What the Stimulus Bill Means for High-Speed Rail
By Dave Demerjian EmailFebruary 25, 2009
Amtrak
The whining about who got what in the $787 billion economic stimulus bill is well underway, but you won't hear many complaints from high-speed rail advocates. They walked away with $8 billion.
That's an unprecedented sum considering the crumbs Amtrak has collected during the past 20 years, and rail boosters are gleefully predicting the money will lead to rail investment in almost every region of the country. Opponents of the funding, who at this point can do little but complain, say it's one large pig in a bill filled with pork, and will do little to help the economy, but that overlooks the fact it will, in the short-term, put people to work improving existing track and infrastructure.
Looking further ahead, the windfall will help finance "high speed rail corridors" capable of supporting trains traveling at speeds as great as 110 mph, creating the first-ever regional network of cities connected by fast rail for the first time.
Highspeed
The allocation makes good on Obama's campaign promise to show rail a little love, something Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood echoed when he said, "I think President Obama would like to be known as the high-speed rail president, and I think he can be."
Most of rail corridors proposed by the Department of Transportation are no-brainers. Expanding the north-south routes of the East Coast will create a rail network stretching from Portand, Maine, to New Orleans and Houston. The Southeast Corridor linking Raleigh and Charlotte, N.C., with Atlanta acknowledges the growing economic importance of that region, and expanding service in California and the Pacific Northwest is equally smart.
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http://blog.wired.com/cars/2009/02/what-the-stimul.html