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Excellent article on Amtrak's Subsidy

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Excellent article on Amtrak's Subsidy
Posted by CMStPnP on Friday, January 11, 2013 6:10 PM

Very well written article on Amtrak's Subsidy.      This should get a good debate going.....

http://dc.streetsblog.org/2012/09/21/reminder-amtrak-subsidies-pale-in-comparison-to-highway-subsidies/

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Posted by John WR on Friday, January 11, 2013 6:47 PM

This is a rebuttal to Representative John Mica's "holy jihad" argument.  Its deja vu all over again.  

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:02 AM

John WR

This is a rebuttal to Representative John Mica's "holy jihad" argument.  Its deja vu all over again.  

How is this "excellent" article in any way a rebuttal to Representative Mica?

Mr. Mica claims that that the Amtrak subsidy is multiples of alternative common carrier modes on a "per ticket" basis.  Some of us have reasoned that the Amtrak subsidy is high on a passenger-mile basis.  One can dicker and bicker about what boundary should be drawn and about all of the "hidden" subsidies, but I have long reasoned that the high rate of the Amtrak subsidy is an impediment to getting more public money to get more trains.  The assertion had been made that I am obdurate with respect to "the facts" and it had been suggested in criticism that I can "go ahead and believe whatever I want", but the way I see it, a more cost-effective Amtrak will be a more politicially popular Amtrak that could attract higher dollar amounts of support.

The argument is made (Chairman Boardman) that based on "fairness", if the Highway Program receives 10 billion in General Revenue to make up to gas tax shortfall, Amtrak should maybe get 10 billion, or perhaps people should halt any complaints about Amtrak getting north of 1 billion?

This is the fairness concern of having 3 children in the family and the unsolvable geometry problem of dividing the remaining part of the apple pie in 3 identical portions, using the measurement tools available to the Ancient Greeks and to small kids.  So if highways get a certain dollar amount, it is "unfair" that trains do not receive the same dollar amount?

What if Federal highway spending supports 25 percent of total passenger miles on Interstate highways alone, leaving out the substantial freight on those highways, and if we followed the European model, the same amount of money spent on passenger trains would support 5 percent of total passenger miles?  Would anyone, ever, admit that passenger trains are a particularly expensive mode in terms of work product per unit of public expenditure?  Or is it all about if Kid Bro gets a dessert treat, I will be in a child's sulk if don't get the same thing in the same amount?

Go ahead and reason that Representative Mica is wrong and that highways getting a higher dollar amount is unfair.  "We", broadly in the passenger train advocacy community, have been reasoning that way for over 40 years, and it is not working.  And yes, I had been a child member of NARP, paying dues from the sweat of pushing a mower over neighbor's lawns, and I once thought as a child, believed in trains as a child, wrote letters to the Congressional delegation as a child, advocated for trains as a child, and over 40 years later, I am a vocal proponent of putting the childish ways of supporting trains behind us.

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by John WR on Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:28 AM

Paul Milenkovic
How is this "excellent" article in any way a rebuttal to Representative Mica?

Paul,

I contend that the article is intended as a rebuttal to John Mica.  I do not contend that you or like minded people will find it persuasive.  

I call it "deja vu all over again" because it was written last September and before the recent election.  The pro and con arguments have been made; I see no reason to simply repeat them.  

You observe that it is desirable to have "a more cost effective Amtrak."  In fact recent figures show a historically small deficit for Amtrak.  You may not find this entirely satisfactory but I hope you will agree it is a step in the right direction.  

Where I disagree most with John Mica is his use of "Holy Jihad" rhetoric.  I find that language inappropriate.  You yourself do not use such language.  I hope that indicates we agree on this particular point.  

John

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Saturday, January 12, 2013 10:32 AM

John WR

Paul Milenkovic
How is this "excellent" article in any way a rebuttal to Representative Mica?

Paul,

I contend that the article is intended as a rebuttal to John Mica.  I do not contend that you or like minded people will find it persuasive.  

And who are those like-minded people?  Plato?  Aristotle?  The Honorable Herbert Kohl, the now retired Senator from Wisconsin?

When Mr. Kohl, a staunch backer of trains whom I had personally thanked for that support at a "meet and greet", was first running for that office, his opponent accused Mr. Kohl, a wealthy businessman who then owned a regional supermarket chain, of selling coffee cake for much more money to the US Army than what he charged in his store.  In an on-camera political debate, he was prepared to answer this charge.  When challenged on "coffee cake gate", he pulled out a Kohl's Foods coffee cake and a defense-contract coffee cake.  The defense-contract cake was much larger, the kind of institutional package used for serving large groups of people economically, such as the soldiers an Army barracks, rather than the smaller family-sized package sold locally. 

