Extensive Definition
The National Railroad Passenger Corporation,
doing
business as Amtrak reporting mark AMTK and
AMTZ, is a government-owned corporation that was organized on
May 1
1971, to
provide intercity
passenger
train service in the United
States. "Amtrak" is a portmanteau
of the words "American" and "track".
All of Amtrak's preferred
stock is owned by the U.S. federal government. The members of
its board of
directors are appointed by the
President of the United States and are subject to confirmation
by the United
States Senate. Common stock
was issued in 1971 to railroads that contributed capital and
equipment; its current holders consider the stock to be worthless
but declined a 2002 buy-out offer by Amtrak.
Amtrak employs nearly 19,000 people. It operates
passenger service on 21,000 miles of track primarily owned by other
railroads connecting 500 destinations in 46 states. Some routes
serve Canada. In fiscal year
2006, Amtrak served 24.3 million passengers, a company record.
According to estimates for fiscal year 2007, Amtrak has served over
the 25 million passenger mark, a 6% increase from the previous
year.
History
Amtrak's origins are traceable to the sustained decline of private passenger rail services in the United States from about 1920 to 1970. In 1971, in response to the decline, Congress and the President created Amtrak. For its entire existence, the company has been subjected to political cross-winds and insufficiencies of capital resources and owned railway. Recent years have been among Amtrak's brightest; the corporation completed a significant rail project in the northeast in the early 2000s while its major competitors — particularly airlines — were affected by bankruptcies and rising fuel costs.Passenger rail service before Amtrak
From the middle 19th century until approximately
1920, travel from one city to another in the United States was
almost certainly by rail. By 1910, close to 100 per cent of
intercity passenger trips were by railroad. The rails and the
trains were owned and operated by private, for-profit
organizations. Approximately 65,000 railroad passenger cars
operated in 1929.
For a long time after 1920, passenger rail's
popularity diminished and there were a series of pullbacks and
tentative recoveries. Rail passenger revenues declined dramatically
between 1920 and 1934, By 1965, only 10,000 rail passenger cars
were in operation, 85% fewer than in 1929. Meanwhile, labor costs
advanced, and with them passenger fares, which discouraged
passenger traffic just as automobiles gained a foothold. Many
routes required beneficial pruning, but the ICC delayed action by
an average of eight months and when it did authorize modifications,
the ICC insisted that unsuccessful routes be merged with profitable
ones. Thus, fast, popular rail service was transformed into slow,
unpopular service. Local governments, far from providing needed
support to passenger rail, viewed rail infrastructure as a ready
source for property tax revenues. In one extreme example, in 1959
the
Great Northern Railroad, which owned about a third of one
percent (.34%) of the land in Lincoln
County, Montana, was assessed more than 91% of all school taxes
in the county. that rivaled and then surpassed the for-profit
network that the railroads had built in previous generations with
corporate capital and government land grants. All told between 1921
and 1955 governmental entities, using taxpayer money and in
response to taxpayer demand, financed more than $93 billion worth
of pavement, construction, and maintenance.
In the 1950s, a second and more formidable threat
appeared: affordable commercial aviation. Government at many levels
supported aviation. Governmental entities built sprawling urban and
suburban airports, and funded construction of highways to provide
access to the airports.
Rail Passenger Service Act
In the late 1960s, the end of passenger rail in the United States seemed near. First had come the requests for termination of services; now came the bankruptcy filings. The legendary Pullman Company became insolvent 1969, followed by the dominant railroad in the Northeastern United States, the Penn Central, in 1970. It now seemed that passenger rail's financial problems might bring down the railroad industry as a whole. Few in government wanted to be held responsible for the extinction of the passenger train, but another solution was necessary.In 1970, Congress passed and, in a surprise,
President Richard
Nixon signed into law, the
Rail Passenger Service Act. Proponents of the bill, led by the
National Association of Railroad Passengers (NARP), sought
government funding to assure the continuation of passenger trains.
They conceived the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (NRPC),
a hybrid public-private entity that would receive taxpayer funding
and assume operation of intercity passenger trains. The original
working brand name for NRPC was Railpax, but shortly before the
company started operating it was changed to Amtrak. There were
several key provisions:
- Any railroad operating intercity passenger service could contract with the NRPC, thereby joining the national system.
- Participating railroads bought into the NRPC using a formula based on their recent intercity passenger losses. The purchase price could be satisfied either by cash or rolling stock; in exchange, the railroads received NRPC common stock.
- Any participating railroad was freed of the obligation to operate intercity passenger service after May 1 1971, except for those services chosen by the Department of Transportation as part of a "basic system" of service and paid for by NRPC using its federal funds.
