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Raton Pass returns from the dead.

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Raton Pass returns from the dead.
Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Friday, August 1, 2014 6:48 AM
Like many fans, I love the ride on the ATSF route from Trinidad to Albuquerque. It is a great sadness that the BNSF no longer sends freight this way, preferring an extra 300 miles via Amarillo. That’s what they think of the Raton Pass route. Its days seem numbered. Not much of an ‘ace in the hole’ as an ATSF president once described it. Conventional wisdom has it that a) no railroad in its right mind would run trains over 3+% grades b) if you want more capacity, you invest in expanding your preferred route, not rehabilitating less attractive secondary ones and c) there’s no traffic from Denver south and west that can’t be handled on other routes, and no intermediate traffic. So Raton Pass is worthless. Hard to argue with this. What could change? The great thing about the future is no one can foresee it. Who knows what the world will be like in 20 years’ time? Let us suppose that the US economy grows by about 3% a year (quite poor historically) and that railroad traffic increases at the same rate, possibly more because of Interstate congestion. That means in 2035 there will be at least twice as many trains needed as today. Major conurbations may well be a railroad nightmare. Routes that avoid them might be a great idea, e.g. Mexico-El Paso to points north and west avoiding the Los Angeles basin. UP might love this. Even if the ATSF main is triple tracked east from San Bernadino, as Rose hinted, it might be out of capacity in places. So, points b) and c) above begin to lose their power. But what about a)? Surely 3+% grades are a killer? Well, what you might want to do is consider what investment might be needed to remove the 3+% grades. These run for about 10 miles only at the top of the pass. The only way to eliminate them is to tunnel. By my reckoning, you only need a 2.5 mile tunnel to keep grades at less than 2.2%- which is what the ATSF routes from the Pacific already have. You would need a few extra miles of new right of way. The most ambitious plan might be a new route starting about 2.5 miles south of Raton, and heading up Dillon Canyon for about 10 miles. (Looks like there used to be a ROW some way up here?), a two and a half mile tunnel down at 1.2% on to Gallinas Parkway and a further 3 miles at 2.2% down get you back onto the old route. All that underused capacity from Trinidad to Newton back in play. With capital budgets measured in billions per annum, this is not that expensive surely? The new track around the pass would surely cost little more than the second track in Abo Canyon. Railroad tunnels are not cheap, and are unfamiliar railroad projects in the US, but building them is common outside the US. 2.5 miles is a tiddler. You need to deal with Glorieta eastbound as well, but whilst the ruling grade from Chico to Glorieta is 3%, the average is only 2.5%, so maybe this is not too hard. Here’s my timeline: 2018. President Clinton abandons Amtrak long distance trains. 2020. Someone in Fort Worth suggests reopening the mothballed Raton route and gets fired. 2025. An ‘experimental’ three trains each way per day are initiated to relieve capacity through Amarillo. Some upgrading is done. 2030. Things are pretty desperate, and more traffic is heading this way. 2035. Proposal to build a diversion accepted. 2036 Warbonnet paint scheme revived. 2038. Project completed, and double tracking to Kansas City underway. Conclusion: Better start the environmental review process now. Fantasy? Quite probably. But some serious questions all the same a) Did the ATSF ever consider flattening Raton? (I have half a recollection that in the early 1950s there was talk of using nuclear devices to remove inconvenient mountains, including Raton, and there was an idea to extend the Cimarron valley line to avoid Raton altogether) b) What would the cost be of rehabilitating from Belen to Newton via Raton, vs. yet another main track via Amarillo- each one gets more expensive, I would have thought? c) If traffic does double in twenty years, how will the railroad network change, and where will terminal capacity be found? Apologies if I haven't been paying attention and these topics have been done to death already.
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Posted by Los Angeles Rams Guy on Friday, August 1, 2014 7:02 AM

I'm a big supporter of the Raton Pass route as it really is the key link for future passenger rail service from Denver south and westward.  In the freight world, the problem with Raton isn't the grades.  Rather, it's the bridges that won't allow clearance for double-stack trains.  Get those modified and then you have something. 

I personally never have understood why BNSF has never initiated intermodal service between Southern California and Denver when predecessor ATSF did it and did it quite well. 