He patiently explained that the Army coffee cake cost more per cake but that it was actually a good value on a per serving basis, and the independent-minded voters in the State of Wisconsin who place reason above blind party loyalty found his argument persuasive. 

So how is the rebuttal to John Mica, so purportedly unpersuasive to me and the like-minded unpersuasables that a person gives up trying, any different than State Representative Engeleiter's breathless charge that businessman Herb Kohl was overcharging the Army for coffee cake, which was dramatically refuted and ending up costing her the election in Wisconsin? 

The highways are a more expensive cake than Amtrak that nevertheless costs less "per serving."  For all I know, John Mica is a terrible person who opposes Amtrak for the most venal of reasons.  But he isn't any less wrong about highway and passenger train spending comparison as Mr. Kohl was about the cakes he sold.

And repeating Yogi Berra's famous scrambled aphorism is supposed to be the "time out" sign that we are "not supposed to reopen the debate" on this question?  Not being open to persuasion goes in both directions, the coffee cake question sank Susan Engeleiter's political career, and it is undermining passenger train advocacy. 

 

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Saturday, January 12, 2013 10:39 AM

Paul M.

While I am not, and doubt I ever will be a passenger train supporter, I must tell you I enjoy your well reasoned, well written pieces. This is a classic.

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Posted by John WR on Saturday, January 12, 2013 6:11 PM

Paul Milenkovic
And who are those like-minded people?  Plato?  Aristotle?  The Honorable Herbert Kohl, the now retired Senator from Wisconsin?

Paul,  

I said "You or like minded people."  The phrase "like minded" refers back to you and means people who agree with you on this issue.  

Representative Mica has every right to his opinion.  However, I regard his phrase "Holy Jihad against Amtrak" as inappropriate.  

 I don't mean to suggest that debate should be closed on this or any other issue.  But if we simply repeat ourselves the conversation becomes tiresome for other people.  

The coffee cake issue puzzles me.  When I was in the Army there was plenty of coffee but no coffee cake.

John

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Posted by CMStPnP on Sunday, January 13, 2013 9:19 AM

You guys should really read the whole article next time before you debate it.     That was the intent of me posting the link to the article to begin with.

According to the article we have 230 million rail passengers in this country sharing Amtrak infrastructure of that amount only 30 million passengers belong to Amtrak.    To me that is a fairly persuasive argument that $1.7 Billion, largely applied to Amtrak Infrastructure is not a huge subsidy and not all that different from the Interstate Highway subsidy.

Further the article points out that Amtrak is mandated by Congress to operate it's long distance train network and so that is not a free business decision.    Is it fair to hold Amtrak financially responsible for that mandate?

Those are the two major points I gleened from the article which neither one of you addressed above.   Perhaps you missed them?

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Posted by schlimm on Sunday, January 13, 2013 10:04 AM

CMStPnP
Those are the two major points I gleened from the article which neither one of you addressed above.   Perhaps you missed them?

Personal agendas can often sidetrack a discussion of issues.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Sunday, January 13, 2013 10:15 AM

CMStPnP

According to the article we have 230 million rail passengers in this country sharing Amtrak infrastructure of that amount only 30 million passengers belong to Amtrak.    To me that is a fairly persuasive argument that $1.7 Billion, largely applied to Amtrak Infrastructure is not a huge subsidy and not all that different from the Interstate Highway subsidy.

Further the article points out that Amtrak is mandated by Congress to operate it's long distance train network and so that is not a free business decision

Is it fair to hold Amtrak financially responsible for that mandate?

These 2 points are very important in our debates and have been ignored too long by our posters including myself/.
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Posted by schlimm on Sunday, January 13, 2013 1:25 PM

The first point in particular alters the "numbers" that some repeatedly use as the basis for insisting that passenger rail, as seen in aggregated Amtrak figures, is very cost-ineffective compared to other transportation modes.  The second point suggests that although elimination of LD routes is unlikely,  reductions of those losses should be the goal.  After all, with politically limited funding available, it is wise to use those funds where they can benefit the most people.

