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Quentin
QUOTE: Originally posted by edblysard You'd never get support to nationalize the freight roads, the stockholders in most class 1s are at last getting a profit from their investment. The railroads themselves would form such a lobby group as you have never seen before. And I doubt very seriously the goverment could affored to buy all the tracks in the first place. While roadways, streets and the interstate system do need maintainance, you would not belive the amount needed for a railroad track. Just keeping all the switches greased would require a small army. But making a nationalized passanger system out of amtrak make sense, and paying freight roads a flat fee for every usage of their tracks, along with some incentive to expedite amtrak trains across their system would work. Heck, we taxpayers have subsidised airlines with free property for airports, no taxes on said land, financial aid/bailouts for years, and outside the rail industry, no one seems to balk. The cost of the land for a airport must far exceed any depot built, and when it wants to, the goverment can sell almost anything to the public. We sure didnt seem to care when the feds handed billions over to the airlines after 9/11, why should we mind the goverment paying for and running our passanger trains? And with the goverment running it, the cost to the rider would at some point come down, if only to make sure there were enought passengers to justify the trains in the first place. Trust me on this, the one thing goverment employees are really really good at is keeping and protecting their jobs. Ed
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
QUOTE: Originally posted by jgoose1 Back to the Future I don'tthink that anyone would have built the interstate high\way system if they had even a slight thought of what it would cost to own. Rail based systems operating at moderate speeds don't cost anywhere as much to own and can carry five times the passenger density of an interstate on one third of the realestate. We just need to send some one with a good box of Crayons to Washington to explain that to John McCain.
QUOTE: Originally posted by motorman10 I disagree. They do not need to discontinue the transcontinentals. They need more of them, as a matter of fact. I ride the train often and to mee it is a conveniece. IT just needs to be looked at as a public service. All local systems are looked at that way. Any system that carries people on a scheduled basis will lose money. The airlines now are losing money because their profit margins are really lean and even freight is not enough to subsidize the loss.
QUOTE: Originally posted by RudyRockvilleMD The plan proposed by President Bush is too much like the privitization scheme for the British railroads. The problem with leaving the staffing of the stations to the states is many stations are only stops such as Harpers Ferry, WV and Benson, AZ. So it is difficult to see how having the states pick up the staffing of the lineside stations would help Amtrak financially
QUOTE: Originally posted by edblysard But making a nationalized passanger system out of amtrak make sense, and paying freight roads a flat fee for every usage of their tracks, along with some incentive to expedite amtrak trains across their system would work. Ed
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