- Railroads that chose not to join the NRPC system were required to continue operating their existing passenger service until 1975 and thenceforth had to pursue the customary Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) approval process for any discontinuance or alteration to the service.
Nearly everyone involved expected the experiment
to be short-lived. The Nixon administration and many Washington
insiders viewed the NRPC as a politically expedient way for the
President and Congress to give passenger trains the one "last
hurrah" demanded by the public. They expected Amtrak to quietly
disappear as public interest waned. Proponents also hoped that
government intervention would be brief, but their view was that
Amtrak would soon support itself. Neither view has yet proved
correct. Popular support has allowed Amtrak to continue in
operation longer than critics imagined while financial results have
made infeasible a return to private operation.
Early days
Amtrak began operations May 1, 1971. The corporation was molded from the passenger rail operations of 20 out of 26 major railroads in operation at the time. The railroads contributed rolling stock, equipment, and capital. In return, they received approval to discontinue their passenger services, and at least some acquired common stock in Amtrak. Amtrak received no rail tracks or right-of-way at its inception. Railroads that shed passenger operations were expected to host Amtrak trains on their tracks, for a fee.There was a period of adjustment. All Amtrak's
routes were continuations of prior service, although Amtrak pruned
about half the passenger rail network. Of the 364 trains operated
previously, Amtrak only continued 182. On trains that continued, to
the extent possible, schedules were retained with only minor
changes from the
Official Guide of the Railways. Former names largely were
continued.
Several major corridors became freight-only,
including
New York Central Railroad's Water Level Route across New York and
Ohio and
Grand Trunk Western Railroad's Chicago to Detroit
service, although service soon returned to the Water Level Route
with introduction of the Lake
Shore Limited. Reduced passenger train schedules created
headaches. A 19-hour layover became necessary for eastbound travel
on the James
Whitcomb Riley between Chicago and
Newport News.
Amtrak inherited problems with stations, most
notably deferred
maintenance, and redundant facilities resulting from competing
companies that served the same areas. On the day it started, Amtrak
was given the responsibility of rerouting passenger trains from the
seven train terminals in Chicago (LaSalle,
Dearborn, Grand Central, Randolph, Chicago Northwestern Terminal,
Central, and Union) into just one, Union Station. In New York
Amtrak had to pay to maintain
Penn Station and Grand
Central Terminal because of the lack of track connections to
bring trains from upstate New York into Penn Station, a problem not
rectified until the building of the Empire
Connection in 1991. In many cases Amtrak had to abandon service
into the huge old Union
Stations such as Cincinnati, Saint Paul, Buffalo, Kansas City,
and Saint Louis and route trains into smaller Amtrak-built
facilities down the line (although Amtrak has pushed to start
reusing some of the old stations, most recently
Cincinnati Union Terminal, and
Kansas City Union Station).
On the other hand, merged operations presented
efficiencies such as the combination of three West Coast trains
into the Coast
Starlight, running from San
Diego to Seattle.
The Northeast
Corridor received an Inland
Route via Springfield,
Massachusetts,
thanks to support from New York,
Connecticut and
Massachusetts.
The
North Coast Hiawatha was implemented as a second Pacific
Northwest route. The Milwaukee
to St.
Louis Abraham
Lincoln and Prairie
State routes also commenced. The first all-new Amtrak route,
not counting the Coast Starlight, was the Vermonter/Washingtonian.
That route was inaugurated September 29
1972, along
Boston and Maine Railroad and Canadian
National Railway track that had last seen passenger service in
1966.
Amtrak soon had the opportunity to acquire
railway. Following the bankruptcy of several northeastern railroads
in the early 1970s, including Penn Central which owned and operated
the Northeast
Corridor, Congress passed the
Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976. A
large part was directed to the creation of a
Conrail, but in addition the law enabled transfer to Amtrak of
the Northeast Corridor railway from Boston,
Massachusetts to Washington,
D.C. That track became Amtrak's jewel. In subsequent years,
short route segments not needed for freight operations were
transferred to Amtrak. Nevertheless, in general, Amtrak remained
dependent on freight railroads for access to most of its
routes.
Amtrak fell far short of financial independence
in its first decade, but it did find modest success rebuilding
trade. Outside factors discouraged competing transport, such as
fuel shortages which increased costs of automobile and airline
travel, and strikes which disrupted airline operations. Investments
in Amtrak's track, equipment and information also made Amtrak more
relevant to America's transportation needs. Amtrak's ridership
increased from 16.6 million in 1972 to 21 million in 1981.
Leaders and political influences
Unlike many large businesses, subsequent to its
formation Amtrak has had only one active investor: the
U.S. government. Like most investors, the Federal government
has demanded a degree of accountability. Determination of
congressional funding and selection of Amtrak's leadership have
been infused with political considerations. As discussed below,
funding levels and capital support have varied over time.