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Posted by John WR on Sunday, January 13, 2013 4:54 PM

schlimm
The second point suggests that although elimination of LD routes is unlikely,  reductions of those losses should be the goal.  After all, with politically limited funding available, it is wise to use those funds where they can benefit the most people.

Yes, but sometimes the politics of the situation limits the ability to do this.  It has been shown that were the Sunset Limited (which loses a lot of money) to operate daily instead of three times a week losses would be significantly reduced.  However, Amtrak is unable to do that because of political reasons.  

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Posted by ontheBNSF on Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:01 PM

John WR

schlimm
The second point suggests that although elimination of LD routes is unlikely,  reductions of those losses should be the goal.  After all, with politically limited funding available, it is wise to use those funds where they can benefit the most people.

Yes, but sometimes the politics of the situation limits the ability to do this.  It has been shown that were the Sunset Limited (which loses a lot of money) to operate daily instead of three times a week losses would be significantly reduced.  However, Amtrak is unable to do that because of political reasons.  

Be grateful that our benevolent overlords allow us to have anything. I don't care which side of the political isle you sit whether it be left, right, or up and down. The fact of the matter is that the status quo is always going to limit rail and will make it worse off. Enjoy Amtrak before it is destroyed and enjoy the freight rail system before it suffers the same fate as passenger rail. Freight rail like passenger rail will be regulated out of existence in the name of "environmental protection" and "fairness".  Why can I say this?, because the EPA keeps raising emission standards and will do so to the point of making freight rail uneconomical. Re-regulation is also in the works as well. Uneconomical PTC systems are going to be shoved down their throats as well.  As for high speed rail never going to be built that is why the timelines they are setting are several years down the road. 

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Posted by schlimm on Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:18 PM

OntheBNSF: Be grateful that our benevolent overlords allow us to have anything. I don't care which side of the political isle you sit whether it be left, right, or up and down. The fact of the matter is that the status quo is always going to limit rail and will make it worse off. Enjoy Amtrak before it is destroyed and enjoy the freight rail system before it suffers the same fate as passenger rail. Freight rail like passenger rail will be regulated out of existence in the name of "environmental protection" and "fairness".  Why can I say this?, because the EPA keeps raising emission standards and will do so to the point of making freight rail uneconomical. Re-regulation is also in the works as well. Uneconomical PTC systems are going to be shoved down their throats as well.  As for high speed rail never going to be built that is why the timelines they are setting are several years down the road. 

Interesting, if rather gloomy and politically-charged speculations.  Any sources?

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Posted by ontheBNSF on Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:44 PM

schlimm

OntheBNSF: Be grateful that our benevolent overlords allow us to have anything. I don't care which side of the political isle you sit whether it be left, right, or up and down. The fact of the matter is that the status quo is always going to limit rail and will make it worse off. Enjoy Amtrak before it is destroyed and enjoy the freight rail system before it suffers the same fate as passenger rail. Freight rail like passenger rail will be regulated out of existence in the name of "environmental protection" and "fairness".  Why can I say this?, because the EPA keeps raising emission standards and will do so to the point of making freight rail uneconomical. Re-regulation is also in the works as well. Uneconomical PTC systems are going to be shoved down their throats as well.  As for high speed rail never going to be built that is why the timelines they are setting are several years down the road. 

Interesting, if rather gloomy and politically-charged speculations.  Any sources?

You can look some of them up yourself. The Epa is going to increase emission standards via Tier 4 emission standards. These emission standards will greatly reduce horsepower and require more locomotives than before thus increasing equipment cost and maintenance. PTC systems are very expensive and railroads are unwilling to upgrade themselves. Re-regulation  has been discussed time and time again. If these measures are implemented then it will have the effect of driving up costs and making it far less economical which would cause shipper to use other modes of transit. High speed rail projects were consistently rejected and the ones that are in the works are in the time period of decades to build.

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Posted by John WR on Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:49 PM

ontheBNSF
Be grateful that our benevolent overlords allow us to have anything. I don't care which side of the political isle you sit whether it be left, right, or up and down. The fact of the matter is that the status quo is always going to limit rail and will make it worse off.

It is true that the Federal Government came close to destroying our rail system.  But somehow at the last minute they were overcome by common sense and passed the Staggers act.  But I am hopeful that Congress will see the light.  They won't force large amounts of freight onto our interstates because right now those interstates are crumbling and they don't know where to find the money to repair them.  But that remains more of a hope than a belief.  

