Amtrak – On the Chopping Block…Again
(From MSNBC,
Amtrak has faced serious threats before, of course. By some
accounts the rail line has struggled for survival virtually since Congress
created it as the National Railroad Passenger Corp. in 1971. But the Bush administration's drastic
proposal, coming as part of a broad assault against dozens of federally
supported programs, sets up a potential congressional donnybrook over the rail
line's future. While Amtrak has many
advocates in Congress, the fight could bring echoes of last year's presidential
battle, with some of the carrier's strongest support likely to come from
Democratic-leaning, heavily urbanized regions on both coasts that depend most
heavily on intercity service.
Bush's $2.57 trillion budget, <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6908656/>
of course, is only an opening gambit, and already there are signs the
administration is prepared to step back from the brink. Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta told
reporters at a news conference the budget proposal was "a call to
action" for Congress to address Amtrak's problems. "We've decided to
go to zero to get their attention," Mineta said. The budget does include $360 million in
contingent funding to keep urban commuter rail service functioning if Amtrak
were to go bankrupt. Moody's Investor Service said bankruptcy would be likely
if Congress were to eliminate all federal funding. Amtrak President David Gunn called the
zero-funding proposal "irresponsible and a surprising
disappointment."
"In a word, they have no plan for Amtrak other than
bankruptcy," he said in an e-mail to employees, which was released
publicly. "We are committed to an efficient and productive rail passenger
system. The plan to force us into bankruptcy would be counterproductive to this
goal." Amtrak supporters have
rallied to the defense of the railroad and are taking nothing for granted. "This is serious," said Ross Capon,
executive director of the National Association of Rail Passengers, an advocacy
group.
"It is tempting to say, of course we are going to win
again because having an
In the 1980s President Reagan's budget director David
Stockman called Amtrak a "mobile, money-burning machine" and an
"amenity that the nation cannot afford and can readily do without."
President Reagan proposed "zeroing out" Amtrak's subsidy in all eight
of the budgets he sent to Congress, according to conservative commentator Paul
Weyrich.
Even in signing Amtrak into existence in 1970, President
Nixon had to overcome fierce opposition within his administration that was
offset by overwhelming congressional support.
"It has struggled ever since it was formed," said John
Spychalski, a transportation expert and professor of supply chain management at
Some individual lines may make money "above the
rail," excluding the cost of basic infrastructure and maintenance, but
"there is no way those systems as a whole are going to make money on
passenger traffic," he said. Even
in
"Long-distance routes are an endless loss of
money," he said. "They provide so little transportation at so much
subsidy per train passenger that they don't really belong as part of
Amtrak." He suggests eliminating
the long-haul lines, leaving only the more heavily traveled short-haul
corridors where the company has a chance to break even on an operating basis. If you were able to get states in some of
those corridors to offer somewhat more support, and get rid of the long-distance
routes altogether, then basically you could operate what remains out of the
system without federal subsidies," said Poole, founder of the Reason
Foundation.
Many states would be left without passenger rail service, but "you could also say they would have no horse and buggy service," he said. "Those people are not cut off from being transported. They have cars, Greyhound, and in many cases they are within 100 miles of an airport." He acknowledges that could be a hard sell for lawmakers from the affected states but points out that most Americans probably never set foot on an Amtrak train. "I think you really have to question the fairness of it," he said. "I personally love trains. I think trains are really neat, but as a policy researcher I have to say, let's get real about what is a good use of scarce public funds."
Posted: 02/12/05