Thursday, May 22, 2008

trains' benefits & cost of gas

...There is a well known phrase train enthusiasts use to describe the sentimental obsession some have for old trains — "the romance of the rail." But romance, as any pragmatist will tell you, doesn't pay the bills, and advocates know passenger rail will thrive in Maine only if it helps the Maine economy.

"It's a very smart wave of the future," says Patricia Quinn, executive director of the Northern New England Passenger Rail Authority, a quasi-governmental organization created by the Maine Legislature in 1995 to operate the Downeaster. "It has nothing to do with romance and history."

Quinn calls the Downeaster a transit option, just as buses or airplanes are, and says it should be subsidized as part of what she believes is wise public transportation policy.

"We need to diversify, other than just having transportation be highways," says Quinn. "Because as time goes on, and with gas prices going up like they are, it's important to invest in other means of transportation."

Indeed, it may be the death of the road that prompts the revival of the rail. In 2007, when fuel prices began to climb, the Downeaster attracted a record 383,833 passengers, and Quinn expects 2008 will be even better thanks to pain at the pump — she is projecting 418,000 people will take the two-and-a-quarter-hour ride to Boston this year. Due to rising demand, the service recently added a fifth daily trip to the schedule.

Quinn says none of Amtrak's passenger services anywhere in the country turn a profit, and as a public transportation service rail should be supported, as highways are, by dedicated revenue from taxes.

To bolster the notion that rail is an economically important part of a public transit system, Quinn commissioned a report on the economic impact of the Downeaster [SEE VIDEO at that link]. The March report found the Downeaster will generate $3.3 billion in new construction investment in the Portland to Boston corridor by 2030, creating 8,000 new jobs and contributing $55 million in state tax revenue. The report, by the Center for Neighborhood Technology in Chicago, points to the two hotels and a $20 million residential and retail complex completed roughly 200 yards from the train station in Old Orchard Beach in 2006, and the $110 million mixed-use redevelopment of Saco mills currently underway that was prompted by plans to reopen the train station nearby. Extending the Downeaster to Brunswick and Rockland, the report claims, will create an additional $981 million in development, 2,582 new jobs and $16.5 million in annual taxes............

With the cost of gas these days....
....it makes sense to turn to trains.

The Amherst Railway Society has had the right idea...as does the Palmer Railroad Advisory Board.

May 22 Meeting

The PVACR invites you to attend an open meeting at 7:30 pm, at the Lathrop House Bed & Breakast (188 Sumner Avenue, Springfield, MA 01108. Those interested in attending this free meeting are encouraged to Park on the adjacent streets: Forest Park Ave or Washington).



GUEST SPEAKER: Dana Roscoe, Senior Transportation Planner with the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission.