HomeMy WebLinkAboutPassenger Trains 120303
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Bryan-College Station EagJp
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Friday, April 7, 1995
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Locat&Nation
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Amtrack rolls back more services,
cuningout Bryan-Clllege Station
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'By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
The Associated Press
WASInNGTON - The train
they call the City of New Orleans
will be cut from seven to five days
, a week, the Broadway Limited to
Chicago will end at Pittsburgh
and Houston residents who want
to ride the Texas Eagle north will
have to start with a bus trip to
Dallas.
The cutbacks also mean that
there will be no passenger service
through College Station, since the
l area is currently served by trains
\ on the Houston to'Dalla$l"Qute.
Amtrak dropped the other shoe
Thursday, announc~ <a series of
se1"\Tice cuts scheduled to take
place in June and September as
the passenger railroad tries to
eliminate red ink.
Without the cutbacks, which
will total 24 percent of the rail-
road's routes when complete,
Amtrak might have been facillg
bankruptcy by midsummer, said
Thomas M. Downs, president of
the railroad.
} If the savings from reducing
service and staff go as Planned,
Amtrak will have a balanced
bUdget this year and next, he said.
Amtrak was faCing a $240 mil.
lion cash shortfall and had been
warned to expect no increase in
federal subsidies. Amtrak
receives nearly $1 billion a year
from the F-ederal Rallroad Admin.
istntian. .
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"This 18 our last anticipated
downsizing, we. hope," Downs
said. "We're down to ~hat we
think is the defensible foundation
of rail' passe~r. service in
America....' .
Downs blamed Amtrak's money
problems on years of reduced cap-
ital spending on railroads while
subsidies were provided to other
types of transportation, combined
with intense com~tttion from
new low-cost airlines.
The new--euts are in addition to
service red~ctions announced
last December . and already' in
place.
Downs noted that the cuts will
allow Amtrak to get rid of most of
the elderly equipment it inherited
25 years ago when it was created.
Some cars are a half-century old
and spare parts have to be hand
made, he said.
The railroad is eager to meet
with state officials who are
W'jIling to provide money to. keep
sOme services operating, Downs
said. Wisconsin, Michigan and
Vermont, among others, have
already agreed to subsidize opera.
tions to maintami'ail service. '
" Service cuts scheduled for June
11: I
.Texas Eagle service between
Dallas and Houston replaced by
bus service. Train would con-
tinue . to operate between Dallas
and Chicago.
.City of New Orleans between
New Orleans and Chicago: elimi.
nate service on Tuesday and
Wednesday; retain other five
days.
.Hoosier State between Indl-
anapc,lis and Chicago: eliminate.
servic1 on Monday, Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday; retain
other three days.
-Discontinue Loop and State
House service connecting St.
Louis, Springfield and Chicago.
.CalIfornia Zephyr between
Salt Lake City and Oakland,
Calif.: eliminate service on
Monday, Wednesday and Friday;
retain other four days.
.Illinois Zephyr between
Chicago and Quincy: eliminate
service on Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday; retain other four
days.
Downs said Amtrak was not
targeting Chicago as a focus of the
cutbacks, noting that the city
happens to be a connecting point
for many trains and thus tends to
be involved in almost any major
changes.
Cuts scheduled for Sept 10 are:
.Broadway Limited operating
from New York to Pittsburgh and
Chicago reduced to a New York.
Harrisburg-Pittsburg service.
Passengers continuing to Chicago
could switch to the Capitol Lim-
ited in Pittsburgh.
.Cardinal between New York,
Washington, Cincinnati ~and
Chicago reduced to Washington-
Cincinnati service on Frida~, ' I'
Saturday and Sunday. .-
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Lifest Ie
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A northbound Amtrak lrain picks up passen-
gers on its morning stop in College Station.
The Houston-to-Daltas route will end Sept. 10.
