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So much for Amtraks high speed in Michigan

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So much for Amtraks high speed in Michigan
Posted by ndbprr on Thursday, March 15, 2012 7:57 PM
A week after Amtrak hit a truck and derailed at 95 mph in Michigan the speed limit was raised to 110 and reduced travel time by 10 minutes. Now NS had put a 25 mph speed limit on the track increasing the trip time by an hour and a half. So much for high speed rail on existing trakage.
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Posted by MidlandMike on Thursday, March 15, 2012 9:34 PM

The 110 mph line is owned by Amtrak, and is west of Kalamazoo.  NS owns the track east of K'zoo.  The State of Michigan (with fed help) is in the process of buying NS's section of track.  In the interim, the state is working with NS to reduce slow order sections.  Its a work in progress.

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So much for Amtraks high speed in Michigan
Posted by blue streak 1 on Friday, March 16, 2012 12:34 AM

Appears NS is playing very hardball with state of Michigan?  For whatever reason Michigan  is not using the HSR grant money to purchase the NS branch?. 

 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-track-situation-slows-down-highspeed-amtrak-service-in-michigan-20120315,0,799505.story?track=rss

 

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Posted by oltmannd on Friday, March 16, 2012 7:57 AM

My hunch is NS is trying to get Michigan to get moving on purchasing the line.  I'd also guess that the current deal between Amtrak and NS puts them is on the hook for the incremental maintenance cost between freight and passenger speed.  There is no through freight on this line, so "branchline" speeds are enough for the local freight traffic.

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Posted by dakotafred on Friday, March 16, 2012 5:35 PM

Agree with Don that this looks like a rather transparent negotiating tactic and wonder if it cannot be challenged as such (and otherwise unjustifiable).

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Friday, March 16, 2012 5:50 PM

Dakota,

NS has a very smart legal department. They would not take this course if they were not on solid ground. I am glad NS has the balls to stick it to "em. ATK is a drain on the freight carriers.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Friday, March 16, 2012 7:47 PM

PNWRMNM

Dakota,

... ATK is a drain on the freight carriers.

Mac McCulloch

According to an NS news release (11/14/07) the federal government authorized $95 million toward their $151 million Heartland Corridor clearance project, and yet you say the government railroad is a drain on this railroad.  Very interesting.

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Friday, March 16, 2012 7:55 PM

Dakota,

I said ATK is a drain on the freight carriers. It is. The Heartland Corridor is a double stack clearance project that has nothing to do with ATK.

Mac

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Posted by MidlandMike on Saturday, March 17, 2012 12:47 PM

PNWRMNM

Dakota,

I said ATK is a drain on the freight carriers. It is. The Heartland Corridor is a double stack clearance project that has nothing to do with ATK.

Mac

I thought you were talking about who's draining who.  NS used $90+ million dollars of federal money (from the same taxpayer pot of money that supports ATK) for the Heartland Corridor.  Whether you call it mutual draining or mutual benefit depends on your point of view, but both NS and ATK were involved. 

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Posted by n012944 on Saturday, March 17, 2012 1:16 PM

MidlandMike

 

 PNWRMNM:

 

Dakota,

... ATK is a drain on the freight carriers.

Mac McCulloch

 

 

According to an NS news release (11/14/07) the federal government authorized $95 million toward their $151 million Heartland Corridor clearance project, and yet you say the government railroad is a drain on this railroad.  Very interesting.

 

One has nothing to do with the other.

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Posted by DwightBranch on Saturday, March 17, 2012 3:32 PM

Dakotafred you are right, the freight carriers, who in most cases received  free land and subsidies for building track, are statutorily required to give passenger traffic priority, and that includes maintaining their track to passenger train standards. When the former B&M/ Guilford tried to cut the speed limits on the Connecticut Valley line in Massachusetts it was condemned under eminent domain and sold to the Central Vermont/ New England Central. When they later tried to impose speed limits on the line between Boston and Portland ME the courts blocked it and forced them to raise speed limits for passenger trains to the normal 70-79 MPH. A few years back the Bush Administration (of all people) forced CSX to stop putting Amtrak in the hole for locals and coal trains by threatening fines and jail time.

