Don't Stop Those Trains
By Thomas M. Downs
Sunday, August 17, 1997; Page C07
The Washington Post
Congress has earmarked a $2.3 billion capital fund for Amtrak,
the nation's passenger rail system. Unfortunately, that fund
cannot be used without an authorization bill acceptable to the
president.
The desperately needed funds, overwhelmingly supported by
Congress, would not only bring Amtrak back from the brink of
bankruptcy but would also ensure a future of modernized
trains, high-speed rail and revitalized train stations. Without the
fund, Amtrak operations will be totally dissolved in less than a
year.
For the past 26 years, Amtrak has run the bands of steel that
carry 55 million people each year from their homes to jobs, to
families and to their vacations. It is a safe and reliable form of
transportation that we largely take for granted. And for many
rural cities and towns that are not served by airlines, it is the
only way to go.
Now imagine America without passenger rail service. If we lost
Amtrak, great train stations would turn into empty halls.
Highway congestion would increase dramatically, as well as the
risk of automobile accidents. The tourism industry would suffer.
And what about the 31 million Americans who simply refuse to
fly?
Just in the northeast corridor alone, without Amtrak, 7,500
fully booked 757s would have to fly to already overcrowded
airports, and another 27,000 cars would need to travel on 20
additional highway lanes between New York and Boston each
day.
If we lost Amtrak service, we'd be isolating hundreds of
thousands of rural residents where rail is the only means of
getting from place to place. For rural America, Amtrak is
literally the last affordable transportation alternative available to
them.
Ironically, Amtrak's current financial crisis is not a result of
poor service or lack of consumer demand. It is the result of a
15-year shortfall in federal capital investment. In fact, over the
years, Amtrak has built a strong record for running a very tight
and efficient business, recovering more of its operating costs
than any other passenger rail in the world -- and that includes
rail services in Germany, France and Japan.
But a railroad is a capital consumption machine, like every
other mode of transportation -- like aviation, like highways and
shipping. Each year, the federal government pours billions into
airports, roads, bridges and shipping channels, but little or
nothing into rail. For example, last year, spending for highways
exceeded $20 billion, while capital investment for Amtrak was
less than $450 million. Amtrak receives less than 2 percent of
all federal transportation spending.
But this year, Congress has recognized the importance of
passenger rail to the transportation needs of this country and
has commended Amtrak for its efforts to wean itself from its
dependence on federal operational grants. Over the past three
years, we've reduced those grants dramatically, and we are on
a path to be independent of them by the year 2002. To
accomplish that, the board of directors has had to make tough
decisions. We've cut expenditures, restructured the company
and improved our bottom line by more than $300 million. But
Congress also saw that as we reduce operating support, there
had to be a way to meet the huge capital needs. We have to
modernize and grow. That is why there was a such strong
endorsement of a $2.3 billion capital fund for Amtrak.
Rail is not dead. It is very much alive, and its importance is
growing. It is essential to America's ability to keep moving. It
hasn't been easy for any of us, but we're not complaining. The
bottom line is that we have made it work and we have proved
that capital funding for Amtrak is a wise investment for the
country to make.
But don't just take my word for it. Ride with us on the City of
New Orleans, the Empire Builder, or the Crescent and talk to
the passengers who board at each stop. They are seniors,
college students and families. They are schoolchildren on their
way to Washington for a field trip. They are young parents with
children on vacation to see the countryside. These Americans
need and deserve a national rail passenger system. We know
it. The president and Congress know it. They must act
accordingly.
The writer is chairman, president and chief executive officer of Amtrak.
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