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Published byNoreen McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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1 Passenger Rail Solutions – Balanced Approach 2009 Ark-La-Tex Rail Summit May 9, 2009 – Marshall, TX Joe Adams, Vice President – Public Affairs
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2 Driving the Golden Spike
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3 Fast Facts Freight Revenue $17.1 B Route Miles32,000 in 23 States Employees45,000 Annual Payroll$3.8 B Customers25,000 Locomotives 8,400 Portland Oakland LA Calexico Nogales El Paso Seattle Eagle Pass SLC Eastport Brownsville Houston KC St. Louis Omaha Twin Cities Duluth Denver Laredo Dallas Memphis Chicago New Orleans Union Pacific System
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4 Both Passenger & Freight Solutions Required Communities want passenger rail transportation to... –Reduce traffic congestion –Avoid/reduce road construction and maintenance –Promote economic growth Communities depend on freight rail transportation to... –Efficiently supply the goods they use everyday (food, vehicles, energy) –Reduce dependency on foreign oil through its fuel efficiency –Lower emissions by Two Thirds –Reduces Highway Congestion –Support infrastructure with private funds – not taxpayer dollars –Promote economic grown
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5 U.S. DOT projection Billions of Tons of Freight Transported in the U.S. Long-Term Demand for Freight Transportation Will Skyrocket
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6 Today 2035 without improvements Below capacity Near capacity At capacity Above capacity Expected Traffic vs. Capacity
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7 Class I Railroad Spending* on Infrastructure vs. State Highway Agency Spending* - 2006 Railroads Already Spend More Than Most State Highway Agencies! *Capital outlays plus maintenance expenses. Sources: FHWA Highway Statistics Table SF-12; AAR 1.Texas$7.57 2. Florida $5.69 3. California $4.19 Union Pacific $4.17 BNSF $3.89 4. New York $3.59 5. Pennsylvania $3.30 6. Illinois $3.30 CSX $2.62 7. Michigan $2.61 8. North Carolina $2.48 9. Ohio $2.14 Norfolk Southern $2.12 10. Georgia $1.88 $ in Billions
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8 Principles for Achieving Appropriate Balance Safe passenger and freight operations Reliable service for passengers and freight customers Protect capacity to accommodate future freight traffic growth Market-based compensation and no additional exposure to liability
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9 Union Pacific Participates in Passenger Rail Commuter Trains on UP 1,430 weekly trains; 880,000 weekly passengers Examples: –Chicago Metra (UP operates the commuter trains on three routes; USA’s 7 th largest commuter operation) –Altamont Commuter Express (Stockton – San Jose, CA) –CALTRAIN (San Jose – Gilroy, CA) –Metrolink (LA - Riverside, CA & Moorpark - Montalvo, CA) Amtrak 550 weekly trains; 130,000 weekly passengers Example: –Capital Corridor Service (San Jose – Oakland – Sacramento – Auburn; 32 daily trains)
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10 Commuter/Intercity Passenger Rail UP is willing to discuss passenger rail proposals Safety must be priority –Separate Track/Right-of-Way Preferable –Positive Train Control systems must be present –Passenger operations must meet all UP and FRA safety standards and fund all incremental safety requirements Freight service must not be compromised –Including UP’s ability to expand, operate on demand, service existing customers and locate new customers Commuter growth capacity must be funded by commuter agency and freight growth capacity must be protected Commuter agencies must indemnify/protect UP against all liability Commuter agencies must pay all costs: developing proposals, return on UP assets/property, UP tax liability, etc.
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11 High Speed Passenger Rail Safety –Separate Tracks –Sealed Corridors –Positive Train Control Freight Service –Access to Shippers Liability –Protection From Increased Risk
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12 Moving Forward Challenging Economic Times Opportunities –Passenger Rail Investment & Improvement Act –American Recovery & Reinvestment Act Union Pacific Guidelines Union Pacific committed to working with stakeholders to explore opportunities for intercity and commuter passenger rail
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