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.,-~)i..I~$hl"
Eagle photolShelley Smllflson
The traJQ "qoesn't stop here anYITIore
; , , College Station'loses part of its history
with the end of passenger service
By SHELLEY SMITHSON
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tures the International Great
Northern Railroad's All Student
Special arriving in College Station,
circa 1910,
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around the walls," he says. "We':
at the station and walk to our do
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Please see TRAIN
Eagle photo/Shelley Smithson
An Amtrak engineer pulling into College Station snags a bag of kolaches from a
special pole set up by volunteer station master Harold "Tex" Owens. Years ago,
such pol~s were used to pass instructions to the crew while trains were en route,
s'
'l'~X:...
tram is ch
bus'y'
!i:B\tt Nash is one of a dwindling
sffi~ents and residents who choog,
Aififrak trains, which stop six days a we
C~MegeStation. Since 1992, the total num~~r
of;passengers loading and unloading at .,' >1.
depOt near Texas A&M has dropped fro
aboupO,600 to iust over 4.200.
i).That's
cof"'''''''',
trt
t6
were e prIm
ing~ggies.I.;
~,"1ryt:ost of my classmates came to Collegalii
Station by train," he says. "We used to gogm
G(;rps trips to Dallas, and we'd load thos~l(;!;
triHns up with Aggies." i;~t;'J
'...:.'.:,T.h .'. ose cadets who couldn't afford the $3';'.',..:.'.:.:..:.
trap ticket could catch a free ride by hi(H~!
~l~{ili~\,J[1
two')wooden train stations that stood 30 (~~t
apart across from the Albritton Tower. ~i;t;;
\::;In the main office of one of the statiorl~:';
was;a big potbelly stove, and there were ff:;')
ltraK, L'1e passenger tram at has
VII.. I transportation to A&M students i
19E:il residents since 1988, plans to discoR...
",,:,:..>.-~}'i . w.....,!"'"<;">>
q~!~rvice to College StatIOn Sept. 10. 01[;;~1
Zt~ith no passenger trains rolling throUW
ti$~!~epot, the College Station train statiq~l~
til;~Yi soon stand as an empty reminder o~ii!1
tra:aition killed by the modern world of'"
"''''anes and budget cutbacks.
\!.ftE1tt~:a~pe
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Page 06 Bryan-College Station Eagle
Sunday, April 23, 1995
Lit
'Train
, From 01
"I don't like to fly because I
can't smoke," says Linda White,
, an Indiana resident who is vis-
iting her daughter. "I've got
plenty of time, and I like meeting
, people on the train."
Harold "Tex" Owens says the
train is a more civilized means of
transPOrtation.
"The seats are larger (than
those in an airline coach),"
Owens says, "and you have a
place to sleep and work in your
own compartment."
Owens is one of several local
residents who plan to fight to
,keep the Amtrak train rolling
through College Station. He will
attend a public forum set for 3
p.m. Thursday in Union Station,
400 S. Houston St., in Dallas.
Others, like Wesley Haba, a
conductor on the Texas Eagle
route, will also urge Amtrak to
continue service to College Sta.
tion. t
"I think discontinUing the
route is a disservice to the stu-
dents and people of College Sta-
tion," Haba says. "I've worked
this route for five years, and
when we used to have pickups
here on Friday, we would have
numerous students."
fag Ie photol St.llley Smithson
Amtrak train conductor Wesley Haba shakes hands with his old friend Harold "Tex"
Owens of Bryan, Owens, a volunteer who tends the COllege Station platform, has met
Haba's train with a warm smile and bags of kolaches twice a week for the last five years.
to Dallas route is not a done deal.
"In the first phase of cutbacks,
several states, like California,
came up with the necessary
, funding. to keep some services,"
Taubenkibel says. "It's up to the
Texas Department of Transporta-
tion to decide if they can pitch in
.. - - 4.\.....,. ron"""ll"l]l U
public hearing April 27, to get
input from the public as to the
most appropriate role for rail pas-
senger service," he says.
Unless the state decides to con-
tribute funds to keep the Houston
to Dallas route alive, Amtrak
trains will no longer travel
through College Station. Amtrak
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