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, January 14, 2013 7:21 AM

CMStPnP

According to the article we have 230 million rail passengers in this country sharing Amtrak infrastructure of that amount only 30 million passengers belong to Amtrak.    To me that is a fairly persuasive argument that $1.7 Billion, largely applied to Amtrak Infrastructure is not a huge subsidy and not all that different from the Interstate Highway subsidy.

That's one of the biggest problems with the analysis.  If you want the avg subsidy per rider, you have to add in ALL the direct subsidies.  You can't just count just the Amtrak subsidy and divide by the total rail passenger count.  Farebox recovery in the commuter rail world is generally 50% or less.  And, the avg fare for commuter trips is much less than the avg Amtrak fare - for obvious reasons.  Should we add in all the riders of the NYC TA 1,2, and 3 trains because they happen to run through Penn Station?

There is a hint that there is a cross-subsidy from Amtrak to the commuter rail world and that is used as justification for Amtrak's subsidy.  If it exists, Amtrak should use it as justification to up their tenant fees!

The problem isn't whether there are subsidies  - it's how effective they are AND how effective they could be.  If my kid came home from school  with a C and I knew he was capable of a B+, why would I listen to his pleas that it's okay because lots of other kids got Cs?

Well, Amtrak is capable of Bs and they have been getting Ds.

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, January 14, 2013 10:07 AM

I don't know about that.  Considering the political climate, demands by labor, and much else that is the environment Amtrak works in, I think they deserve at least a C+ or B-.   And the political, social, and economic environment is very hard to change.

On this subsidy business.   And here I run smack into conflict with the kind of thinking of Sam1:

Doesn't the once a year vacation traveler deserve a subsidy somewhat in the same order of magnitude, if not quite as great, as the daily commuter, regardless if the daily commuter is using Amtrak between Phily and NY or Old Orchard Beach and Boston or one of the commuter operations?

What about the once a lifetime college student seeing the country as  his graduation present?

And I do believe Amtrak does on occasion save lives.

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Posted by schlimm on Monday, January 14, 2013 11:28 AM

daveklepper

I don't know about that.  Considering the political climate, demands by labor, and much else that is the environment Amtrak works in, I think they deserve at least a C+ or B-.   And the political, social, and economic environment is very hard to change.

On this subsidy business.   And here I run smack into conflict with the kind of thinking of Sam1:

Doesn't the once a year vacation traveler deserve a subsidy somewhat in the same order of magnitude, if not quite as great, as the daily commuter, regardless if the daily commuter is using Amtrak between Phily and NY or Old Orchard Beach and Boston or one of the commuter operations?

What about the once a lifetime college student seeing the country as  his graduation present?

And I do believe Amtrak does on occasion save lives.

Framed in that way, Dave, I tend to agree with you, and that represents a definite compromised view for me.  Maybe not so much really deserve, but maybe it is part of the cost of building a sufficient constituency to get on with the main show.

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Posted by ontheBNSF on Monday, January 14, 2013 12:31 PM

The fundamental problem with ANY government run mode of transportation is that there will always be conflict. You either end up with a one size fits all solution. Imagine if the government was in the shoe business people would always be in conflict over what kinds of shoes are produced, what materials they are made from, and what size etc. vs. buying shoes today on the market where there is no conflict and people simply choose the shoes they find desirable. IF the government ran shoes and either maintained a monopoly on shoes or semimonopoly then people would have to vote for shoes and the majority would get what it wants. Or you vote for politicians who think will produce the kind of shoes you want. With the government being transportation it ends becoming a political football and only the majority ever gets what they want. Either that you vote for people who think have your interest in mind People always fight argue over the merits of one mode of transport or another rather than simply choosing the mode that they find has the most merit. Eminent domain only serves to make this worse. Markets aren't utopian ideas you deal with them almost everyday and without conflict. Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, and to lesser extent Europe have more of a market for transportation than we do and as such have less conflict than we do. Would I privatize sidewalks or city streets? Not in the traditional sense but I would make property owners, residents upon streets, or HOA's the owners of such properties or retain ownership of them by cities and simply require that if you use them you pay for the full cost of using them. Just my .02

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, January 14, 2013 12:58 PM

schlimm

daveklepper

I don't know about that.  Considering the political climate, demands by labor, and much else that is the environment Amtrak works in, I think they deserve at least a C+ or B-.   And the political, social, and economic environment is very hard to change.

