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The End of the City of New Orleans?
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Seen today (6/25) in the Memphis Commercial Appeal. <br /> <br />http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/local_news/article/0,1426,MCA_437_3881991,00.html <br /> <br /><b><b>End of the line?</b></b> <br />Budget barriers threaten to derail Amtrak and fabled <br />City of New Orleans <br /> <br /> <br />By Bartholomew Sullivan <br />sullivanb@shns.com <br />June 24, 2005 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /><i>Nighttime on the City of New Orleans <br /> <br />Changing cars in Memphis, Tennessee <br /> <br />Half-way home, we'll be there by morning <br /> <br />Through the Mississippi darkness <br /> <br />Rolling down to the sea.</i> <br /> <br />-- Steve Goodman, ''The City of New Orleans'' <br /> <br />WASHINGTON -- Arlo Guthrie sings ''The City of New <br />Orleans'' somewhere just about every night. <br /> <br />The classic song about the train that's got the <br />"disappearing railroad blues" captures the spirit of <br />an America that, when it was written in 1970, seemed <br />to be fading fast, Guthrie said. Now, a congressional <br />proposal to end Amtrak's City of New Orleans service, <br />and most long-distance Amtrak service across the <br />country, has Guthrie hoping it's not too late to save <br />a cultural icon. <br /> <br />In 1979, he rode the now-defunct Montrealer from his <br />home in western Massachusetts to Washington's Union <br />Station and played a protest concert to stop a Carter <br />administration plan to cut passenger rail service. He <br />told The Commercial Appeal on Friday that it may be <br />time to ride from the Windy City to the Big Easy to <br />save The City of New Orleans. In the same breath, he <br />wondered if Congress would even notice. <br /> <br />''They're backed up against the wall with so many <br />other crazy things going on that the fate of the <br />nation's train system is probably not on their to-do <br />list,'' he said. ''But it should be. I can't believe <br />they're that preoccupied that they can't actually sit <br />down and reason it out and find a way to keep the <br />trains rolling,'' Guthrie said. ''Because it's not <br />just a symbol. If it were just a symbol, maybe we <br />could live without it. But it's more than that. It's <br />the hope for the future. Everyone knows that.'' <br /> <br />The House appropriations committee last week voted to <br />approve only $550 million for Amtrak -- a 55 percent <br />cut from current funding -- for the fiscal year that <br />starts Oct. 1. The full House is expected to take it <br />up on Wednesday. Amtrak officials say that level of <br />funding not only prevents the continued operation of <br />long-distance trains like The City of New Orleans, it <br />effectively derails all service. <br /> <br />''If it's finally enacted that way, Amtrak would <br />simply cease to exist,'' said longtime Amtrak <br />spokesman Cliff Black. Debt service and severance <br />payments to employees working on the terminated <br />long-distance routes would eat up the entire <br />appropriation. <br /> <br />In a letter to employees, Amtrak president David L. <br />Gunn put it bluntly: ''The practical impact of $550 <br />million in federal support would be the same as zero <br />funding for Amtrak, and they know it.'' <br /> <br />Fans of passenger rail service hope something closer <br />to the $1.8 billion sought by Amtrak will be restored <br />when it comes up in the Senate, which has <br />traditionally been more favorably disposed to the <br />agency. The same bill that cuts Amtrak increases <br />Federal Aviation Administration funding by $877 <br />million. <br /> <br />Others predict that when the public learns that <br />storied train routes like the Sunset Limited, Empire <br />Builder, Southwest Chief and California Zephyr are <br />slated to be chloroformed, there will be outrage. Some <br />of it has begun to bubble up. <br /> <br />''Once it becomes obvious to the public that the <br />passenger trains are going to die, there will be some <br />kind of uproar and uprising,'' said Bill Strong of <br />Germantown, a Southeast regional director of the <br />National Association of Railroad Pass- engers. ''But <br />it might be too late.'' <br /> <br />An Illinois Central Chicago-to-New Orleans route was <br />first called The City of New Orleans in 1947, said <br />Amtrak's Chicago spokesman Marc Magliari. When Amtrak <br />took over the passenger system in 1971, it called the <br />overnight route The Panama Limited. In 1981, The City <br />of New Orleans name was restored. Since 1998, it has <br />run daily once in each direction. The fare is <br />currently $183 one-way. <br /> <br />It has some ardent fans in Shelby County. Many of them <br />meet monthly at the White Station branch of the <br />Memphis and Shelby County Library System as the local <br />chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. <br /> <br />Memphis Redbirds general manager David A. Chase, 51, <br />the society's chapter president, said that it was <br />''beyond my imagination'' to shut down passenger rail <br />service. <br /> <br />''Arlo Guthrie and (his late father) Woody Guthrie <br />will have nothing to sing about if we don't have The <br />City of New Orleans,'' said Chase. <br /> <br />''Especially in this day and age, when air travel is <br />in peril ... we probably need more than ever to rely <br />on rail service.'' <br /> <br />The City of New Orleans chugged out of the Crescent <br />City northbound on Friday with 398 passengers. <br />Forty-nine got off at Memphis, but 51 others got on. <br />Southbound from the Windy City with 350 passengers, 46 <br />got off at Memphis and 29 climbed aboard. <br /> <br />Amtrak ridership is up and its loss per passenger mile <br />has been declining in recent years, its supporters <br />point out. <br /> <br />Strong said the Bush administration ''has gotten some <br />very bad and incorrect information that they're <br />passing out as gospel.'' The truth is that no <br />passenger rail system could operate profitably without <br />a substantial subsidy, he said. He pointed to the FAA <br />funding of airports and the whole air traffic control <br />system supporting for-profit airline companies and <br />multibillion-dollar highway construction used by <br />passenger buses. <br /> <br />Strong said he got some encouragement from U.S. Rep. <br />Harold Ford Jr., D-Tenn., who signed a letter to the <br />subcommittee chairman considering Amtrak's budget in <br />support of a $2 billion appropriation. Rep. John <br />Tanner, D-Tenn., whose district contains a train stop <br />at Newbern, said rural Tennesseans should have a rail <br />option. <br /> <br />But Strong said Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., is <br />''buying the administration line ... and trying to <br />save money.'' <br /> <br />In a statement to the newspaper, Blackburn confirmed <br />that view: ''Taxpayers have been bailing Amtrak out <br />for more than three decades. We've reached a point <br />where people are saying enough is enough.'' <br /> <br />Guthrie says it's short-sighted to cut Amtrak service. <br /> <br />''I wi***here were some other thing that I could <br />think of to do that would help rekindle interest in <br />the train system,'' he said. ''I think if a little <br />more thought went into it and these guys (in Congress) <br />could pay a little bit more attention to it, they <br />could surely figure out some way to do it without <br />destroying one of the things that made the country <br />what it is in the first place.'' <br /> <br />Contact Washington correspondent Bartholomew Sullivan <br />at (202) 408-2726. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />. <br />
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