 

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Posted by samfp1943 on Friday, August 1, 2014 8:31 PM

Note to Dreyfusshudson:

Funny you should mention it in your post [snipped] "...That means in 2035 there will be at least twice as many trains needed as today. Major conurbations may well be a railroad nightmare. Routes that avoid them might be a great idea, e.g. Mexico-El Paso to points north and west avoiding the Los Angeles basin. UP might love this. Even if the ATSF main is triple tracked east from San Bernadino,.." [snipped]

The TRAINSNewswire of this date contains the following headline: "...Proposed Mexican rail line would link El Paso area with Pacific Coast..."

By William P. Diven
Published: August 1, 2014

     FTA:"...EL PASO, Texas — A joint Chinese-Mexican venture revealed this week might bring rails from the Pacific Ocean to the international border opposite Union Pacific's newly opened terminal and intermodal yard in southern New Mexico just across the state line from El Paso.
(Further from the article):"...During a trade mission to Beijing, the governors of Chihuahua and Nayarit signed contracts with the project developer China Hyway Group Limited and other investors to link a Pacific port with the U.S. border by rail, according to a report Wednesday in newspaper El Diário de Chihuahua. Work is to begin later this year, the report says, quoting Chihuahua Gov. César Duarte Jáquez.

According to the article the proposed deep water port has yet to be constructed.  

(And an additional note from the article):"...Left out of the trade mission and apparently cut out of the deal is Ferromex, Mexico's largest railroad, whose trains already traverse a roughly 1,000-mile route from Nayarit to Juárez. Its Guadalajara-Nogales line connects to Cíudad Chihuahua via the Copper Canyon route through the Sierra Madre. From there it's a straight shot north across the desert to Juárez and interchange with the BNSF Railway and UP in El Paso..."

Additional information is available at the TRAINSNewswire 

The article mentiones no time frame for its start.. To construct and dredge a deep water port will be very time consuming. The there will be the political interplay. The majors are Ferromex, Union Pacific (Fm's largest stock holder) and then BNSF, and KCS de M.  Not to mention the inter mural politics of Mexico and the USA... Should provide a lot of interesting interplay, before the first train rolls... And THEN.. Who'll build the power? Whistling

 

 


 

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Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Saturday, August 2, 2014 7:20 AM

It seems to me that any passenger service over the Pass would need to take about 15 minutes from Trinidad to Raton, to be competitive on to Albuquerque, rather than the (very enjoyable) hour at present, so even more radical engineering than I was suggesting would be required. 

With respect to clearances, I don't recall that many bridges between Albuquerque and Trinidad?- tunnel apart of course. Can't speak for La Junta to Kansas City- it's dark then! 

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Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Saturday, August 2, 2014 7:59 AM

Thanks- I missed this. Haverty of KCS believed that the Mexico coast could provide better access to some parts of the US than Los Angeles.

As a comment noted, this would mean US Dollars heading to China being reinvested in the Mexican economy. I suppose the point about Chinese money is that it's probably a lot easier to invest in infrastructure in Mexico than the US, where, I imagine  there would be strong local hence political opposition to large infrastructure projects, especially in highly populated areas.

With regard to how capacity might expand within the US, I came across a Frailey blog which says 'OUR RAILROADS ARE A MESS'. It's a huge thread and everyone seems to agree with the starting premise, but as far as I can see, despite  a lot of inputs from very knowledgeable people with expertise in railroads politics and finance, no solution emerged. No one saw a technological or political breakthrough which might help.

It seems to me that the only solution is from the Railroads themselves, providing they are earning enough to make the massive, game changing investments in capacity which may be needed. There are already examples; the BNSF's triple tracking of Cajon, the doubling of Abo Canyon and now Vaughn, and the doubling of the GN west of Minot, not to mention flood defences along the Missouri; the UP is doubling the Sunset route. NS and CSX don't seem to be following suit at the same level in terms of capacity, though they have invested to allow doublestacks.

I can see this process continuing, and I suspect plans are made, but the invest button will only be pressed when there's a crisis looming or happening, probably always too late. In todays' financial environment, it's a brave man or a fool that places big bets on future trends.

I can see expansion happening in low population areas, but anything near big cities, and most especially terminal capacity looks difficult, and that's where some novel thinking is going to be needed. 

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Posted by mudchicken on Saturday, August 2, 2014 9:18 AM

Dreyfusshudson

With respect to clearances, I don't recall that many bridges between Albuquerque and Trinidad?- tunnel apart of course. Can't speak for La Junta to Kansas City- it's dark then! 