On this subsidy business.   And here I run smack into conflict with the kind of thinking of Sam1:

Doesn't the once a year vacation traveler deserve a subsidy somewhat in the same order of magnitude, if not quite as great, as the daily commuter, regardless if the daily commuter is using Amtrak between Phily and NY or Old Orchard Beach and Boston or one of the commuter operations?

What about the once a lifetime college student seeing the country as  his graduation present?

And I do believe Amtrak does on occasion save lives.

Framed in that way, Dave, I tend to agree with you, and that represents a definite compromised view for me.  Maybe not so much really deserve, but maybe it is part of the cost of building a sufficient constituency to get on with the main show.

If only Amtrak's passion for what they do had risen to the level of their ardent supporters, we wouldn't be having this discussion.  We'd be arguing over whether the next 180 mph link should go from Harrisburg to Pittsburgh or Charlotte to Atlanta.

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Posted by John WR on Monday, January 14, 2013 2:29 PM

schlimm
Framed in that way, Dave, I tend to agree with you, and that represents a definite compromised view for me.  Maybe not so much really deserve, but maybe it is part of the cost of building a sufficient constituency to get on with the main show.

There is another issue here which in my view deserves to be considered:  Should the United States, as a matter of national policy, have a national passenger rail system?  If we believe there should be a national passenger rail system then I think it follows that we need to maintain a political consensus for that system and to maintain that consensus we need the long distance routes even at the cost of their subsidy.  

The opposing view is that we do not need a national system at all.  Those states that want to can provide for their own people and, if they choose, get together with neighboring states.  At best that would give us a broken skein of individual routes disconnected from each other.  And we would loose much of Amtrak's intercity service, especially where is crosses one or more state lines.  There would be no national consensus that passenger rail is needed and no rail service based on that consensus.  

Perhaps passenger rail service should go the way of travel by canal  boat and stagecoach.  But until we are willing to say that I think we need Amtrak.   

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Posted by ontheBNSF on Monday, January 14, 2013 6:20 PM

John WR

schlimm
Framed in that way, Dave, I tend to agree with you, and that represents a definite compromised view for me.  Maybe not so much really deserve, but maybe it is part of the cost of building a sufficient constituency to get on with the main show.

There is another issue here which in my view deserves to be considered:  Should the United States, as a matter of national policy, have a national passenger rail system?  If we believe there should be a national passenger rail system then I think it follows that we need to maintain a political consensus for that system and to maintain that consensus we need the long distance routes even at the cost of their subsidy.  

The opposing view is that we do not need a national system at all.  Those states that want to can provide for their own people and, if they choose, get together with neighboring states.  At best that would give us a broken skein of individual routes disconnected from each other.  And we would loose much of Amtrak's intercity service, especially where is crosses one or more state lines.  There would be no national consensus that passenger rail is needed and no rail service based on that consensus.  

Perhaps passenger rail service should go the way of travel by canal  boat and stagecoach.  But until we are willing to say that I think we need Amtrak.   

Actually you guys are seeing it all wrong. It isn't a matter of which mode of transport the government run own it is matter of whether there is any merit to government in running ANY mode of transport. Why would rail go the path of the stagecoach or canal the passenger train still remains a popular way to travel in Japan and Taiwan.

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Posted by John WR on Monday, January 14, 2013 7:17 PM

ontheBNSF
Actually you guys are seeing it all wrong. It isn't a matter of which mode of transport the government run own it is matter of whether there is any merit to government in running ANY mode of transport. Why would rail go the path of the stagecoach or canal the passenger train still remains a popular way to travel in Japan and Taiwan.

I would argue that the government runs our road system.  Although I don't have a government provided driver for my car any time I drive the roads are all patrolled by government supplied police officers and all signs and traffic signals are installed and maintained by government.  And of course, the government builds the roads.  If we are going to discuss whether or not the government should run any mode of transport certainly we should start with the road system which is by far the largest system. 

If the government were to stop running Amtrak I can't imagine who would pick up the passenger service.  After all, for over a hundred years the history of passenger railroads is a history of increasing public activism and government control.  Ultimately the railroads were required to continue it despite the fact that it ran at a loss and sometimes at a very large loss.  Why would any private company want to buy into that risk?

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Posted by ontheBNSF on Monday, January 14, 2013 7:25 PM

John WR

ontheBNSF
Actually you guys are seeing it all wrong. It isn't a matter of which mode of transport the government run own it is matter of whether there is any merit to government in running ANY mode of transport. Why would rail go the path of the stagecoach or canal the passenger train still remains a popular way to travel in Japan and Taiwan.

