U.S. to Begin Funding High-speed Rail
Service in September
$9 billion allocated to bulding service
June 22, 2009In a bid to rival the
express trains of France, Japan, Spain and China, regions in the U.S. have
been given guidelines on how to apply for $9 billion allocated to build a
national network of high-speed rail corridors, the Department of
Transportation said.
It said that the Federal Railroad Administration would award the first round
of grants by mid-September under the new rail plan first revealed by
President Barack Obama in April. "My high-speed rail proposal will lead to
innovations that change the way we travel in America," Obama said then,
mentioning rapid train services in France, Spain, China and Japan. "We must
start developing clean, energy-efficient transportation that will define our
regions for centuries to come," Obama said.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said on June 18 that the commitment
to revitalize the nation's rail lines by creating high-speed corridors and
improving existing service between cities included an eight-billion-dollar
grant program under Obama's massive economic stimulus plan. There is also a
continuing one-billion-dollar annual investment proposed in the president's
budget, he said.
"Rail travel will encourage economic growth and create new domestic
manufacturing jobs, while reducing pressure on our highways and airways,"
said Federal Railroad Administrator Joseph Szabo.
Vice President Joseph Biden and LaHood heard from governors and state
transportation chiefs at the White House two weeks ago about how they hoped
to boost their economies with improved passenger rail service, officials
said.
According to guidelines drawn up, rail proposals will be considered on the
merits for their ability to make trips quicker and reduce congestion on
highways and at airports and meet other environmental, energy and safety
goals.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2009
Industry Week To subscribe or visit go
to: http://www.industryweek.com
|