Some members of Amtrak's board and executive
leadership have had little or no experience with railroads.
Conversely, Amtrak also has benefited from the interest of highly
motivated and politically-oriented public servants. For example, in
1982, former
Secretary of the Navy and retired Southern
Railway head W.
Graham Claytor Jr., brought his naval and railroad experience
to the job. Claytor had served briefly as an acting
Secretary of Transportation in the cabinet of President
Jimmy
Carter in 1979, and came out of retirement to lead Amtrak after
the disastrous financial results during the Carter administration
(1977-1981). He was recruited and strongly supported by John H.
Riley, an attorney who was the highly skilled head of the
Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) under the Reagan
Administration from 1983-1989. Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth
Dole also tacitly supported Amtrak. Claytor seemed to enjoy a
good relationship with the Congress and was perceived to have done
a good job, albeit through extensive use of short-term debt.
In the 1990s, Claytor was succeeded at Amtrak's
helm by a succession of career public servants. First, Thomas
Downs, who had overseen the
Union Station project in Washington, DC, which experienced
substantial delays and cost overruns, assumed the leadership. In
January, 1998, after Amtrak weathered a serious cash shortfall,
George
Warrington succeeded Downs. Warrington previously led Amtrak's
Northeast Corridor Business Unit.
Then in April, 2002, David L.
Gunn was selected as president. Gunn had a strong reputation as
a straightforward and experienced manager. He was not one to shy
away from conflict with others. Years earlier (between 1991 and
1994), Gunn's refusal to "do politics" put him at odds with the
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority board of
directors, which included representatives from the District of
Columbia and suburban jurisdictions in Maryland and
Virginia.
Gunn was an accomplished public servant and railroad person and his
successes before Amtrak earned him a great deal of credibility,
despite a sometimes-rough relationship with politicians and labor
unions.
Gunn was polite but direct in response to
congressional criticism of Amtrak, and his tenure was punctuated by
successes in reducing layers of management overhead in Amtrak and
streamlining operations. Amtrak's Board of Directors removed Gunn
on November 9
2005; he was
succeeded by David Hughes, Amtrak's Chief Engineer. Given Gunn's
solid performance, many Amtrak supporters feared that Gunn's
departure was Amtrak's death knell, although those fears have not
been realized. On August 29
2006, Alexander
Kummant was named as Gunn's permanent replacement effective
September 12
2006.
The list of Presidents of Amtrak includes:
- Roger Lewis 1971-.
- Paul Reistrup.
- Alan Stephenson Boyd -1982.
- W. Graham Claytor Jr. 1982-1993.
- Thomas Downs 1993-1998.
- George Warrington 1998-2002.
- David L. Gunn 2002-2005.
- David Hughes (interim) 2005-2006.
- Alexander Kummant 2006-present.
Modern history (1980s to present)
Ridership stagnated at roughly 20 million
passengers per year amid uncertain government aid from 1981 to
about 2000. Ridership increased in the 2000s after implementation
of capital improvements in the Northeast Corridor and rises in
automobile fuel costs. Since 2002, Amtrak has had four consecutive
years of record ridership. During fiscal year 2006, Amtrak reported
more than 24.3 million passengers, its highest total to date.
According to Amtrak, an average of more than 67,000 passengers ride
on up to 300 Amtrak trains per day.
In the 1990s, Amtrak's stated goal remained
operational self-sufficiency. By this time, however, Amtrak had a
large overhang of debt from years of underfunding, and in the
mid-1990s, Amtrak suffered through a serious cash crunch. To
resolve the crisis, Congress issued funding but instituted a
glide-path to financial self-sufficiency, excluding railroad
retirement tax act payments. Passengers became "guests" and there
were expansions into express freight work, but the financial plans
failed. Amtrak's inroads in express freight delivery created
additional friction with competing freight operators, including the
trucking industry.
Delivery was delayed of much anticipated high-speed trainsets for
the improved Acela
Express service, which promised to be a strong source of income
and favorable publicity along the Northeast
Corridor between Boston and Washington DC. Through the late
1990s and early 2000s, Amtrak could not add sufficient express
revenue or cut sufficient other services to break even. By 2002 it
was clear that Amtrak could not achieve self-sufficiency, but
Congress continued to authorize funding and released Amtrak from
the requirement.
Amtrak's leader at the time, David L.
