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1960 to 1970: what the heck happened?
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[quote user="bobwilcox"]To quote gabe <p style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]"> </p><p style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">"But, what changes hit the rail industry from the 1960s to the 1970s to make things go so horribly wrong?" Do you have an opinion you would like to share with the list?[/quote]</p><p style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]"><font size="2" style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">No <u style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">changes</u> hit the rail industry in 1960; rather, it was the <u style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">status quo</u> that hit the rail industry around 1960. </font></p><p style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]" class="MsoNormal"><font size="2" style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">The following quote is from, <u style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">A History of the ICC</u>, Hoogenboom,<span style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]"> </span>pp. 159-160.</font></p><p style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]" class="MsoNormal"><font face="courier new,courier" size="3" style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">“[In December, 1960], John P. Doyle, staff director of the Transportation Study Group (created earlier by the Senate) submitted his draft report to the Senate Committee on Interstate and foreign Commerce. … Regulatory policy, the Doyle report concluded, ‘<em style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]">has produced a general program of preserving the status quo which is in direct opposition to the overall objective of a dynamic transportation system which can best serve the economy and defense of the country</em>.’<span style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]"> </span>Predicting that the nation was headed for a transportation crisis, the report cited … the absolute decline in railroad traffic and revenue from 1956 to 1959.<span style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]"> </span>Railroads suffered, the report continued, from the great technological developments in competing modes; from enormous public investment in highways, airports, and waterways at a time when railroads had difficulty raising private capital; … and common carriers were subject to ‘inequitable and destructive ICC regulation.’ ”</font></p><br /><font size="3" style="__styledocument: [object]; styledocument: [object]"> </font>
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