I would argue that the government runs our road system.  Although I don't have a government provided driver for my car any time I drive the roads are all patrolled by government supplied police officers and all signs and traffic signals are installed and maintained by government.  And of course, the government builds the roads.  If we are going to discuss whether or not the government should run any mode of transport certainly we should start with the road system which is by far the largest system. 

If the government were to stop running Amtrak I can't imagine who would pick up the passenger service.  After all, for over a hundred years the history of passenger railroads is a history of increasing public activism and government control.  Ultimately the railroads were required to continue it despite the fact that it ran at a loss and sometimes at a very large loss.  Why would any private company want to buy into that risk?

You just nailed the point I am trying to argue. MY point is that all modes of transport should be privately owned. Roads are definitely a place to start and airports could definitely be privately owned as well. My point is that private infrastructure is the way. If there was actual level playing field for transportation I think passenger rail would make a comeback and so would city transit systems. When advocate private transport I don't necessarily advocate automobiles.

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Posted by John WR on Monday, January 14, 2013 8:31 PM

ontheBNSF
MY point is that all modes of transport should be privately owned. Roads are definitely a place to start and airports could definitely be privately owned as well.

One guy who would agree with you is Jon Corzine, the former Governor of New Jersey.  He proposed that the state monitize the New Jersey Turnpike.  What he meant was that we should sell it and use the money to pay the State's outstanding debt.  The idea never got anywhere because of strong opposition.  

Today with E-Z pass technology we could sell the whole Eisenhower Defense and Interstate Highway System.  The owners would fund it by putting tolls on it.  For people without E-Z pass transponders a camera would take a picture of their car and license plate and they would be billed for use of the road plus a service charge to cover the extra cost.  Perhaps the time is ripe.  The Interstates are crumbling to pieces and Congress doesn't have the money to repair them.

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Posted by schlimm on Monday, January 14, 2013 10:40 PM

ontheBNSF
MY point is that all modes of transport should be privately owned. Roads are definitely a place to start and airports could definitely be privately owned as well. My point is that private infrastructure is the way.

Why is it "the way?"    Roads, transit, airports?   For whose benefit?

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Posted by ontheBNSF on Monday, January 14, 2013 11:09 PM

schlimm

ontheBNSF
MY point is that all modes of transport should be privately owned. Roads are definitely a place to start and airports could definitely be privately owned as well. My point is that private infrastructure is the way.

Why is it "the way?"    Roads, transit, airports?   For whose benefit?

I view it is "The way" because individual consumers would choose the mode of transit they find to have the most merit and government wouldn't pick winners and loosers like it has for years. Transportation operators would finally be able to operate independently not subject to the political whims of the day. I would also include as part of privatization ending eminent domain laws this would greatly increase private property rights. Privatization would open the way for technological development that has possibly been held back. Competition would drive down costs. Rather than the services costing tax payer they would pay dividends to tax payers. Large bureaucracies would be eliminated. The need for new infrastructure would encourage building of such new infrastructure and job creation as a result. There are other benefits but those are what comes to the top of my head

Railroad to Freedom

  • Member since
    June 2002
  • 20,096 posts
Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:15 AM

All Interstates private toll roads under your plan?

  • Member since
    January 2001
  • From: Atlanta
  • 11,971 posts
Posted by oltmannd on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 7:01 AM

You MIGHT be able to come up with a scheme to toll the rural portions of the interstates using RFID tags (EZPASS), but tolling the suburban/urban routes would only chase traffic off onto less safe alternate routes.

You might even just toll trucks and let auto passengers go free.  Everyone pays some fuel tax, but trucks pay for the extra-heavy construction, moderate grades and additional wear and tear.  A little freight to passenger cross subsidy would be a good match for the reality on the rail side (freight roads provide Amtrak slots at less than full cost - nobody ever tries to figure this hidden subsidy into Amtrak's costs.  I wonder why?)

But, it all is a non-starter.  There is no ground-swell of political support for this any more than there is for greatly changing Amtrak's route structure.  It's fun to talk about, though.

I'm still convinced that the best, and perhaps only route to expanded passenger rail service is for Amtrak to get its act together. If the subsidy per passenger on the LD routes can be whittled down to a respectable size, then Amtrak ceases to be an easy target for scoring political points and has a chance to be taken seriously.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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