Wednesday, January 21, 2009

All Aboard Ohio: Stimulus bill may ignore Ohio's train and transit needs

Media release

All Aboard Ohio is calling on Ohio's Congressional Delegation to support a list of "Shovel Ready" federal stimulus projects identified last week by the U.S. House of Representatives' Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. In that list was $30.25 billion worth of highway and bridge projects, $12 billion for transit and nearly $5 billion for passenger rail.

This week the House Appropriations Committee kept the funding levels intact for highways, but reduced transit to $8.9 billion and eviscerated passenger rail funding to just $1.1 billion.

"There are some really great stimulus projects in Ohio that could begin to create the kind of interconnected transportation system that is needed to reduce our travel costs, boost development in our historic cities and towns, increase our energy efficiency, reduce our carbon emissions and compete better with the rest of the world," says All Aboard Ohio interim executive director Ken Prendergast. "That is the kind of change we can believe in. I hope Congress does too."

A stimulus project list appears at the bottom of this press statement. Note that some of the projects are actually for federally required planning and environmental review so that those rail projects can become "shovel ready" for a long-term federal stimulus.

"Unfortunately, it seems that repeated utterances of 'Roads-n-Bridges' have become a programmed response as the best way to boost jobs," Prendergast says. "It's not. Our nation became overdependent on driving during the 100 years when America was the world's biggest producer of oil. Now we are as dependent on imported oil as Europe, Japan and China. But while those nations are rebuilding their economies around trains and transit as well as walkable town centers, America is in danger of driving itself into an economic and environmental dead end.”

China is spending $88 billion on rail projects this year. European countries are shifting their infrastructure budgets from a dominance of "Roads-n-Bridges" to being in balance with "Trains and Transit". India will invest $30 billion on rail in 2009. Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Vietnam, Argentina, Mexico, Turkey and other nations are or will soon invest billions to build high-speed rail. Meanwhile America plans to spend more for short-lived benefits and less to invest in Trains and Transit that will transform a resource-constrained America for the coming century and beyond.

"We ask everyone in Ohio to please contact their Congressperson today," Prendergast says. "America can do what is easy or it can do what is best for its economy over the long term. Either way, decisions made in Congress in the next few weeks will likely set a direction for this nation that will last for decades."


Local projects

Here's a local list of "Trains and Transit" projects, submitted for federal stimulus program funding:

  • Downtown Streetcar system: up to $185 million; requested by the City of Cincinnati.
  • Cleveland-Columbus-Dayton-Cincinnati (3-C) Corridor intercity passenger rail service (Phase One): $100 million; requested by the Ohio Department of Transportation and the City of Cleveland.
  • Ohio Hub System passenger rail preliminary engineering and environmental impact studies: $100 million; requested by the Ohio Department of Transportation and the City of Cleveland.
  • Ohio Hub - Tier One Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement: $15 million; requested by the Ohio Department of Transportation.
  • Future Phase of Amtrak Planning and Engineering Design: $2.5 million; requested by the Ohio Department of Transportation.
Release issued by All Aboard Ohio on January 16, 2009. Contact Ken Prendergast, interim executive director, at (216) 288-4883 or kenprendergast@allaboardohio.org.