Gunn, was polite but direct in response to congressional
criticism. In a departure from his predecessors' promises to make
Amtrak self-sufficient in the short term, Gunn argued that no form
of passenger transportation in the United States is self-sufficient
as the economy is currently structured. Highways, airports, and air
traffic control all require large government expenditures to build
and operate, coming from the
Highway Trust Fund and
Aviation Trust Fund paid for by user fees, highway fuel and
road taxes, and, in the case of the General
Fund, by people who own cars and do not.
Before a congressional hearing, Gunn answered a
demand by leading Amtrak critic Arizona Senator
John
McCain to eliminate all operating subsidies by asking the
Senator if he would also demand the same of the commuter airlines, upon whom the citizens
of Arizona are dependent. McCain, usually not at a loss for words
when debating Amtrak funding, did not reply.
Under Gunn, almost all the controversial express
business was eliminated. The practice of tolerating deferred
maintenance was reversed to eliminate a safety issue. The
policies improved labor relations to some extent, even as Amtrak's
ranks of unionized and salaried workers thinned.
Amtrak's current chief, Alexander Kummant, is
committed to operating a national rail network, and he does not
envision separating the Northeast corridor (the segment from Boston
to Richmond) under separate ownership. He has said that shedding
the system's long distance routes would amount to selling national
assets that are on par with national parks, and that Amtrak's
abandonment of these routes would be irreversible. Amtrak is
seeking annual congressional funding of $1 billion for ten years.
Kummant has stated that the investment is moderate in light of
Federal investment in other modes of transportation.
Public funding
Amtrak commenced operations in 1971 with $40
million in direct Federal aid, $100 million in Federally insured
loans, and a somewhat larger private contribution. Officials
expected that Amtrak would break even by 1974, but those
expectations proved unrealistic and annual direct Federal aid
reached a 17-year high in 1981 of $1.25 billion. During the
Reagan administration, appropriations were halved. By 1986,
Federal support fell to a decade low of $601 million, almost none
of which were capital appropriations. In the late 1980s and early
1990s, Congress continued the reductionist trend even while Amtrak
expenses held steady or rose. Amtrak was forced to borrow to meet
short-term operating needs, and by 1995 Amtrak was on the brink of
a cash crisis and was unable to continue to service its debts. In
response, in 1997 Congress authorized $5.2 billion for Amtrak over
the next five years — largely to complete the Acela capital project
— on the condition that Amtrak submit to the ultimatum of
self-sufficiency by 2003 or liquidation. Amtrak made financial
improvements during the period, but ultimately did not achieve self
sufficiency.
In the aftermath of the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, during which Amtrak kept
running while airlines were grounded, the value of a national
passenger rail service was briefly acknowledged in Washington. But
when Congress returned to work following the attacks, the airlines
received a $15 billion bailout package, and inattention toward
Amtrak resumed.
In 2004, a stalemate in Federal support of Amtrak
forced cutbacks in services and routes as well as resumption of
deferred maintenance. In fiscal 2004 and 2005, Congress
appropriated about $1.2 billion for Amtrak, $300 million more than
President George W.
Bush had requested. However, the company's board requested $1.8
billion through fiscal 2006, the majority of which (about $1.3
billion) would be used to bring infrastructure, rolling stock, and
motive power back to a state of good repair. In Congressional
testimony, the Department of Transportation's inspector-general
confirmed that Amtrak would need at least $1.4 billion to $1.5
billion in fiscal 2006 and $2 billion in fiscal 2007 just to
maintain the status quo. In 2006, Amtrak received just under $1.4
billion, with the condition that Amtrak would reduce (but not
eliminate) food and sleeper service losses. Thus, dining service
were simplified and now require two fewer on-board service workers.
Only Auto
Train and Empire
Builder services continue regular made onboard meal
service.
State governments have partially filled the
breach left by reductions in Federal aid. Several states have
entered into operating partnerships with Amtrak, notably California,
Pennsylvania,
Illinois,
Michigan,
Oregon,
Missouri,
Washington,
North
Carolina, Oklahoma, Wisconsin,
Vermont,
Maine, and
New
York, as well as the Canadian province of
British
Columbia, which provides some of the resources for the
operation of the Cascades
route.
Controversy
Aid to Amtrak by government was controversial
from the beginning. Formation of Amtrak in 1971 was criticized as a
bailout serving corporate rail interests and union railroaders, not
the traveling public. Critics assert that Amtrak has proven
incapable of operating as a business and does not provide valuable
transportation services meriting public support, a "mobile
money-burning machine." They argue that subsidies should be ended,
national rail service terminated, and the Northeast Corridor turned
over to private interests. "To fund a Nostalgia Limited is not in
the public interest." Critics also question Amtrak's energy
efficiency. The U.S. Department of Energy considers Amtrak among
the most energy-efficient forms of transportation. A Wall Street
Journal article made the oft-repeated myth that it would be cheaper
if Congress funded free discount airline tickets for each
passenger.
