Quentin
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox Railroads got relativly few government subsidies in the last century while other modes of transportation got lots of government. However, railroads and canals got large government grants in the nineteenth centurary. The theory was that transportation is fundamental to goverment goals so new modes of transportation are kick started with government money. This has happened in the US and all of the other developed countries. The question is not if you are going to use tax money but where you are going to spend it. Widening I81 or expanding the NS from Chattanogga to Enola?
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal This is what the pro-Amtrak crowd can't seem to get into their thick skulls. You cannot compare highway and airport spending with Amtrak spending, because they are completely different entities. And you cannot compare highway and airport spending with rail infrastructure spending because the rail lines are privately owned while airports and highways are publicly owned. Why is this so hard to understand? Anyone who continues to play the disparate entities is completely off their rocker, and that includes politicians who spout the same lines.
QUOTE: AMTRAK IS A PUBLICLY OWNED OPERATING COMPANY THAT JUST HAPPENS TO OWN THE NEC BUT OTHERWISE IS ALLOWED TO INTRUDE ONTO PRIVATE PROPERTY OF THE CLASS I RAILROADS. APPARENTLY, THE PRICE OF TICKETS TO RIDE AMTRAK DOES NOT COVER A SIGNIFICANT PORTION OF IT'S COSTS, OTHERWISE THEY WOULDN'T KEEP BEGGING FOR MORE AND MORE SUBSIDIES. IF AMTRAK CHARGED A TICKET PRICE THAT COVERED IT'S OPERATING COSTS, I GUESS NO ONE COULD AFFORD TO RIDE IT. THAT SHOULD TELL YOU SOMETHING!
QUOTE: The only way you can begin to compare tax expenditures on rail with those on highways and airports is if the nation's rail infrastructure is separated from the operating companies, ala AT&T or ala RailTrak. Then and only then can you start to have legitimate comparisons of what is spent on what.
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
QUOTE: Originally posted by tomtrain As I understand it, mathematics will tell you a minority interest doesn't stand a chance against a majority. Is there a way to take rail (passenger or freight) to a different plane? Is there a way that intercity passenger trains can become an essential small element of marketers' larger actions?
I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
Jock Ellis Cumming, GA US of A Georgia Association of Railroad Passengers
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal This is what the pro-Amtrak crowd can't seem to get into their thick skulls. THE PRICE OF TICKETS TO RIDE AMTRAK DOES NOT COVER A SIGNIFICANT PORTION OF IT'S COSTS, OTHERWISE THEY WOULDN'T KEEP BEGGING FOR MORE AND MORE SUBSIDIES. IF AMTRAK CHARGED A TICKET PRICE THAT COVERED IT'S OPERATING COSTS, I GUESS NO ONE COULD AFFORD TO RIDE IT. THAT SHOULD TELL YOU SOMETHING!
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
QUOTE: Originally posted by slotracer Speaking of flaws, "A Major portion of americans want Amtrak to exist"....if this was so, many mor people would be voting with their dollars and riding it, and it would not require massive subsidies to buy down the cost of operating the system o that ticketrs can be sold at anywhere near market value....to the minute percentage of the population that will ride it. I don't mean to sound insulting, just getting to the fact that times have moved on, people have moved on, for right or wrong, yet we continue to fund something that the population, and times have mostly rejected. If I had my way, TV's would be abolished in facor of old radios with great shows to listen to, apple pies would be scratch made and cool in open windows and Auto teechnology would go back a number of decades, people would live at a slower pace and not need to get everywhere by air so fast, neighbors would know each other and a sense of community would return (Yes unbelievably I am a republican) but I realize these great things are unfortunately past, and I/We cannot make them return on a mass scale. I can scratch make a pie and get involved in my community, but I cannot make the passenger train vibrant and popular again......I reaize those things I can help change and those things beyond my control is all.......
QUOTE: Originally posted by M.W. Hemphill Andrew, in order: 1. Of course! But where will it get the money to buy them? Amtrak would love to have more of its own lines like the MC and the NEC, but it will need to get the capital from the taxpayer, first. 2. Yes, if freight was forbidden to use the lines. It would be just like a light-rail or subway system, conceptually. 3. The freight railroads were averse to an illegal taking of private property without due compensation -- a basic constitutional right in every Western country. The "competition" would sit on top of a theft. For example, despite the fact that I don't know squat about the retail grocery business, I bet I can make a lot of money selling groceries anyway, if I can take over 10% of the space in the local supermarket to stock my inventory and not have to pay a fair-market rent on the space. Of course, I'll need my own police force to make my appropriation of that space possible. 4. Sure. You'd probably have to amend the U.S. Constitution to make it stick. A majority of the public would have to be in favor of it, first. Not very likely at present, because it would open the door to government seizure of many types of private property. If, in the future, the U.S. becomes a country where most of the wealth is owned by a minority of the people, then the majority might change its mind and change the laws to redistribute the wealth. That is EXACTLY the issue every time every tax law is changed, along with a lot of other law in the U.S., including land-use law, labor law, you name. 5. If Amtrak owned its own lines, and got into the freight business, it would then be a freight railroad and subject to STB regulation and have to prove public convenience and neccessity. It would then be subject to legal challenge because it would be sitting on top of a massive public subsidy to do that. It would be illegal, to put it mildly. The laws can always be changed. They often are. The public gets to do that every time it votes, either directly through referendum or indirectly by choosing representatives of its collective will. Be careful of what you wish for.
QUOTE: Originally posted by DSchmitt In $ per passenger-mile what is the subsidy for: Amtrack? All passenger rail? Highway?
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