Watrous and Canyoncito (North of Lamy)

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Saturday, August 2, 2014 11:06 AM

Consider dealing with the grades by merely adding "More Power !", now that DPUs are practical and widely used.  Increased operating expenses, yes, but avoids the huge capital expense and time needed to build it and make it pay (kind of like the railroad's version of the oil companies' "How do we move the crude oil ?" problem - by train today, or wait for the pipeline to be built in who-knows-how-many years ?).

See also these 2 articles:

"Shorter plus steeper equals faster plus cheaper - accent is now on speed, not tonnage"
by LeMassena, Robert A., from Trains, August 1970, p. 44
(Magazine Index keywords: Line  location )

  

"Is gross ton miles per train hour valid? - is the ratio a valid indicator of efficiency?"
by LeMassena, Robert A., from Trains, April 1970, p. 37
(Magazine Index keywords: analysis  operation ) 

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Posted by ndbprr on Saturday, August 2, 2014 3:27 PM
Businesses used to use ten years as justification for payback. As capital got tighter it moved to five years. Now it is two years. Suggest a need 35 years into the future as critical and see how long it takes to be fired. None of the current management will be around and stockholders want results not reduction in stock value or dividends. Besides the world may not be here then.
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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Saturday, August 2, 2014 4:34 PM

Yep - which becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, because without long-term investment, some essential things don't get built or done (or maybe government has to step in ?) . . . Sigh

Except for a guy named Warren Buffett who runs a company called Berkshire Hathaway, and who famously has a long-term view of things.  A very recent headline:

"Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. posted a record quarterly profit, a 41% jump tied to gains at its railroad, energy and other businesses as the U.S. economy continued its recovery." (From http://online.wsj.com/articles/berkshire-hathaway-profit-rises-1406928279?mod=yahoo_hs; emphasis added - PDN)   

Oh yeah - about that railroad: it's BNSF, which owns the subject Raton Pass line . . .  Whistling

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Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Sunday, August 3, 2014 8:53 AM
Many Thanks- a quick check on Google Earth gave 10 in all between Albuquerque and Trinidad including 5 bridges carrying I25. Sounds like significant but not serious money to fix- you have to want to do it. Unless the builders of I 25 foresaw double stacks!
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Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Sunday, August 3, 2014 9:19 AM
Thanks for your two comments, also ndbprr. I understand the conundrum, but am perhaps slightly more optimistic that RR management will find a way through. I think providing there is an actual or looming crisis, railroads will invest in capacity. The projects will take a year or three to come to fruition, and chaos will increase in that period, but things will eventually get done. So, if capacity demand continues to increase, there will be a continual state of actual or near meltdown in parts of the system. But it will work. Just about. Will Mr Buffet's successors at Berkshire Hathaway grit their teeth and act more pre-emptively than Wall Street? We shall see. It seems the big RRs can invest $5B/year with current earnings without anyone complaining. The nightmare scenario is if they need say $10-$20B a year just to stay afloat in a sea of rising demand. Federal Government investment in infrastructure of any kind does not seem to be a vote winner, so this might happen.
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Posted by BaltACD on Sunday, August 3, 2014 11:41 AM

Does anyone know what the required overhead clearance was for Interstate bridges over railroads was when the Interstate system was originated?  What is the requirement today?

In my area some I-70 bridges were rebuilt recently over a spur that has limited freight traffic - during the period that both old and new bridges existed - it appeared that the new one was about 5 feet higher than the old.

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Posted by mudchicken on Sunday, August 3, 2014 3:51 PM

(1) It's the two steel truss structures, none of the I-25 or roadway structures. The problem on the two in question is with the knee and gusset plates on laterals inside the trusses. The Canyoncito structure is older and less forgiving than the more massive Watrous structure that survived a helicopter crash among other indignities.

(2) Balt: depends slightly on the state you're in, but in general 22'-6" by the model law of 1958. Some states allowed and grandfathered-in as low as 19'-10" for some bridge elements. East coast (older) has more grandfathered structures. Some states, like Iowa, got really sloppy with the regulations and are just now starting to regain consciousness.

(*) If the threat of catenary appears, you're looking at 24'-6" minimum which has been in place since the mid 1980's after FRA, DOT and the railroad Ch.E's came up with a national MOU.

