Federal criteria released last week show that high-speed rail plans in
California and the Midwest appear to be front-runners in the race for $8
billion in stimulus cash.
The criteria favor projects with established revenue sources and multistate
cooperation.
Eight Midwestern states, including Indiana, are cooperating closely to
promote a network, with Chicago as its hub. That network would join 12
metropolitan areas within 400 miles and include the line that runs from
Chicago through Indianapolis, with a stop in Lafayette.
The total capital cost of upgrading the 3,000-mile network would be about
$7.7 billion, according to the Midwest Regional Rail Initiative group.
Rick Harnish, executive director of the Midwest High Speed Rail Association,
said he’s pleased Indiana is taking steps to participate with its neighbors
in potential rail projects.
During a visit last week to Fort Wayne he said public support of those
projects is critical to making them a reality.
“If you want service in Fort Wayne, you have to make it clear to the
governor and legislators today,” Harnish said.
Recently released federal train-route maps do not include Fort Wayne as a
stop, but Harnish said those maps were completed hastily and should not be
considered accurate.
Geoff Paddock, of Northeast Indiana Passenger Rail Association, said studies
have shown it would be quicker for train routes from Chicago to eastern
cities to travel through Fort Wayne than through more northern cities like
South Bend.
Harnish said Indiana must submit a “pre-application” for stimulus funding
next month. In August, he said the state needs to follow through with a full
application for a share of $8 billion in rail funding included in the $787
billion stimulus bill.
The Tippecanoe County Area Plan Commission will consider a resolution in
July that urges state officials to apply for funding from the stimulus pot
or from a new stream of federal transportation funding becoming available.
Commission executive director Sallie Fahey said the service would offer a
direct benefit to the Lafayette area if the existing Amtrak line running
from Indianapolis to Chicago were upgraded.
“It adds an additional safe, clean and efficient mode of transportation for
our residents that we don’t have now,” she said. “The emphasis (on
high-speed rail) has pretty much always been on the East Coast corridors. So
this is the first time there is at least a glimmer of hope that there might
be money available in the Midwest.”
Improvements would need to be made to tracks and equipment on the existing
routes to enable Amtrak trains to reach top speeds of 110 mph.
Baudilio Tejerina, a native of Spain who works for Northwestern University
in Evanston, Ill., travels to Lafayette regularly to work with faculty at
Purdue.
He always makes the trip on an Amtrak train and said that it would be
“fantastic” to see the line upgraded to a higher speed service.
“It would be something that belongs to this century,” said Tejerina, who is
used to the high-speed trains throughout Europe and wonders why there isn’t
a similar system in the U.S.