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HOT TOPICS
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I-81 Freight Rail Study and Norfolk Southern Cresent Corridor compared and contrasted in new paper for CTB
11/18/07
Because both are rail intermodal efforts
affecting the I-81 Corridor, there has been public confusion over
what these two projects are and how they differ. In a new paper
prepared for the Commonwealth Transportation Board meeting in Roanoke
on November 7, RAIL Solution details the differences and highlights
some curious ways the new NS direction departs from the vision of
its own CEO, Wick Moorman (2nd item below).
Read more...
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Response to "I-81 Crescent Corridor" Initiative
7/9/07
RAIL Solution has been asked our views on
Norfolk Southern's recently announced "I-81 Crescent Corridor"
initiative. To understand its significance, one has to separate what's
old from what's new.
Read more...
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Norfolk Southern's I-81 Strategy
10/19/06
Norfolk Southern President, Chairman, and
CEO Charles "Wick" Moorman made a major address at Hotel
Roanoke, which he called a "coming out party" for the
railroad's I-81 strategy.
Read more...
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A Multi-State Plan Needs Multi-State Involvement
RAIL
Solution is reaching out to Tennesseans,
Pennsylvanians, Marylanders, and
West Virginians.
“Our neighbors need to know
that the H-1581 process offers opportunity
for significant transport- ation
improvements at less cost to taxpayers,
highway users and our environment
up and down the I-81 Corridor. These
citizens need to be pressing their
transportation planners to gain
access to the intermodal rail planning
process.”
Dave Foster
RAIL Solution Exec. Dir.
contact>
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Below is the full text from Virginia Assembly website:
http://leg1.state.va.us/
Chapter
934
An Act to determine conditions necessary to divert truck freight from
Interstate Route 81.
[H
1581]
Approved May 18, 2006
Whereas, the General Assembly has determined that the transportation of
freight and passengers by rail frequently provides a less expensive, safer,
and more environmentally friendly and fuel efficient alternative to the
construction of additional highway capacity; and
Whereas, the General Assembly has established the Interstate Route 81
Corridor Multistate Transportation Planning Initiative, potentially involving
13 states; and
Whereas, the Commonwealth of Virginia's previously commissioned studies
to evaluate the feasibility of diverting freight in the Interstate Route
81 Corridor to rail have been restricted to improvements inside the borders
of Virginia only; and
Whereas, Interstate Route 81 has been found to be overutilized by commercial
truck traffic, more than half of which consists of long-haul through-trucks
beginning and ending their trips outside of Virginia; and
Whereas, a higher-speed dual-track railway would enable the diversion
of a significant portion of the through-truck traffic from interstate
highways to rail; and
Whereas, the 600-mile Interstate Route 81 Corridor between Knoxville,
Tennessee, and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, may be a suitable market in which
to deploy a modern, higher-speed intermodal concept using "roll on/roll
off" technology in the United States; and
Whereas, if deemed feasible, such a rail operation has the potential to
divert a higher percentage of truck-borne freight from Interstate Route
81 in Virginia than conventional intermodal rail concepts considered in
earlier studies, and with the potential for adding other services such
as passenger rail in the future; and
Whereas, there is a pressing public need to provide a mechanism for making
improvements to the Commonwealth's rail infrastructure that are clearly
in the public interest; now, therefore,
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. § 1. That the Commonwealth of Virginia, through the Secretary
of Transportation and the Rail Advisory Board, shall cause to have completed
a comprehensive feasibility plan to define the conditions that would be
necessary to divert the maximum amount feasible of the long-haul, through-truck
freight traffic to intermodal rail in the Interstate Route 81 Corridor.
Such a plan shall be completed as quickly as reasonably possible and the
finished plan provided to the Governor, members of the General Assembly,
and the public. The plan may be developed as part of a statewide multimodal
freight study or other study conducted by the Rail Advisory Board, the
Intermodal Office or the Virginia Department of Transportation. It shall
include, but not be limited to, evaluation of the following with the objective
of maximizing diversion potential to rail and minimizing future Interstate
Route 81 highway capacity construction needs:
A. Operating Characteristics.
1. Utilize existing VDOT or Norfolk Southern Shenandoah line right-of-way
wherever possible;
2. Extend at least 500 miles, creating or expanding logical termini in
Tennessee and Pennsylvania or New York with at least one intermediate
terminal in Virginia;
3. Utilize suitable "roll on/roll off" and other efficient rail
technologies and service concepts;
4. Achieve truck-competitive transit times and reliability between terminals;
5. Consider alternative ownership, management, and service operational
options and requirements; and
6. Consider the option of a new rail right-of-way from Front Royal to
Culpeper to expedite more efficient use of the Norfolk Southern Piedmont
line.
B. Financial Evaluation.
1. Capital cost of upgrading and construction for rail line as determined
in subsection A as well as cost of terminals, rolling stock, and other
equipment or infrastructure;
2. Operating cost for the level of rail service needed to achieve truck-competitive
speed and reliability;
3. Include comparative return on investment analyses between the rail
option(s) found to be most effective in meeting the performance criterion
of 60% diversion rate for through-state freight to rail;
4. Evaluate project financing alternatives, including funds available
through SAFETEA-LU, the Federal Railroad Administration’s $35 billion
"Railroad Rehabilitation and Improvement Financing" loan program,
public and private sector bond financing, and public-private partnership
capital investment;
5. Include truck direct and indirect cost savings from using rail compared
to over-the-road driving;
6. Include analysis of a full range of future fuel price scenarios, in
determining potential diversion rates to rail, and the capability to meet
debt service and operate profitably; and
7. Estimate the construction schedule for completing track upgrades and
grade crossing separation, including but not limited to, the rail corridor
from Front Royal to Manassas.
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NEXT MEETING:
June 7th at 10am Salem, VA
OF INTEREST
CSX's Innovative I-95 Corridor Proposal
Rail: Perpetually Underfunded
2006 Recap
PROBLEMS with the Tier 1 EIS
-Overview of DEIS.
-RS Response
-VDOT I-81 Site
-Write to VDOT>
-EIS Process Overview
Concerns for:
-Local Leaders
-Business Leaders
-Historic Sites
-Railroad Fans
-Environmentals
MEDIA COVERAGE
-Editorials/News
-Letters to Editor
LEARN MORE
RAIL Solution's I-81 Transportation Issues & Priorities
Maximize Rail/ Minimize Road Expansion
RESOURCES
-VA Gen. Assembly
-Analysis & Reports
-EIS Process
-PPTA Process
-Media Contacts
-Links
-Contact Us
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