Author: jrood

Caltrain construction, maintenance update Sept. 24 -30






Work will be done on the
new pedestrian underpass at the Santa Clara, Calif., station. The underpass
will connect the north- and southbound platforms, allowing two trains to pass
through the station at the same time and improving safety for pedestrians in
the station.

BART sets grand opening on Contra Costa Transit Village






On October 1-2, Sunne Lane
and Harvey Drive near the Pleasant Hill, Calif., BART Station will be closed to
traffic. This closure is to allow for the set-up and ceremonies for the grand
opening of the Contra Costa Centre Transit Village and the Robert I. Schroder
Overcrossing that will be held in the Town Square on October 2.

Demand for TIGER II funding overwhelms supply






Nearly 1,000 construction
grant applications for more than $19 billion from all 50 states, U.S.
territories and the District of Columbia far exceeded the $600 million in
TIGER (Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery) II dollars the
U.S. Department of Transportation can award for infrastructure projects ranging
from highways and bridges to transit and ports, Secretary Ray LaHood said
following the August deadline for submissions.

Hampton Roads new contract aims to set light-rail deadline, save millions






As the city ponders how
to pay for light-rail budget overruns, the Hampton Roads Transit board took
action Sept. 23 to help control project costs, The Virginian-Pilot reports. The
board approved changes in the final large contract for rail construction that
HRT President and CEO Philip Shucet said will allow the agency to avoid
spending an additional "few million dollars."

WMATA schedule weekend renovation Sept. 24-26






September 24-26, Metro in
the Washington, D.C., area will install new crossties, upgrade its track and
trim weeds on the Orange, Blue, Yellow and Green lines to improve long-term
reliability and service. As a result of this work, which is critical to
maintain the railroad in a state of good repair, riders can expect delays of up
to 30 minutes. 



LIRR sets overnight track inspection early Sept. 25






MTA Long Island Bus will
provide bus and van service in place of four Long Island Rail Road trains at
three Port Washington Branch stations in the early morning of Saturday,
September 25, in order to allow overnight track inspections. LIRR customers
will be able to transfer between trains and buses/vans at the Great Neck
Station, and should allow up to 30 minutes of additional travel time in either
direction.

New Mexico Rail Runner Express sets weekend work






Due to bridge repair work
in the Rail Runner corridor, the #502 train from Belen (8:50am) and the #505
train from Santa Fe (11:20am) will be cancelled, Sunday, September 26, between
8:50 am and 1:00 p.m. The two later trains will still run on their normal
Sunday Schedule

NTSB Chairman briefs Congress on June 2009 WMATA collision






Visioning Sessions

National Transportation
Safety Board Chairman Deborah A.P. Hersman appeared before a U.S. House of
Representatives subcommittee to discuss the final report and safety recommendations
from the NTSB’s investigation into the fatal June 2009 collision of two
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) trains on the Red Line
in Washington, D.C.

 

Aldridge/Collisys wins Twin Cities Central Corridor systems contract






Visioning Sessions

The Metropolitan Council awarded
Aldridge/Collisys, a joint venture, an $87.9-million systems contract to build
the traction-power substations and overhead contact system for the Central
Corridor LRT Project.  Aldridge/Collisys
also will construct the communications system, train-to-wayside communications,
radio, public address system and train control system with control centers,
wayside signals and remotely controlled power-operated switches.

Public invited to San Bruno Grade Separation community meeting






The public is invited to a
community meeting about the San Bruno, Calif., Grade Separation Project from
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Sept. 30 at Belle Air School in San Bruno. The meeting
will include a presentation on the project, which will elevate the Caltrain
tracks above San Bruno, San Mateo and Angus avenues. The project also includes
a new elevated train station between San Bruno and San Mateo avenues that will
replace the current station, three pedestrian underpasses and a new parking lot
with 191 spaces. In addition, Posy Park and the streets and sidewalks in the
neighborhood will be improved.


‘Keep Hudson rail tunnel project on track’






(The following column,
"Don’t let this opportunity slip away: Keep Hudson rail tunnel project on
track," was written by Martin E. Robins and appeared Sept. 23, 2010, in
the
Newark, N.J., Star Ledger. Robins is director emeritus of the Alan M.
Voorhees Transportation Center at Rutgers University, was the original project
director of Access to the Region’s Core from 1994 through 1998.)
No one can blame Gov. Chris
Christie for his 30-day moratorium on the Access to the Region’s Core project,
the enormous undertaking to build a new passenger rail tunnel under the Hudson
River. But he must do everything in his power not to let this extraordinarily
valuable public works project slip away over exaggerated fears of future costs
that may never materialize.

D.C. Metro Committee recommends creation of a new safety committee






Continuing to emphasize the
priority of safety, Washington, D.C., Metro’s Customer Service, Operations and
Safety Committee has recommended that the full Board of Directors establish a
Safety and Security Committee and that the Board also adopt a new mission
statement that clearly places safety at the forefront of the transit agency. 

The
actions serve to demonstrate the transit agency’s commitment to safety as its
top priority and address a recommendation by the National Transportation Safety
Board for increased safety oversight by the Metro Board, which is expected to
vote on the recommendations at its regular monthly meeting on Sept. 30. 



CSXT Worcester, Mass., intermodal site on track






Though the local permitting
process for the project seemingly crawls along, officials at CSX Transportation
are hopeful that their $100-million plan to expand the company’s freight yard
behind Union Station will be completed by 2012, the Telegram reports.