Proponents point out that the government heavily
subsidizes the Interstate
Highway System and many aspects of passenger aviation. Massive
government aid of those forms of travel was a primary factor in the
decline of passenger service on privately owned railroads in the
1950s and 60s. Meanwhile, Amtrak, through fees to host railroads,
pays property taxes that highway users do not pay. Advocates
therefore assert that Amtrak should only be expected to be as
self-sufficient as those competing modes.
Critics claim that gasoline taxes amount to use
fees that entirely pay for the government subsidies to the highway
system and aviation. In fact this is not true: gas taxes cover
little if any of the costs for "local" highways and in many states
little of the cost for state highways. They don't cover the
property taxes foregone by building tax-exempt roads. They also
don't cover policing costs: Amtrak, like all U.S. railroads, pays
for its own security, the Amtrak
Police; road policing and the
Transportation Security Administration are paid for out of
general taxation.
Labor issues
Intractable positions staked out by labor leaders were blamed for part of the decline of passenger rail service in the early to middle 20th century, and labor union clout was widely credited with facilitating the creation of Amtrak in 1971. Many trade union jobs were saved by the bailout.In recent times, efforts at reforming passenger
rail have addressed labor issues. In 1997 Congress released Amtrak
from a prohibition on contracting for labor outside of the
corporation (and outside its unions), opening the door to
privatization. Since that time, many of Amtrak's employees have
been working without a contract. The most recent contract, signed
in 1999, was mainly retroactive.
Still, though, the influence of unions is a
strong force against change. Amtrak has 14 separate unions to
negotiate with, because of the fragmentation of railroad unions by
job. And it has 24 separate contracts with those unions. This makes
it difficult to make substantial changes, in contrast to a
situation where one union negotiates with one employer.
New Amtrak president Kummant seems poised to
follow a cooperative posture with Amtrak's trade unions. He has
ruled out plans to privatize large parts of Amtrak's unionized
workforce.
In late 2007 and early 2008, however, major labor
issues came up, a result of a dispute between Amtrak and 16 unions
over healthcare, specifically to which employees healthcare should
be available to. The dispute was not resolved quickly, and the
situation escalated, to the point of President Bush declaring a
Presidential Emergency Board to resolve the issues. It was not
immediately successful, and a strike was threatened, to begin on
January 30th, 2008. In the middle of that month, however, it was
announced that Amtrak and the unions had come to terms and January
30th passed without a strike. In late February it was announced
that three more unions had worked out their differences, and as of
that time it seems unlikely that any more issues will arise in the
near future.
Amtrak operations and services
Amtrak is no longer required by law, but is encouraged, to operate a national route system. Amtrak has some presence in all of the 48 contiguous states except Wyoming and South Dakota. Service on the Northeast Corridor, between Boston, Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C., as well as between Philadelphia and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, is powered by overhead wires; for the rest of the system, diesel locomotives are used. Routes vary widely in frequency of service, from three trips weekly on the Sunset Limited, from Los Angeles, California, to New Orleans, Louisiana, to weekday service several times per hour on the Northeast Corridor, from New York City to Washington, D.C. Amtrak also operates a captive bus service, Thruway Motorcoach, which provides connections to train routes.The most-popular and heavily used routes are
those on the Northeast
Corridor, which include the Acela
Express, and Regional.
Those routes serve Boston,
Massachusetts; New York
City; Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania; Washington,
D.C.; and many communities between. Four of the six stations
busiest by boardings are on the corridor:
New York (Penn Station) (first),
Washington (Union Station) (second), Philadelphia
(30th Street Station) (third), and Boston (South
Station) (sixth). The other two of the top six are Chicago
(Union Station) (fourth) and
Los Angeles (Union Station) (fifth).
Amtrak trains have both names and numbers. Train
routes are named to reflect the rich and complex history of the
routes and the areas traversed by them. Each scheduled run of the
route is assigned a number. Generally, even-numbered routes run
northward and eastward, while odd-numbered routes run southward and
westward. Some routes, such as the Pacific
Surfliners, use the opposite numbering system, inherited from
the previous operators of similar routes, such as the
Santa Fe Railroad.
Some of the trains used more often:
Northeast
- Empire: Niagara Falls–Buffalo–Albany–New York
- Keystone: Harrisburg–Philadelphia–New York
- Downeaster: Portland–Boston
- Pacific Surfliner: San Luis Obispo–Santa Barbara–Los Angeles–San Diego
- Capitol Corridor: Sacramento–Oakland–San Jose
- San Joaquins: Oakland–Stockton–Bakersfield & Sacramento–Stockton–Bakersfield
- Amtrak Cascades: Vancouver–Seattle–Portland–Eugene
Rail passenger efficiency versus other modes
Per passenger mile, Amtrak is 18 percent more
energy-efficient than commercial airlines and automobiles Advanced
technology further increases efficiency:
regenerative braking on the Acela Express, for example, reduces
electric-energy consumption by 8 percent. Passenger rail is also
competitive with other modes in terms of safety per mile.
