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QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ....SERIOUS argument....The Executive branch doesn't have the line item veto power.
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QUOTE: Originally posted by Big_Boy_4005 QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ....SERIOUS argument....The Executive branch doesn't have the line item veto power. Correct, so if he can't starve it out of funding, and still wants to kill it, he can have it managed into oblivion. Firing Gunn was the first step. Why else would you fire a qualified, competent manager?
QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd QUOTE: Originally posted by Big_Boy_4005 QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ....SERIOUS argument....The Executive branch doesn't have the line item veto power. Correct, so if he can't starve it out of funding, and still wants to kill it, he can have it managed into oblivion. Firing Gunn was the first step. Why else would you fire a qualified, competent manager? insubordination? I agree with you, though. Particularly when you know that he was a willing participant in reforming Amtrak. He, with the board's blessing, put forth a reform plan.
QUOTE: Originally posted by bbrant QUOTE: Originally posted by SteamerFan The Future of Amtrak never looked brighter. Now it can finally be moved forward into the 21st century and not backwards into the 19th. I agree with that. Get Amtrak off the corporate welfare program and let them make it on their own which I believe is a real possibility. Brian
QUOTE: Originally posted by SteamerFan The Future of Amtrak never looked brighter. Now it can finally be moved forward into the 21st century and not backwards into the 19th.
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QUOTE: Originally posted by TRAINMANTOM DOES ANYONE OUT THERE HAVE AN ANSWER TO THE QUESTION WHY IT IS OK TOGIVE MONEY TO AIRLINES ,HIGHWAYS AND SHIP COMPANIES AND NOT TO AMTRAK.
QUOTE: Originally posted by kenneo He withholds the funding by not authorizing the actual release of the monies. The congress can appropriate, but the executive disburses. The executive can withhold appripriated funds if it wants to.
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QUOTE: Originally posted by garr jeaton, I checked the figures on transportation subsidies that I was refering to. They came from a report in the 2/10/05 Wall Street Journal using the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, www.transtats.bts.gov as the source. Per 1,000 passenger miles traveled, the federal subsidy breakdown per mode is: Amtrak...................$186.35 Urban Transit ......$118.26 Airlines ......................$6.00 Highways .................-$1.91 It has been a while since I read this report, but IIRC it seemed on the up and up. Jay
QUOTE: Originally posted by garr Mitch, That is a very good point. Where a competitive edge has been given, i.e. the Northeast Corridor, Amtrak has done realatively well. However, the NE Corridor is a perfect niche for train travel--densely populated and just the right size geographically for trains to outperform planes and automibles. Plus, Amtrak owns the track, thus it controls the amount of traffic and when it can run. There are other corridors, such as Seattle/Portland/Vancouver; Chicago/Milwaukee, etc. but, in nearly all the cases, the big problem is that Amtrak doesn't own the tracks. If what you suggest were to happen, my guess is that the subsidy would go even higher. If the track time was available from the host railroad, the increased ticket revenue from an extra train on a route would quickly be depleted by the cost of the additional train sets and employees needed along with equipment maintenance. If new track had to be built from scratch for Amtrak, today's subsidy would seem but a pittance. In the case of long distance trains, I don't think that the volume of passengers is there to justify additional train sets. In certain seasons, some LD trains do sell out, but, as a whole, the speed of the trains combined with price/time comparisons of air vs rail vs car limits Amtrak's passenger growth. Jay
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