From the Portland Oregonian
Editorials
Amtrak is always the caboose
The national passenger railway system comes last once again as Congress prepares a massive transportation bill
02/15/04
While the White House and Congress argued this week about whether to lavish as much as $378 billion on transportation projects in a bloated highway bill, both sides seemed prepared to make Amtrak tootle along with far less money than last year.
That’s simply not good enough for a nationwide transportation system that will be used by an estimated 25 million people this year.
Amtrak President David Gunn asked for $1.8 billion for fiscal 2005, including about $800 million for long-overdue maintenance projects, such as replacing rails and ties, repairing bridges and refurbishing sleeper cars.
The Bush administration proposed giving Amtrak $900 million – half of what the national passenger railway says it needs.
Gunn calls the president’s budget proposal a “shutdown number” for Amtrak. Congress won’t let Amtrak come to a complete halt – passenger rail is too popular with the public for that. However, lawmakers have shown before they are perfectly willing to starve the railway system to the point where it can do little more than limp along.
Several train supporters in the Senate scrambled this week to get some intercity rail money tucked into the huge highway bill before Congress. However, that bill is headed straight for a presidential veto, and it’s likely that when lawmakers cut it down to size, the rail money will be among the first to go.
Leaders in Congress and the White House still are unwilling to make the same commitment to railroad infrastructure as they do to highways and airport runways.
Meanwhile, there never has been a stronger case for Amtrak. The rail system is setting records for ridership. New financial controls put in place by Gunn last year have left the railroad