If the freight railroads want to be free of their obligation to provide public passenger transportation then they should buy land and build their own tracks. No offers? That is what I thought.

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Saturday, March 17, 2012 4:23 PM

Dwight,

The obligation to which you refer applies only to routes where the carriers were running passenger trains as of ATK day.

I suspect this line segment did not then have passenger trains on it.

Mac McCulloch

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Posted by schlimm on Saturday, March 17, 2012 5:37 PM

PNWRMNM

Dwight,

The obligation to which you refer applies only to routes where the carriers were running passenger trains as of ATK day.

I suspect this line segment did not then have passenger trains on it.

Mac McCulloch

I believe the CHI-DET route (NS, ex-PC, ex-NYC/MC) was one of the initial ones on May 1, 1971.

Ex-Wolverine 14, 17 ChicagoBuffalo (via Detroit) Amtrak operated; DetroitBuffalo segment discontinued

Ex Michigan 355 Detroit to Chicago Amtrak operated

Ex Twilight Limited 356 Chicago to Detroit      "

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Posted by oltmannd on Saturday, March 17, 2012 5:51 PM

It was an original route, but current deal is different than 5/1/71 deal, I think.  NS seems like they are trying to get the state off center on buying the line.

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Posted by n012944 on Saturday, March 17, 2012 6:27 PM

DwightBranch

Dakotafred you are right, the freight carriers, who in most cases received  free land and subsidies for building track, are statutorily required to give passenger traffic priority, and that includes maintaining their track to passenger train standards. 

Incorrect.  Unless you have knowledge of each railroads contract with Amtrak, which are far different than the ones signed in 1971, don't say what railroads are required to do......The Guilford/B&M deal fell under the 1971 contracts.  You are also incorrect about fines and jail time for CSX......

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Posted by DwightBranch on Saturday, March 17, 2012 6:39 PM

n012944

 

 DwightBranch:

 

Dakotafred you are right, the freight carriers, who in most cases received  free land and subsidies for building track, are statutorily required to give passenger traffic priority, and that includes maintaining their track to passenger train standards. 

 

 

Incorrect.  Unless you have knowledge of each railroads contract with Amtrak, which are far different than the ones signed in 1971, don't say what railroads are required to do......The Guilford/B&M deal fell under the 1971 contracts.  You are also incorrect about fines and jail time for CSX......

There was an article in Trains about seven years ago written by Don Phillips that outlined what I talked about regarding the Justice Department, who finally enforced the provisions in the law at their disposal enforcing the passenger-train first provision, and CSX. The quote I remember was something top management at CSX said to their top operating people, overheard by a reporter, after meeting with DOJ staff, which was: "Bury the hatchet".  And the article stated that UP would be next. I would link to it but I have had no luck searching the records here.

 

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Posted by n012944 on Saturday, March 17, 2012 7:53 PM

Don't believe everything that you read......

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Posted by schlimm on Saturday, March 17, 2012 10:36 PM

"NS spokesman Pidgeon told MLive his comment in the Tribune was accurate. 'If any passenger rail entity wants to run on this track, then it is unreasonable to expect Norfolk Southern to pay for those improvements,' he said.

He said Amtrak and Norfolk-Southern in 2010 agreed that passenger rail could operate on these lines as safety allowed and Norfolk Southern would be able to impose speed restrictions without penalty."

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Posted by dakotafred on Sunday, March 18, 2012 7:06 AM

schlimm

"NS spokesman Pidgeon told MLive his comment in the Tribune was accurate. 'If any passenger rail entity wants to run on this track, then it is unreasonable to expect Norfolk Southern to pay for those improvements,' he said.

He said Amtrak and Norfolk-Southern in 2010 agreed that passenger rail could operate on these lines as safety allowed and Norfolk Southern would be able to impose speed restrictions without penalty."

Schlimm: Good citation here, seeming to show NS on solid ground. But where is it from?

