http://www.enn.com/news/2003-09-02/s_7931.asp

For U.S. travelers, high-speed rail is still elusive

Tuesday, September 02, 2003

By Michael Conlon, Reuters

CHICAGO - U.S. airport security tangles, a fact of life in the nearly 
two years since the Sept. 11, 2001, hijack attacks, have not 
kick-started the development of high-speed U.S. rail networks to 
replace many short city-to-city flights.

Money is a big reason, but cultural and structural issues are also 
major barriers, experts say.

The benefits that some East Coast business travelers enjoy with 
upgraded service in that rail corridor - the recent problems with 
Amtrak's high-speed Acela notwithstanding - could be replicated in 
several regions of the country, studies have long promised.

On the surface, it sounds good: downtown San Francisco to downtown 
Los Angeles in 2.5 hours; Chicago to Detroit or St. Louis in four 
hours or less; miles of Florida or Texas countryside flying by while 
the business traveler taps away on a laptop. Many air trips distended 
by security checks and bad weather could actually be completed faster 
on the ground. It's nothing that a few billion dollars can't 
accomplish.

"The problem is we can't seem to figure out how to make money 
operating passenger trains in America, even in the high-density 
Northeast Corridor," said Robert Gallamore, director of Northwestern 
University's Transportation Center. "The problem is long-term and 
structural," he added.

Basically, the White House has told the states they or private 
industry will have to fund the bulk of the cost for high-speed rail 
development.

In cash-strapped California's case, that means a nearly $10 billion 
bond issue on the ballot in November 2004 to fund a Los Angeles-San 
Francisco ground route beneath the heavily trafficked commercial air 
corridor. Service could begin by 2012, even if the bond issue flops 
and alternate financing has to be found, a spokesman for the 
California High-Speed Rail Authority said.

Gallamore says the West Coast, East Coast, and Midwest corridors 
offer the best hope for airline-competitive city hops by rail, though 
no one knows how soon. He is less optimistic about Texas and Florida.

"It may be quite some time," he said. "The states are having budget 
difficulties perhaps more than the federal government."

Car Culture

It is encouraging that technology and engine design developments will 
make a safe, quick ride possible, Gallamore said. But programs have 
to do battle with a culture hooked on automobile travel by gasoline 
prices that are still artificially low and by the lack of easy 
airport-to-rail network connections such as those in Europe, he said.

Ron Kuhlmann, a vice president at Unisys R2A, a strategic aviation 
consulting unit of Unisys Corp., says the "hassle factor is real and 
extraordinarily unpredictable" when it comes to flying. Using train 
service as it exists in the Northeast "doesn't require you to take 
your shoes off, and you can take your Swiss Army knife with you - and 
get some work done."

Despite that, he sees a clouded future for high speed rail because of 
a likely poor return on investment, exacerbated by the number of 
train trips that would be needed to make it a viable alternative to 
flight.

Kuhlmann suggests that high-speed rail may develop not along the 
European model, where passengers can hop easily from airport to 
train, but as a separate system not linked to airports and serving 
people who want quick transportation from city center to city center.

A 2000 study on high-speed rail linking Chicago to other major nearby 
cities projected a capital investment of more than $4 billion (in 
1998 dollars) plus more than a half-billion for rolling stock.

Dennis Minichello, president of the Midwest High-Speed Rail 
Coalition, says the level of interest among proponents and potential 
users remains high, though he admits there is "not a lot to report" 
in terms of forward movement.

"Who is going to pay is always the problem," he said. "If that could 
be worked out, we'd be racing down the track toward high-speed rail."

Lalia Rach, Dean of New York University's Tisch Center, which studies 
tourism and other issues, said, "We're not a country that's committed 
to rail travel. In increasingly troubled economic times, it moves 
farther down the list as other social issues take precedence.... We 
are a culture that has a love affair with the automobile.... You're 
fighting cultural issues, economic issues."

Indeed, the shift to rail that occurred after 9/11 on the East Coast 
may have peaked. A recent report found that airlines there have 
regained key business lost to the rails after the hijack attacks.

Source: Reuters




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