WASHINGTON – During an oversight hearing of the Senate Commerce Committee on Wednesday,, U.S. Senator Tom Udall of New Mexico pressed Richard Anderson, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Amtrak Board of Directors, on Amtrak’s plan to preserve and improve long-distance passenger rail for the American public.
Last year, Udall secured a commitment from a top Amtrak official to stop plans to substitute buses for trains on a segment of the Southwest Chief rail line during Fiscal Year 2019. Before this public commitment, the Southwest Chief route, which serves several New Mexico communities, faced an uncertain future after Amtrak threatened to withhold millions of dollars in funding necessary to maintaining long-distance passenger rail line service.
Udall thanked Anderson for “changing course, for now, from discontinuing the Southwest Chief – an action that would do a disservice to Amtrak customers and hurt all communities on the line between Dodge City, Kansas and Albuquerque, New Mexico.” Udall then stated that he was “very discouraged” to hear Anderson admit that Amtrak was still considering breaking up long-distance routes, and noted his strong disagreement with that plan.
Udall urged Anderson to meaningfully engage with communities and stakeholders to make improvements that would ensure the future of the national train network. “While progress has been made – I am confident that the threat is not over,” said Udall. “I see that Amtrak continues to blame Congress and others for budgetary woes when it is convenient. Yet when tasked with engaging with stakeholders, you are slow to do so.”
“When Congress rejects Amtrak’s corridor plan, it appears that Amtrak will once again be left without a real vision for the National Network. That is deeply disappointing. Amtrak must develop a visionary and bold plan to preserve and improve long-distance rail for the American public,” Udall continued.
James Souby, Commissioner of the Southwest Chief & Front Range Passenger Rail Commission and President of the Colorado Rail Passenger Association, who was instrumental in helping to save the Southwest Chief line, also noted, “The way Amtrak evaluates long-distance service… is purely based on metrics related to passenger trips [but] the greatest value of long-distance trains are the economic and social benefits they bring to the communities they serve… In the three states–Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico–that the Southwest Chief runs through, the economic and social benefits total $180 million a year.”
“When you think about the economic and social value of that train to that community, it’s immense,” Souby continued.
Udall urged Anderson to listen to Souby’s powerful statement.
Udall has long advocated for investment in rural transportation infrastructure, such as the Southwest Chief line, which helps boost local economies and link communities across New Mexico to the rest of the nation. He previously helped lead bipartisan efforts, along with Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), in the Senate to secure an additional $50 million in federal funding to help maintain Amtrak’s train services in the 2019 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies (THUD) appropriations bill.
Born and raised in Raton, I was so used to hearing the sounds of the old “choo choo” trains at night, it helped calm me and sleep. I could tell when they went North to Colorado as the engines really huffed and puffed to get over Raton Pass. But going south, the sounds were much faster. I enjoyed going to the roundhouse to watch when crews turned the trains around to go South or North. When the first diesel trains came, they stopped in Raton to let us take a good look. I was really impressed with the Super Chief trains. It was sad to see the old roundhouse and maintenance be no more as it once was. And now, the train service through Raton, as I understand it, is sparse. I realize Amtrak needs money to operate and Congress is reluctant to provide more, but the thought of no trains except freight trains going through Raton is deplorable. When I was stationed at the Air Force Academy in the 1960s, I was sent to Vietnam in 1966. I stayed with my parents in Raton for about 3 or 4 days then rode the train to Los Angeles to visit relatives before going to Vietnam. It is the longest train ride I’ve ever taken and very pleasurable. When the stewards found out I was in the military going to Vietnam they gave me special treatment all the way.