing for … the big ships are here,” said VPA Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director John Reinhart in a May 9 press release.Indeed, more than 1,200 “Neopanamax” vessels — ships with a carrying capacity of up to 14,000 TEUs — have passed through the Panama Canal since its $5.25 billion expansion project was completed in June 2016, according to the Panama Canal Authority. The project involved widening the waterway and adding two new sets of locks to allow larger ships to pass through.In the run-up to the opening of the widened Panama Canal, some observers forecast an uptick in Asian containerized traffic heading to the U.S. East and Gulf coasts due to larger ships arriving. While the overall market share of traffic calling on those ports has been growing compared to West Coast ports, the expanded Panama Canal is just one factor, trade experts and port leaders say.Going forward, though, the widened canal could spell future volume boosts for eastern ports and railroads. For now, intermodal stakeholders are working to remain nimble regardless of how trade patterns shake out.“There will be vessels of similar or equal size [as the Development] calling on Virginia with regularity and we are expecting to benefit from increased volumes,” said Port of Virginia spokesman Joe Harris in an email.From June 2016 through mid-May this year, the port’s overall TEU volumes are up 7 percent compared with volumes during the same period. In addition, the port’s rail volume for the same period grew 13 percent year over year.The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is raising the Bayonne Bridge to allow larger vessels to access its terminals.Port Authority of New York and New Jersey

“The increase is the result of a number of factors and the Panama Canal is among them,” Harris said.

Other reasons for the Port of Virginia’s rail traffic boost, in particular? The port’s growing double-stack access to key Midwestern markets has played a part. Then there’s the speed at which shippers can reach those markets: Cargo moving via Norfolk Southern Railway’s Heartland Corridor can reach Chicago in 40 hours.

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Jun
08

Disaster training prepared MARTA for Atlanta’s I-85 bridge collapse

Rail News Home Passenger Rail June 2017 Rail News: Passenger Rail

MARTA CEO Keith ParkerPhoto – MARTA By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Senior Associate Editor
 
As a massive fire raged under a section of Interstate 85 causing a bridge to collapse in Atlanta on a Thursday night in late March, city and state officials gathered via conference call to hash out a transportation action plan for the hundreds of thousands of drivers whose commutes were thrown into disarray.
 
No one was hurt, but the incident shut down a 3-mile section of I-85 and cut off access to a major roadway through Atlanta. The city already was famous for its traffic gridlock prior to the March 30 bridge collapse. Now that a key thoroughfare was out of commission for at least several weeks, Atlantans were facing a transportation nightmare.
 
Among the leaders on that crisis-response phone call was Keith Parker, general manager and chief executive officer of the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA), the primary transit service that operates the region’s rail and bus services. Parker first realized the I-85 situation's gravity when he saw the thick, black smoke billowing from the fire one-third of a mile from MARTA's headquarters.
 
Within an hour, Parker, the Georgia Department of Transportation and other state and city officials had crafted a transportation implementation plan that included increasing MARTA train and bus service.
 
"We were able to increase service by 10 p.m. that night," says Parker. "Along with that, we had a concerted and consistent communications plan in place. Throughout that evening, early the next day and throughout the next weekend, I and others were doing media interviews telling people to try MARTA."
 
In addition to conducting news media interviews, MARTA communications staff used the agency's website and social media platforms — including Parker's own Twitter account — to get the word out about how to use MARTA trains or buses. By the next morning, MARTA saw a steady increase in ridership.
 
"Our biggest challenge was how to accommodate all those new people," says Parker.
 
Finding room for all those cars
Besides adding trains and buses to routes, MARTA increased the number of parking attendants at stations and MARTA police officers throughout the system to help direct the rush of commuters who were new to MARTA. The rush of riders prompted another concern: Where to park all those extra cars? Even though the I-85 collapse occurred during spring break when traffic was down, MARTA's station parking lots and decks were at or near capacity.
 
MARTA opened up 1,600 spaces at under-utilized stations, but the agency needed even more room for parked cars. Parker and agency staff talked with local businesses and organizations to identify ways to expand parking capacity at or near stations throughout the system. AT&T was among those that offered to help, providing 750 additional spaces.
 
MARTA also encouraged commuters to carpool, use ride-sharing services and "Kiss-and-Ride" lanes to get to rail stations. The agency's buses provided free transfers to the rail stations. And to make it easier for commuters to bike their way to a MARTA train, the agency added bicycle racks and bike repair kiosks. Commuters also could get real-time station parking capacity updates via MARTA's website.
 
"We were able to greatly expand our capacity and reduce some of the frustration of new and regular customers," says Parker. "Those efforts worked very well."
 
MARTA's typical ridership is 400,000 to 430,000 daily riders. During the six-week I-85 closure, the agency experienced a system-wide increase of more than 11 percent, with an initial spike the day after the bridge collapse of nearly 25 percent, according to MARTA spokesman Erik Burton.
 
Quickly accommodating a flood of new customers was a challenge for MARTA, no doubt about it. But at the same time, Parker saw it as an opportunity to attract and keep new customers.
 
To entice new passengers to get on board, MARTA offered deals such as discounted monthly passes, a new weekend family pass and a Groupon offering $12 for a three-day unlimited Breeze Card — an $18 value.
 
"The feedback we received from new customers was that they had no idea it was so easy to use MARTA," Parker says. "That's been the refreshing part of the experience for our [new] customers. When they get on a MARTA train, they know they’ll be on time 97.5 percent of the time."
 
As of June 5, final data was unavailable to compare ridership before and after the bridge reopened the week of May 13. Still, agency officials believe MARTA will retain some of its new customers.
 