Intermodal connections
Intermodal connections between Amtrak trains and other transportation are available at many stations. Most Amtrak rail stations in downtown areas have connections to local public transport. Amtrak also code shares with Continental Airlines, providing service between Newark Liberty International Airport (via its Amtrak station and AirTrain Newark) and Philadelphia 30th St, Wilmington, Stamford, and New Haven. Amtrak also serves airport stations at Milwaukee, Oakland, Burbank, and Baltimore.Amtrak coordinates Thruway
Motorcoach service to extend many of its routes, especially in
California.
Gaps in service
Outside the Northeast Corridor, Amtrak is a niche player in passenger transportation. In 2003, Amtrak accounted for just 0.1% of U.S. intercity passenger miles (5,680,000,000 out of 5,280,860,000,000 total, of which private-automobile travel makes up the vast majority). In fiscal year 2004, Amtrak routes served over 25 million passengers, while, in calendar year 2004, commercial airlines served over 712 million passengers.Amtrak provides some rail service in 46 states.
The only states that are not served by Amtrak are Hawaii (in the
middle of the Pacific
Ocean), Alaska (served by
the Alaska
Railroad), and South Dakota
(although in years past there was service by the
Milwaukee Road to South Dakota, Amtrak has never instituted any
service to that state) and Wyoming (lost rail
service in the 1997 cuts, and in early 2008 lost the Denver-Casper
motorcoach service). Amtrak serves many states only nominally
through stations along borders and/or away from major population
areas. Many major cities in the Midwest, West, and South have two
or fewer trains per day, such as Atlanta,
Denver,
Cincinnati,
Indianapolis,
and Minneapolis–Saint
Paul.
Amtrak's reliance on freight railroads also has
caused its service elimination. Passenger rail service was entirely
discontinued to Phoenix,
Arizona, in
1997, after the Union
Pacific Railroad, which owns the tracks that served Phoenix,
announced that it was abandoning the right of way. Amtrak did not
have the funds to maintain the trackage. Today, the city is served
only by Thruway Motorcoach. In 1983, the Palmetto was
truncated from St.
Petersburg to Tampa,
Florida
because Amtrak was unable to take on the costs of maintaining the
Seaboard Coast Line Railroad drawbridge, which took the train
over Tampa Bay.
Damage to railroad track caused by Hurricane
Katrina interrupted service on the Sunset
Limited. Originally the train departed from Orlando,
Florida, but the track damage along the Gulf coast caused the
train to originate at New
Orleans, Louisiana. Although the track's owner, CSX, completed repairs
by early 2006, Amtrak service has not resumed over one year later,
leaving the intermediate stations between Jacksonville,
Florida and New Orleans without any Amtrak service.
Several significant Amtrak routes have been
eliminated because of lack of funding since 1971, creating other
gaps. The east–west train feeding Kansas
City, Missouri, with New
York and Washington, D.C., called the National
Limited, was cut, leaving Chicago as the only
throughway for direct links between the Midwest and East. The
North Coast Hiawatha, between Chicago and Seattle,
provided only reduced service between Chicago and the Pacific
Northwest. The last link with the vaunted Chicago–Florida services of
such trains as the City of
Miami, the Dixie
Flagler, and the South Wind,
was broken when the Floridian
was discontinued, in October 1979. In 1997, the Desert Wind
and Pioneer
were discontinued, along with service to Las
Vegas, Boise, and
all of Wyoming. In 2003, Amtrak discontinued the Kentucky
Cardinal, ending all service to Louisville.
In 2005, Three
Rivers (a reborn Broadway Limited) was nixed, removing the only
direct New York–Chicago service through central Pennsylvania.
Guest Rewards
Amtrak's loyalty program, Guest Rewards, is similar to the frequent-flyer programs of many airlines. Guest Rewards members accumulate points by riding Amtrak and through other activities, and can redeem these points for free or discounted Amtrak tickets and other rewards.Freight
Amtrak Express provides small-package and less-than-truckload shipping among more than 100 cities. Amtrak Express also offers station-to-station shipment of human remains to many express cities. At smaller stations, funeral directors must load and unload the shipment onto and off the train. Amtrak hauled mail for the United States Postal Service and time-sensitive freight, but discontinued these services in October 2004. On most parts of the few lines that Amtrak owns, trackage-rights agreements allow freight railroads to use its trackage.Commuter services
Through various commuter services, Amtrak serves
an additional 61.1 million passengers per year in conjunction with
state and regional authorities in California,
Connecticut,
Maryland,
Virginia,
and Washington.