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Sunday, August 3, 2014 5:13 PM

Just a few examples:

Washington State DOT says 22'-6" for existing bridges, 23'-6" for new ones - see Exhibit 720-1, Bridge Vertical Clearances on Page 720-6 (page 6 of 14):

http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/publications/manuals/fulltext/m22-01/720.pdf 

North Carolina is 23'-0" to 23'-6" - see page 12 of 31 at: https://connect.ncdot.gov/projects/roadway/roadwaydesignadministrativedocuments/bridge%20policy.pdf 

NS is 23'-0" - see: http://www.nscorp.com/content/dam/nscorp/industrial-development/track-design-information/Plan_7-1_Clearance_Diagram.pdf 

I suspect that the national MOU that MC mentioned above was developed without much consideration of the possibility of domestic double-stacked containers (9'-6" high each) under 50 KV catenary.  Someplace I recall 27' being the desired figure there, and I'd argue for 33' (see NS diagram above, note at the top about greater clearances for high-voltage wires, etc.), and be prepared to settle for about 30' - I think that's about what the remaining tunnels on the ex-Southern Rwy. CNO&TP ("Rat Hole" line) were bored out to during the several upgrades of that line since the 1960's.  It would be interesting to see what Amtrak has been insisting on for highway overpass rebuilds up and down the NorthEast Corridor recently.  

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"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
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Posted by mudchicken on Sunday, August 3, 2014 6:00 PM

An awful lot of that extra vertical clearance is an allowance for surfacing over time. (undercutting every surfacing cycle would be amazingly ex$pen$ive) Amazing how often the rubber tired tribe designs to the absolute bare minimum clearance standard without any "cushion".

IIRC, the structures on the Glorietta Sub could squeak through two 8.5 x 8.5 sea-cans, but add at least one 9.5 foot container and alarm bells went off in the clearance bureau side of the centralized dispatchers office, wherever it resided. I don't know if BNSF could ever find another Asst.Supt/RFE/TM to run that place like Glenn Powers could in the 1980's. The guy was amazing as a mountain territory operations expert.

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Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Monday, August 4, 2014 4:54 AM
Many thanks for the clarification on the bridges you referred to- I've now correctly identified both of them.
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Posted by dakotafred on Monday, August 4, 2014 6:57 AM

Paul_D_North_Jr

Consider dealing with the grades by merely adding "More Power !", now that DPUs are practical and widely used.  Increased operating expenses, yes, but avoids the huge capital expense and time needed to build it and make it pay (kind of like the railroad's version of the oil companies' "How do we move the crude oil ?" problem - by train today, or wait for the pipeline to be built in who-knows-how-many years ?).

So sensible, instead of slavishly confining allocation of resources to the best profile. Besides realizing savings over the cost of new construction, you miss all the environmental-impact and NIMBY hassles!

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Monday, August 4, 2014 8:36 AM

dakotafred

So sensible, instead of slavishly confining allocation of resources to the best profile. Besides realizing savings over the cost of new construction, you miss all the environmental-impact and NIMBY hassles!

Oh yes, as sensible as restoring that rusted hulk of a Model T out in the back forty because you are worried your new car/pickup might have to go to the shop one day.

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Posted by Dreyfusshudson on Tuesday, August 5, 2014 3:42 PM
Not sure I understand this last post: Dakotafred argues the operational inconvenience and costs of DPUs are more sensible than infrastructure investments; PNWRMNM seems to take the sensible idea and piggyback that restoring a model T Ford (Raton)on the off chance that the new car (Amarillo route) breaks down is not sensible. If this is correct, it is not what I was suggesting. I was arguing that since I think it likely that RR traffic will at least double in the next 20 years, there will be capacity crunches everywhere, and major investments needed. In this scenario, it would make sense to evaluate if Raton was a better bet for further investments than even more capacity through Amarillo. No point at all in renovating Raton now. I've no idea how the numbers would crunch, still less how they might look in the different world of 2025. As long as Raton remains open, it is worth asking the question. Once it's gone, it's gone forever is a fair bet. Raton would only come back on the basis of real capacity need, and yes, to begin with it would use DPUs. There seems to be a general aversion to infrastructure investment. Sure, if you place a big bet and get it wrong, that's a financial disaster, and there are plenty of examples. But duct tape and band aid only holds things together for so long; and the longer you dither, the more the full solution costs. So there is a case for boldness, (Raton is a poor example), and I believe that with anticipated population + economic growth, bold investments are vital. Two further points come to mind. Firstly, it seems to me one of the reasons BNSF doesn't need Raton is that it can now send Denver- Pacific traffic via Moffat, Soldier Summit, Donner, Tehachapi, Inside Gateway etc- no easy ride. Never quite understood why they do this- easier to pay up and let someone else worry about upkeep of 1500 miles of track? Secondly, what if Raton Pass was already flattened? Would BNSF still not use it? Would they say 'We have to have a route from Denver to Texas, and this has spare capacity to Amarillo, so we can use this and close Raton to save maintaining 250 miles of worn out Railroad? Hopefully someone in Forth Worth has good answers to these questions.
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Posted by PNWRMNM on Tuesday, August 5, 2014 8:36 PM