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Posted by n012944 on Sunday, March 18, 2012 1:41 PM

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Posted by schlimm on Sunday, March 18, 2012 5:28 PM

[

 

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Posted by schlimm on Sunday, March 18, 2012 5:34 PM

dakotafred

 

 schlimm:

 

"NS spokesman Pidgeon told MLive his comment in the Tribune was accurate. 'If any passenger rail entity wants to run on this track, then it is unreasonable to expect Norfolk Southern to pay for those improvements,' he said.

He said Amtrak and Norfolk-Southern in 2010 agreed that passenger rail could operate on these lines as safety allowed and Norfolk Southern would be able to impose speed restrictions without penalty."

 

 

Schlimm: Good citation here, seeming to show NS on solid ground. But where is it from?

Sorry.  I forgot to include the link.  I Googled Amtrak-NS Michigan service contracts and got the article which was in something called "MLive" which must be a Michigan source.

 

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Posted by MidlandMike on Sunday, March 18, 2012 7:58 PM

Schlimm,  Thanks for the reference.  "MLive" is the common website for virtually all the larger Michigan city newspapers outside of Detroit.

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Posted by BaltACD on Sunday, March 18, 2012 8:58 PM

Be careful what you ask for - you may get it!

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Posted by DwightBranch on Sunday, March 18, 2012 9:10 PM

BaltACD

Be careful what you ask for - you may get it!

Indeed- FRA could come in and impose 10 MPH on freight trains, for example, or embargo it entirely, if it is that unsafe.

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Posted by Mike O on Sunday, March 18, 2012 10:26 PM

A major railroad has a small legal department? I find that hard to believe. 

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Posted by n012944 on Monday, March 19, 2012 2:12 AM

DwightBranch

 

 BaltACD:

 

Be careful what you ask for - you may get it!

 

 

Indeed- FRA could come in and impose 10 MPH on freight trains, for example, or embargo it entirely, if it is that unsafe.

 

Sigh.  Please tell me where anyone is saying that it is "that unsafe".  A 30 mph slow order is a long way from a line being embargoed because of its condition.  I

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Monday, March 19, 2012 7:50 AM

You are making this more complicated than it is. NS has posted track for 25 MPH. That means that when the FRA track inspector shows up he can only write up violations of the FRA Class II standard. That condition applies regardless of the general condition of the track.

If NS had been maintaining to Class IV before restricting speed to 25 MPH, the vast majority of the track will physically meet Class IV standards, so the FRA will have a hard time finding any violation of Class II standards. In the longer run, NS will presumably fix only those things that are violation of Class II standards and the overall condition of the line will deteriorate to Class II,  This deterioration will take years, depending on begining condtion and tonnage over the line. 

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Posted by DwightBranch on Monday, March 19, 2012 12:47 PM

n012944

 

 DwightBranch:

 

 

 BaltACD:

 

Be careful what you ask for - you may get it!

 

 

Indeed- FRA could come in and impose 10 MPH on freight trains, for example, or embargo it entirely, if it is that unsafe.

 

 

 

Sigh.  Please tell me where anyone is saying that it is "that unsafe".  A 30 mph slow order is a long way from a line being embargoed because of its condition.  I

I am getting tired of your patronizing tone (somewhere in this thread you told someone else to "educate himself") especially when you seem clueless as to the subtext of what is being discussed (that NS is using this speed reduction to try to extort money from Amtrak and/or Michigan). Either learn to read between the lines or please keep your opinions to yourself.

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Posted by n012944 on Monday, March 19, 2012 2:09 PM

DwightBranch

 

 

 

I am getting tired of your patronizing tone (somewhere in this thread you told someone else to "educate himself") especially when you seem clueless as to the subtext of what is being discussed (that NS is using this speed reduction to try to extort money from Amtrak and/or Michigan). Either learn to read between the lines or please keep your opinions to yourself.

I am well aware of what the NS is doing. However you seem clueless about the process and legality of what the NS is doing.  You also seem clueless towards the Amtrak's contracts with the class ones, and what is required of them.  As for keeping my opinions to myself, good luck with that.  Maybe one should be a member of a forum for a little more than a week and half before dictating policy.

BTW please find the quote on this thread where I told someone to "educate himself"......

An "expensive model collector"

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