Amtrak's Capitol
Corridor, Pacific
Surfliner (formerly San Diegan),
and San
Joaquins are funded mostly by a state transit authority,
Caltrans, rather than the federal government.
Classes of Service
Amtrak has a variety of cabins that suit a variety of needs. Classes are similar to those used by airlines.First Class service is offered on the Acela
Express only. First Class passengers have access to Amtrak
ClubAcela lounges in Washington DC, Philadelphia, New York and
Boston (lounges offer complementary drinks, personal ticketing
service, lounge seating, conference areas, computer/internet access
and televisions tuned to CNN). At the Philadelphia and Washington
DC ClubAcelas, passengers can board their train directly from the
ClubAcela (In Philadelphia, passenger use an elevator while in
Washington, passengers leave through a side door leading to the
tracks). Seats are larger than those of Business Class and come in
a variety of seating modes (single, single with table, double,
double with table and wheelchair accessible). First Class is
located in a separate car than the other classes and each train set
contains only one First Class car. First Class includes
complimentary meal and beverage service along with free newspapers
and hot towel service. First Class seats are set in a 1x2
configuration. There are two attendants per car.
Business Class is the minimum class of service on
the Acela Express and is offered as an upgrade on Regional and
other short to long distance trains. Business Class seats are
larger than those in coach. Business Class passengers have easy
access to the cafe car. they also receive complementary
non-alcoholic beverages and free newspapers. Business Class seats
all have power outlets for electronics. Business Class seats are
located in different areas depending on the train. On some trains,
Business Class is located at the front of the Cafe Car. These seats
are in a 1x2 style and feature leather upholstery, cup holders and
leg rests. These seats also recline to a more "sofa recliner
style". The other type of Business Class seat is located in an
actual Business Class car. These seats are organized in a 2x2 style
and feature more legroom than the coach seats in the other
cars.
Coach Class is the minimum class of service on
Amtrak trains and includes footrests and decent legroom. Coach
seats are set in a 2x2 configuration.
Sleeper Service rooms are considered First Class
on long distance trains. Rooms are classified into roomettes,
bedrooms, family bedrooms and accessible bedrooms. With the price
of a room comes complementary meals and attendant service. At
night, rooms turn into sleeping areas with fold down beds and fresh
linens. Complementary bottled water, newspapers and turn down
service is included as well. Sleeper car passengers have access to
the entire train. Sleeper passengers also have access to the Club
Acela lounges in stations along the Northeast Corridor and access
to the Metropolitan Lounges in Chicago, Miami, New Orleans, and
Minneapolis/Saint Paul.
Trains and tracks
Most tracks on which Amtrak operates are owned by freight railroads. Amtrak operates over all seven Class I railroads in the United States, as well as several short lines: the Pan Am Railways, New England Central Railroad, and Vermont Railway. Other sections are owned by terminal railroads jointly controlled by freight companies or by commuter rail agencies. The arrangement has two notable impacts on Amtrak operations. The host railroad is responsible for maintenance and occasionally Amtrak has suffered service disruptions from untimely track rehabilitation. When host railroads have simply refused to maintain their tracks to Amtrak's needs, Amtrak occasionally has been compelled to pay the host to maintain the tracks. Also, Amtrak enjoys priority over the host's freight traffic only for a specified window of time. When a passenger train misses that window, host railroads may (and frequently do) direct passenger trains to follow lumbering freight traffic, severely exacerbating even minor delays.Tracks owned by Amtrak
Along the Northeast Corridor and in several other areas, Amtrak owns 730 route-miles of track (1175 km), including 17 tunnels consisting of 29.7 miles of track (47.8 km), and 1,186 bridges (including the famous Hell Gate Bridge) consisting of 42.5 miles (68.4 km) of track. Amtrak owns and operates the following lines:Northeast Corridor
The Northeast Corridor between Washington,
D.C. and Boston
via Baltimore,
Philadelphia,
Newark,
New York and Providence,
Rhode Island is largely owned by Amtrak, working cooperatively
with several state and regional commuter agencies. Amtrak's portion
was acquired in 1976 as a result of the
Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act.
- Boston to the Massachusetts/Rhode Island state line (operated and maintained by Amtrak but owned by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts)
- 118.3 miles (190.4 km), Massachusetts/Rhode Island state line to New Haven, Connecticut
- 240 miles (386 km), New Rochelle, New York to Washington, D.C.