Dreyfusshudson

 I was arguing that since I think it likely that RR traffic will at least double in the next 20 years, there will be capacity crunches everywhere, and major investments needed. In this scenario, it would make sense to evaluate if Raton was a better bet for further investments than even more capacity through Amarillo. No point at all in renovating Raton now. I've no idea how the numbers would crunch, still less how they might look in the different world of 2025. 

Hopefully someone in Forth Worth has good answers to these questions.

They do.

Mac

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Posted by MidlandMike on Tuesday, August 5, 2014 9:52 PM

dakotafred

Paul_D_North_Jr

Consider dealing with the grades by merely adding "More Power !", now that DPUs are practical and widely used.  Increased operating expenses, yes, but avoids the huge capital expense and time needed to build it and make it pay (kind of like the railroad's version of the oil companies' "How do we move the crude oil ?" problem - by train today, or wait for the pipeline to be built in who-knows-how-many years ?).

So sensible, instead of slavishly confining allocation of resources to the best profile. Besides realizing savings over the cost of new construction, you miss all the environmental-impact and NIMBY hassles!

It's hard to say how an EIS process will come out.  Sometimes on something like adding sidings/new track, you get a finding of no significant impact (FONSI).  However, sometimes simply adding more trains to existing track turns into a dust-up like the CN takeover of the EJ&E.

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Posted by K. P. Harrier on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 2:51 PM

This all sounds like a cat and mouse game!

The situation is similar to the service Phoenix, AZ has found itself in.

UP has basically mothballed the Phoenix Line’s west portion, and is two-tracking the Sunset Route that is away from Phoenix.

Even signals are gone …

… but grade crossing devices are in place.

Photos shot March 21, 2012

If it wasn’t for Amtrak Nos. 3 and 4, the Raton line would probably be in the same shape as UP’s western Phoenix line.

The cat and mouse aspect is if the States fork some saving money in, well and fine, and BNSF will use the line, though not in great amount.  If not, the line will stay without trains.  If Amtrak over Raton moves over to the freight line to the south, Raton likely would be as UP’s western Phoenix line … STILL in tack, but signal-less and weed invested.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- K.P.’s absolute “theorem” from early, early childhood that he has seen over and over and over again: Those that CAUSE a problem in the first place will act the most violently if questioned or exposed.

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Posted by mudchicken on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 4:19 PM

Can't speak for Arizona, but it's old news that NM welched badly on the original deal, especially when the feds kept refusing to be their personal money tree. BNSF got burned and started playing hardball. nuf sed.

 

(As if the weirdoes dancing on the cistern at Riberra (allegedly for people on the trains who might see them for a nanosecond) and the "art" billboards weren't strange enough to be state funded projects)

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Posted by diningcar on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 7:23 PM
MC and I have much personal experience on the La Junta - Albuquerque line, me earlier from 1957. 1st the State of NM owns the track and ROW from the East switch at Lamy to Belen; and had a contract to buy all of the track and ROW from near Trinidad to their connection at Lamy. All of this commitment from the Governor Richardson Administration. The State determined, under a new administration, that they did not want to fulfill their obligation for the additional purchase (Lamy - Trinidad) and BNSF let them out of this obligation (with other commitments from NM). More later as my wife just arrived and we have dinner date.
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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 8:09 PM

MidlandMike
It's hard to say how an EIS process will come out.  Sometimes on something like adding sidings/new track, you get a finding of no significant impact (FONSI).  However, sometimes simply adding more trains to existing track turns into a dust-up like the CN takeover of the EJ&E.