"Once those riders return to driving and experiencing the tough Atlanta traffic, we think they'll come back to MARTA," says Parker.Parker's advice: Be prepared
Key to MARTA's response to the I-85 crisis was having a plan at the ready. Agency staff regularly participate in crisis-response training and disaster-preparedness exercises.
 
"It's just a matter of time before a transit agency will be faced with something like this," says Parker. "The event could be inclement weather, a terrorist attack or a chemical spill that shuts down an area. Whatever the case, something eventually will happen to a transportation network that will make public transit critically important. You have to plan for that eventuality."
 
In addition to being prepared, transit agency leaders "have to continue to remind ourselves to communicate, communicate, communicate," Parker adds.
 
"There is a tendency to relax once the plan is in place," he says. "But the public has to be constantly reassured and re-informed about how things are going."
Keywords Browse articles on Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority MARTA Keith Parker Interstate 85 Georgia Department of Transportation disaster planning Contact Progressive Railroading editorial staff.

Jun
08

TNW marks 35 years in business

Rail News Home Short Lines & Regionals 6/8/2017 Rail News: Short Lines & Regionals
TNW Corp. has created a new logo to celebrate the company's 35th anniversary.Based in Dallas, the company launched service in 1982 as the holding company for the Texas North Western Railway to serve customers in the Texas panhandle near Sunray, with an interchange connection on the BNSF Railway Co.Today, TNW is the holding company for three short lines and three logistics centers in Texas and partners with a short line and port facility in Indiana."Through steady internal growth and a series of strategic acquisitions, we have built a solid foundation for continued success in the future," said Chief Executive Officer Paul Treangen in a press release. "As we continue to expand our operations and become more involved in economic development initiatives with the communities and commercial development entities in our market areas, TNW is well positioned for future opportunities.”TNW supplies rail-car storage, servicing, cleaning and repair services. It also operates logistics parks that include manufacturing, storage and agricultural facilities for on-site companies that use short lines to import raw materials, export finished products and maintain their daily operations.

Contact Progressive Railroading editorial staff.

More News from 6/8/2017


Jun
08

Valley Metro kicks off light-rail station construction

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 6/8/2017 Rail News: Passenger Rail
Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton signs a commemorative plaque at the 50th Street Station.Photo – Valley Metro

Valley Metro today began construction on the new 50th Street/Washington light-rail station.

The project marks the agency's first infill station, which is a station built on an existing line. The 50th Street stop also is the first capital project to begin under the Transportation 2050 sales-tax initiative, which Phoenix voters approved in 2015.

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Jun
08

North Dakota DOT publishes draft of new state rail plan

The North Dakota Department of Transportation (NDDOT) is seeking public comment through June 30 on the draft of its 2040 State Rail Plan.

NDDOT is writing the plan to guide the advancement of the rail system used by the state's freight shippers and rail passengers, NDDOT officials said in a press release.

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Jun
08

Metrolinx picks three teams to bid on Hurontario light-rail project

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 6/8/2017 Rail News: Passenger Rail
A rendering of the Hurontario line's Robert Speck stop in Mississauga, Ontario.Photo – Metrolinx/Infrastructure Ontario

Metrolinx and Infrastructure Ontario (IO) have released a short list of three teams that qualify to bid on the 12.4-mile Hurontario light-rail project.

The three teams were selected based on criteria identified in a request for qualifications process that began in October 2016.

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Jun
08

L.A. Port's FY2018 budget includes rail projects

The Los Angeles Board of Harbor Commissioners last week approved a $1.17 billion budget for the Port of Los Angeles in fiscal-year 2018.

The budget includes funding for ongoing rail projects at the port, where cargo volumes are expected to grow by 5.6 percent over the adopted FY2017 budget, according to the board's press release.

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Jun
08

WMATA to pull older fleets from service ahead of schedule

6/8/2017    

Rail News: Mechanical

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Jun
08

U.S. railroads posted 6.4 percent traffic growth in May

U.S. rail traffic surged 6.4 percent to 2,625,492 carloads and intermodal units last month compared with volumes in May 2016, the Association of American Railroads (AAR) reported yesterday.

U.S. railroads originated 1,286,075 carloads in May, up 8.4 percent over the same month last year. Intermodal container and trailer volume rose 4.6 percent to 1,339,417 units during May compared with a year ago.

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Jun
08

Denver RTD to resume rail line testing, but contractor concerned about approval time

Denver's Regional Transportation District (RTD) has received approval from the Colorado Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to resume testing on the G Line commuter-rail route, local media reported yesterday.

RTD temporarily halted testing on the line last fall due to issues with grade crossing software. However, the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) early last month gave its approval to continue limited testing on the line.

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Jun
08

Canadian Pacific eyes “total transportation solutions” to create growth

You asked for , but despite our computers looking very hard, we could not find it. What happened ?

the link you clicked to arrive here has a typo in itor somehow we removed that page, or gave it another nameor, quite unlikely for sure, maybe you typed it yourself and there was a little mistake ?

Original author: Mischa Wanek-Libman, editor

Jun
08

Canadian Pacific eyes “total transportation solutions” to create growth

You asked for , but despite our computers looking very hard, we could not find it. What happened ?

the link you clicked to arrive here has a typo in itor somehow we removed that page, or gave it another nameor, quite unlikely for sure, maybe you typed it yourself and there was a little mistake ?

Original author: Mischa Wanek-Libman, editor

Jun
08

Canadian Pacific eyes “total transportation solutions” to create growth

You asked for , but despite our computers looking very hard, we could not find it. What happened ?

the link you clicked to arrive here has a typo in itor somehow we removed that page, or gave it another nameor, quite unlikely for sure, maybe you typed it yourself and there was a little mistake ?

Original author: Mischa Wanek-Libman, editor