The part of the line from New Haven to the New
York/Connecticut border (Port
Chester/Greenwich)
is owned by the state of Connecticut,
while the portion from Port Chester to New Rochelle is owned by the
state of New
York. The
Connecticut Department of Transportation and the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority operate this line through
Metro-North
Railroad.
Philadelphia to Harrisburg Main Line
This line runs from Philadelphia to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. As a result of an investment partnership with the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, signal and track improvements were completed in October 2006, and now allow all-electric service with a top speed of 110 mph (about 175 km/h) to run along the corridor.- 104 miles (167 km), Philadelphia to Harrisburg (Pennsylvanian and Keystone Service)
Empire Corridor
- 11 miles (18 km), New York Penn Station to Spuyten Duyvil, New York
- 35.9 miles (57.8 km), Stuyvesant to Schenectady, New York (operated and maintained by Amtrak, but owned by CSX)
- 8.5 miles (13.8 km), Schenectady to Hoffmans, New York
New Haven-Springfield Line
- 60.5 mi (97.4 km), New Haven to Springfield (Regional and Vermonter)
Other tracks
- Chicago-Detroit Line - 98 miles (158 km), Porter, Indiana to Kalamazoo, Michigan (Wolverine)
- Post Road Branch - 12.42 miles (20 km), Post Road Junction to Rensselaer, New York (Lake Shore Limited)
Amtrak also owns station and yard tracks in
Chicago;
Hialeah
(near Miami,
Florida)
(leased from the State of Florida); Los
Angeles; New
Orleans; New York
City; Oakland
(Kirkham Street Yard); Orlando;
Portland,
Oregon; Saint
Paul, Minnesota; Seattle;
and Washington,
D.C.
Amtrak owns the
Chicago Union Station Company (Chicago
Union Station) and Penn Station Leasing (New
York Penn Station). It has a 99.7% interest in the
Washington Terminal Company (tracks around
Washington Union Station) and 99% of 30th
Street Limited (Philadelphia 30th
Street Station). Also owned by Amtrak is Passenger Railroad
Insurance.
Other infrastructure:
- Freedom Tunnel
- Livingston Avenue Bridge
- Morrisville-Trenton RR Bridge
- New York Tunnel Extension
- North River Tunnels
- Southeast HSR Corridor
- Sunnyside Yard
Motive power and rolling stock
See also
- Amtrak paint schemes
- Amtrak Arrow Reservation System
- Amtrak Police
- Amtrak California, partnership with
- Amtrak Cascades, partnership with
- List of Amtrak stations
- Positive Train Control
- Railway Museum of Greater Cincinnati
- Superliner (railcar)
- Thruway Motorcoach
- Amtrak (parcel delivery company) (UK)
- Auto-Train Corporation — Pioneer of car-on-train service.
- Mid America Railcar Leasing
- VIA Rail
References
Other Sources
- Amtrak System Timetable, Fall 2004/Winter 2005''
- Amtrak
- Journey to Amtrak - The year history rode the passenger train
- Amtrak at Milepost 10
- Mike Schafer, Amtrak's atlas, Trains June 1991
- Kevin McKinney, At the dawn of Amtrak, Trains June 1991
External links
Pro-Amtrak Advocacy National- National Association of Railroad Passengers
- Friends of Amtrak
- Save Amtrak
- United Rail Passenger Alliance
- Arizona Rail Passenger Association
- Rail Passenger Association of California (RailPAC)
- Colorado Rail Passenger Association (known as Colorail)
- Passenger Rail Kansas
- Michigan Association of Railroad Passengers
- Save Our Trains Michigan
- Save Our Trains Mississippi
- New Jersey Association of Railroad Passengers
- Empire State Passengers Association (NY)
- Delaware Valley Association of Rail Passengers (southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and other areas in or near the Delaware Valley)
- PassengerRailOk.org (Oaklahoma)
Amtrak Criticism
Current
Information
- Amtrak.com
- Amtrak Guest Rewards
- Check Amtrak Delays
- Amtrak News
- Amtrak route ownership
- Current Amtrak route photos
- Amtrak Radio Frequencies (includes information on the owners of the tracks)
- Rail Critic
- Amtrak Coupons, Discounts & Promotions
- Amtrak Routes on Google Maps
- Amtrak Historical Society
- Amtrak Photo Archives
- Amtrak's beginnings - via http://Trains.com
- Trains Operating on the Eve of Amtrak (1971-04-30)
- Amtrak's First Trains & Routes (1971-05-01)
- Amtrak timetable, 1971-11-14
- Amtrak Reform Council an archived website hosted by the UNT Libraries Cyber Cemetery
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