New Amtrak Repair Facility
[Caltrain plans to spend nearly TWICE as much to build a similar facility in San Jose -- including $2 million wasted on a "community wall" between its rail yard and a "community" of light industrial warehouses and a few more million wasted on an access tunnel under the mainline rail tracks because dim-witted San Jose politicians refused to allow deliveries via an existing industrial arterial road (Stockton Avenue). Of course, Caltrain's maintenance yard was supposed to open in 1995, but dim-witted San Jose politicians TWICE vetoed operationally superior and cheaper yard locations, and forced nearly a decade of delay and many tens of millions in extra expenses on an agency which they consistently insist on under-funding. And so it goes.]
The operative word here is jiffy,
and that’s good news to Amtrak's California Zephyr tourists and routine
riders on the inter-city Capitol Corridor and
Also visible from passing
passenger trains is Amtrak's newest environmental containment system.
Metal shavings from the wheel truing trenches, oils from plastic drip pads
and grime from the train washing shed all get filtered through a series of
pipes and chemical tanks. The end product is recycled water that can
go on lawns and sludge cakes that will be shipped to landfills. It's good news for the
When the Amtrak Kirkham Maintenance
Facility goes into full operation next month, Amtrak will service all of
20 locomotives and 78 rail cars on the Capitol Corridor and
fifth-busiest inter-city rail lines. That's
one of the reasons the Caltrans Rail Division, which pays for that
Oakland-based service, poured $38 million into the new maintenance yard.
"I never thought today was going
to happen. The road to this facility was 20 years in the making," said
Caltrans rail Chief Warren Webber. "It
opens within budget and significantly ahead of schedule." Amtrak President David Gunn was equally pleased. "I've been in the business 40 years, and
I've seen more railroad facilities close than open," he said, calling
Caltrans' rail system a model for the nation. "The key is
incremental improvements. It's results in our lifetime, not waiting for
something 20 years from now. "Now
we will be able to focus on improving our service," said Gunn, who
has fought Congress just to get the money to keep the deteriorating
national passenger rail system intact.
(From the
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