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Midwest,
Calif.
front
runners
for $8B
in rail
cash
By
MICHAEL
TARM –
AP
CHICAGO
(AP) —
High-speed
rail
plans in
the
Midwest
and
California
appear
to be
front
runners
in the
race for
$8
billion
in
stimulus
cash
based on
federal
criteria
released
Wednesday
that
favor
projects
with
established
revenue
sources
and
multistate
cooperation.
California
voters
last
November
approved
nearly
$10
billion
in state
bonds
that
could be
combined
with
federal
money to
build
800
miles of
high-speed
track.
Eight
Midwest
states
have
cooperated
closely
to
promote
a
network,
with
Chicago
as its
hub,
that
would
join 12
metropolitan
areas
within
400
miles.
Karen
Rae,
deputy
administrator
of the
Federal
Railroad
Administration,
stopped
short of
naming
favorites
during
an
interview
with The
Associated
Press in
Chicago,
but she
praised
Midwestern
states
for
their
cooperation
and
pointed
to
California's
bond
issue.
"That's
very
important.
California
by
having
the bond
has a
step
up,"
said
Rae, who
hastened
to add
that
many
factors
would
determine
final
distribution
of the
stimulus
money.
The
FRA's 68
pages of
often
technical
rules
also
seek
projects
that
would
reduce
regional
highway
and
airport
congestion
and
create
jobs,
especially
among
lower
income
Americans.
"I think
these
are
good,
well-thought-out
criteria,"
said
rail
advocate
Kevin
Brubaker
of the
Environmental
Law &
Policy
Center
in
Chicago,
who
noted a
particular
emphasis
on
integrating
new
networks
into
existing
rail
systems.
Messages
seeking
comment
were
left
Wednesday
with
officials
with the
Midwest
Rail
Initiative
and the
California
High-Speed
Rail
Authority.
Lollygagging
states
will
have to
move
fast to
try to
grab a
share of
the
funds,
with the
FRA
guidelines
setting
a July
10
deadline
for
pre-applications
and an
Aug. 24
deadline
for most
final
application
papers.
The FRA
said it
intends
to
release
the
first
round of
grants
by
mid-September.
Any
region
can
present
a
long-range
plan,
but the
FRA has
highlighted
10 major
corridors
that
cover
lines in
Texas,
California,
Florida,
the
Pacific
Northwest,
the
Midwest,
the Gulf
Coast,
the
Southeast,
northern
New
England,
Pennsylvania
and New
York.
The
guidelines
released
Wednesday
call for
detailed
cost-benefit
analyses
to be
submitted
with
applications,
but
Randal
O'Toole,
of the
free-market
oriented
Cato
Institute
in
Washington,
D.C.,
said
deadlines
coming
so
quickly
one
after
another
will
make it
impossible
to
scrutinize
the
submissions.
"July
and
August
deadlines
is
rushing
it,"
said
O'Toole,
a
longtime
critic
of such
government-backed
programs.
"It's
hard for
me to
imagine
federal
authorities
are
going to
take
these
analyses
seriously.
There's
no time
for
that."
President
Barack
Obama
laid out
plans in
April
for
high-speed
rail he
said
would
help
dramatically
change
the way
Americans
travel.
Even
advocates
concede
the $8
billion
isn't
nearly
enough
for a
wholesale
change
in
passenger-train
service,
something
that
would
require
hundreds
of
billions
more.
But
backers
still
hope the
stimulus
money,
as well
as $1
billion
a year
for five
years
proposed
for
high-speed
rail in
the 2010
federal
budget,
will
lead to
more
funding
down the
road.
The
FRA's
Rae
assured
a group
of about
200
transportation
officials
who were
gathered
in
Chicago
for a
rail
conference
that the
stimulus
cash is
just the
beginning
of a
long-term
national
push.
"This is
not
about
stringing
rail
across a
region
for no
purpose,"
she
said.
Improvements
to
tracks
and
equipment
on the
existing
routes
could
enable
Amtrak
trains
to reach
top
speeds
of 110
miles
per hour
— an
improvement
of
around
30 mph.
The only
U.S.
service
currently
meeting
the
FRA's
110 mph
threshold
to
qualify
as a
true
high-speed
train is
Amtrak's
Acela
Express
route
between
Boston
and
Washington,
D.C.
The
Midwest
project
foresees
upgrades
of three
existing
routes:
Chicago-St.
Louis;
Chicago-Madison,
Wis.,
via
Milwaukee;
and
Chicago-Pontiac,
Mich.,
through
Detroit.
Later,
they'd
upgrade
a St.
Louis-Kansas
City,
Mo.
route.
The
governors
of the
eight
Midwest
states —
Illinois,
Indiana,
Iowa,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Missouri,
Ohio and
Wisconsin
— wrote
Transportation
Secretary
Ray
LaHood
in April
appealing
for
money
for the
region,
one of
the
hardest
hit by
the
recession.
The
California
High-Speed
Rail
Authority
has said
it hopes
to build
800
miles of
track
for
high-speed
trains
and
would
ask for
federal
funds to
work on
lines
between
San
Francisco
and San
Jose and
Los
Angeles
and
Anaheim.
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