The following is a statement by Eugene K. Skoropowski, Managing
Director of the Capitol Corridor Joint Powers
Authority:
OAKLAND, Calif. -- The new session of Congress is
presented with perhaps the best opportunity to finally make
intercity rail passenger service a meaningful component of our
nation's transportation system. While the tragic events of September
11 clearly show the need for what the military calls 'adequate
redundancy' in our transport system for national security, the
reasons to preserve, expand and modernize the nation's underfunded
passenger rail system are far more basic.
We have had
decades of massive public subsidies to the nation's highway system
(remember the 'National Defense Highway System,' now called simply
'the Interstates'?), and similar largess to the aviation industry
and to our waterways and ports. These funds have been provided for
'the public good.' At the same time, our nation's private railroad
opted out of the passenger business largely because the aging
passenger system needed massive capital investment and the railroads
could not raise the needed capital in the private marketplace,
largely due to the competition from the government in its 'free'
capitalization of every other mode of transport (road, air and
water). Deterioration from lack of capital investment and erosion of
the passenger rail market caused by the government's subsidies to
the other transport modes made passenger trains unprofitable and the
railroads wanted to shed these losses which were being born by the
private railroads, not the public. We really thought we would never
need trains again.
In May 1971, two-thirds of the nation's
passenger trains ended. What was left was a 'skeletal' system,
consisting of a fleet of aged, mostly unreliable passenger cars,
dilapidated stations and, in many instances, deteriorated track.
This 'cast-off collection' was transferred to Amtrak in 1971 to
'save' passenger service. Somehow, the concept that this new
creation of Congress could become 'profitable' was engendered, even
though no other form of transport could exist without massive public
subsidies, subsidies that continue today.
The real miracle
is that the nation's rail passenger system has survived at all, let
alone in far better shape than it was in 1971. No business can
survive without investment of adequate capital funding and provision
of an operating revenue stream. While continuing to pour billions of
public dollars into the alternate modes (roads, air and water), only
the nation's rail passenger system was measured by a standard of
'profitability.' This requirement has never entered into the
vocabulary of the requirements for any of the other modes of
transport.
Exactly what is the relevance of 'profitability'
to provision of a national transport SERVICE in the first place? The
national intercity rail system was intended to provide the American
public with a SERVICE, and should be measured by its accomplishment
of that mission, and funded accordingly. We provide fire, police,
library and other services to our people and no one speaks of their
'profitability.' Services are supposed to be provided for the public
good. Long-time rail passenger advocates can rattle off a myriad of
benefits of rail in terms of safety, environmental and convenience.
Congress has a golden opportunity to 'right the past wrongs'
regarding our national passenger rail system. Sure, Amtrak has some
warts, so fix them. Amtrak certainly isn't Enron!
All things
considered, looking at the national passenger rail system that is
still in existence today (at least until October), and the new,
modern trains which have now replaced all the rolling junk of 1971,
Amtrak has done a remarkable job during the past 31 and 1/2 years.
Much more can be done, and should be done to expand services,
increase train frequencies and speed up the entire network. Some of
this can be done in cooperation with the private freight-only (now)
railroads and some of this will call for new publicly-owned tracks
to permit time competitive speeds in 'corridors' like San
Francisco-Los Angeles. All this will take an investment of capital
funds (something Amtrak has been continuously promised but never
provided) and an adequate and on-going stream of operating funds
(again, something with which Amtrak has never been provided).
Critics will bewail the $23 billion Amtrak has been provided
during the last 31-plus years. They conveniently overlook both what
Amtrak has accomplished with those funds in rebuilding the old
system, and what subsidies the public has given, and continues to
give, to the other transport modes during that same time period.
Bill Gates and his wife have provided more money to charity in the
last few years than our federal government has provided to Amtrak in
its entire existence. There is a message here.
A reasonable
person would conclude that if the private airlines can walk into
Congress and get $15 billion overnight, plus whatever amounts we
spend on the airports, air traffic control system and the FAA, then
surely a paltry billion or two annually will not bankrupt our
government. It may just prove what we are finding out in
California... Americans LOVE passenger trains and will use them if
they are frequent enough and modern enough. God knows, most drivers
will do almost anything to avoid driving, and they pray for a viable
train service.
Congress has a chance to put into place the
mechanism that will give Americans a real choice about how we
travel. A national system of intercity trains must be a part of
America's transport network. Failure to provide this rail network
will condemn us to rely on the hopelessly overloaded highways and
increasingly frustrating air system.
The last two sessions
of Congress have been presented with intercity passenger rail
legislation to deliver the much-needed capital investments. The
bills (both in the Senate and in the House) were jointly introduced
by Republican and Democratic leaders. These bills engendered some 60
Senate co-sponsors (yes, that's 60 out of 100) who were not just
'supporters' but joint sponsors of the proposed legislation. In the
House there were 188 co-sponsors (yes, 188 out of 435 total
members), yet in the last two sessions of Congress these bills have
been allowed to die. The American people are asking Congress for a
modern, national passenger rail system that ties our nation together
on the ground, and most of Congress has been on board. Enactment of
this federal legislation is needed now.
This is the time for
Congressional action, not inaction.
Eugene K. Skoropowski is
Managing Director of the Capitol Corridor Joint Powers Authority
with offices in Oakland, California. Capitol Corridor Intercity Rail
Service operates between San Jose-Oakland/San
Francisco-Sacramento-Auburn, California. It is a state-supported
contract service with Amtrak, in cooperation with the Union Pacific
Railroad.