Sunday, April 6, 2008

Updates

What a week! Some points of interest:

1. Pioneer Valley Advocates for Commuter Rail launched a new web page (http://www.springfieldrail.org/)

2. We had great media coverage (Reminder, WWLP, ABC40).

3. Membership from that web page has grown by 19 in the last week.

4. Our meeting at Starbucks on April 3 brought 20 people (not the ones included in the count above).

5. We're now up to 106 signers of the online petition.

6. We've been meeting with many local leaders, some of whom are 100% in support, and some of whom are more cautious about having their names associated with this new $152 economic development initiative.

7. At the caucuses this weekend, we collected 80+ signatures at one, and await figures from the other. Petitions have been distributed to members for collection.

8. the Green City forum went well: One of our members wrote "During the forum, Congressman Neal was asked a question about his support for commuter rail and he had a 5-minute or so discussion about how he supports rail transit and he would like to see a Worcester-Boston link. I went up to him afterward to ask him about NHHS and he said he supports it."

9. That same member had also attended the TIMBY forum, with this report:
"The bulk of the audience was Boston area folk, and most of the discussion centered around MBTA, MassHighway and MTA issues

- Representative Wagner & Congressman Olver were both in attendance.

- Mary MacInnes from the PVTA talked about the various transit projects in the region, including Union Station (and she alluded to US as being a destination for the NHHS line), the Holyoke & Westfield Intermodal stations. She spent the bulk of here time talking about those projects, but she did mention an early study on a Spfld-VT CT line, an EOT study on a Worcester-Spfld line CR and the NHHS line.

- Mike Rennicke from Pioneer Valley Railroad talked about how various states are investing in freight railroad infrastructure by setting up state "banks" and other methods, and he wants MA to help out with the short-haul freight railroad companies as a way of reducing congestion and fuel costs from highway truck traffic.

- Pretty much the issue that dominated discussion was the fact that the MBTA and MTA have huge debt which is eating up all the transportation money right now, and they might very well need a state bailout.

Most of the discussion centered around how infrastructure is crumbling since we don't have much money to fix it (things are better now that the Big Dig is done, but maintenance spending still has reached pre-Big Dig numbers). There was also discussion about debt restructuring (MassTrans), cost cutting and new revenue sources like per use pricing.

What I really took away from the TIMBY conference, with respect to NHHS, is that the biggest obstacle the NHHS faces in Massachusetts is that fact that the state has no money to spend on transporation because the MBTA and MTA are sucking it all up.

The case really needs to be made that the commuter rail will drive economic investment in an area that needs it.

10. We're considering an event for National Train Day. (next meeting tba)

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