Good point.  A few years back I took a seminar on the new NPDES stormwater runoff permit rules, and was surprised to find that there's basically an exemption for widening an existing utility (RR) line and right-of-way (roads, too), as long as you're careful about it, don't have anything unusually sensitive in the work zone, and do get the right permits for stream crossings, floodplain encroachments, and the like.  (Contrast with UP's sad tale of woe along one of the western desert river gorges about 10 years ago [east of San Diego, as best as I can recall] - too-extensive and zealous 'restoration' [construction] work of a washout situation without even consulting the local environmental permitting officials led to a world of hurt.  To its credit, UP's engineering staff learned and handled the big Oregon mudslide and emergency restoration about 4 years ago in a much better and amicable way for all concerned.]  

In contrast, the only reason all the environmental reviews happened with CN+EJ&E merger was the merger itself - that required US governmental approval by the STB, which was enough to trigger the EIS process.  Had CN already owned EJ&E and no merger approval was necessary, the added trains and trackage would have needed only minimal permitting - same as the multiple-tracking of Cajon Pass and the rest of the BNSF TransCon, UP's of the Sunset Route, and earlier its lines across Nebraska, as well as the joint Powder River Basin lines a few years back. 

The big eastern roads - NS and CSX - in some places have the fortunate circumstance that they're just replacing/ reinstalling a 2nd or 3rd main track or siding that was removed a few decades ago.  As such, the environmental impact is obviously minimal - little or no new earth disturbance, stream or wetland encroachments, etc. - so the permitting process is much less burdensome. 

- Paul North. 

"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
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Posted by diningcar on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 9:57 PM
Back from dinner The Raton line route was Santa Fe's original line to California. As the freight business grew this line was not able to be competitive because of the grades and it's lengthy route to the now developing south Texas freight business. In 1908 the Belen Cutoff (present Transcon) was opened for operation and most of the freight business used it. The Raton line retained some freight but was primarily the passenger route to California. Comes Amtrak and the Raton line becomes less significant to Santa Fe. Then the merger with BN created better opportunities to route the heavy coal trains and other Denver and southward freight through Las Animas Jct. to Amarillo with the empty coal trains and northward freight using the Amarillo - Dalhart - Trinidad line. This brief overview may solicit follow-up questions which are welcome. It is my personal observation and belief that there is no current motivation for BNSF to invest in that part of the line which they own between La Junta and Lamy. From La Junta east they have an interest that will remain viable for their business.
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Posted by MidlandMike on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 10:27 PM

Paul, as you know, but perhaps many railfans don't realize, the EIS involves more than things such as frogs.  They include "people" issues and cultural impacts.  There is also opportunity for public comment, and those Chicagoland suburbanites were fired up.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Wednesday, August 6, 2014 10:36 PM

Looking at the ex-SP line west of Pheonix, one has to wonder why they did not retain it for directional running, rather than double track the main.  If something that close is not retained, then I can imagine how much the Raton line is unwanted.  It also shows how UP is much quicker to dump an Amtrak route than BNSF.

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Posted by K. P. Harrier on Thursday, August 7, 2014 3:00 AM

diningcar (8-6):

Two questions:

ONE:  Technically, and in comprehendible terms, which ex-AT&SF route is shorter, through Raton or Amarillo?

TWO:  Somewhere down the road of time, traffic volumes on the Transcon will become intolerable, pushing the maximum traffic volume possible for two-tracks.  Do you see BNSF perceiving it more economical to route some eastbound traffic down Raton and east, or triple-tracking the Transcon?

MidlandMike (8-6):

The Phoenix line is about 43 miles longer than the more direct Sunset Route.  In the Phoenix area there is a proliferation of 90 degree curves (i.e., from north-south to east-west, as an example).

There are also many grade crossings.

And, it would be slow going through Phoenix.

So, the choice was obvious for UP … Two-track the actual Sunset Route.

Take care all,

K.P.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- K.P.’s absolute “theorem” from early, early childhood that he has seen over and over and over again: Those that CAUSE a problem in the first place will act the most violently if questioned or exposed.

  • Member since
    March 2016
  • From: Burbank IL (near Clearing)
  • 13,540 posts
Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, August 7, 2014 7:05 AM

I'm not sure if I'm reading the prior postings correctly, but I get the impression that those who tout the Raton Pass route as a reliever for congestion on the southern route don't realize that the two lines come together near Albuquerque and there is only one route to the west.  Routing freights over Raton to relieve congestion on the southern route doesn't address the issue of congestion further west.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul

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