GO Transit will be
expanding rail service on the Georgetown line to Toronto-area suburbs Kitchener-Waterloo,
Guelph and Acton, with service scheduled to begin by the end of 2011.
Treated-wood producer
Stella-Jones expects more demand for its railway ties in new tracks and
upgrades as the economy improves, The Canadian Press reports. Sales of railway
ties at Stella-Jones increased 91 per cent in its third quarter to C$84.3
million, chief executive Brian McManus said.
Restoration
of the Columbus and Greenville Railway line in Mississippi could have far-reaching and
long-lasting results, not just for the areas it touches directly but also for
the entire nation, the Commercial Dispatch reports. As freight volumes and fuel
costs increase, shippers will move toward rail and barge, prompting more rail
activity.
Northumberland-Quinte West
Member of Parliament Rick Norlock, Peter Delanty, Mayor of Cobourg, and Yves
Desjardins-Siciliano, General Counsel and Secretary of VIA Rail Canada,
unveiled the design for VIA’s enhanced and expanded Cobourg, Ont., passenger
rail station. Representing an estimated investment of C$9 million, the
project will receive C$1 million in funding from the Government of Canada’s
Economic Action Plan. This investment will provide modern, attractive
facilities for passengers, with capacity to meet potential future growth.
The following statement
was issued by Amtrak to make clear its position on the Access to the Regions’
Core (ARC) tunnel project in New Jersey: "Amtrak is not having formal
discussions with NJ TRANSIT regarding a joint tunnel project and has no plans
to purchase any NJT work related to the ARC project.
Following a week of
events launching GO Transit’s first-ever Passenger Charter, GO riders in the Toronto
area are getting a chance to tell their favorite customer service stories with
the launch of the new Random Acts of GO-ness program.
Chicago transit Authority Red
Line trains traveling southbound (to 95th/Dan Ryan) temporarily will be unable
to stop at the Jarvis, Morse and Loyola stations from 11 p.m. Friday, November
12 until 4 a.m. Monday, November 15, due to tie renewal work. Red Line trains
traveling northbound (to Howard) are not affected.
Tom Judge, who has been
Editor of Railway Track & Structures magazine since joining Simmons-Boardman Publishing Corporation in July
1998, will be retiring effective Dec. 31, 2010. Managing Editor Mischa Wanek-Libman,
who has been with the publication nine years, will become Editor of RT&S.
Worldwide industrial
services and engineered products company Harsco Corporation received two new
railway equipment orders in China totaling close to $11 million.
The Chicago Transit Board approved a $1.337-billion budget for 2011 that, through cost-conscious
management, maintains current fares and service levels for riders. The proposed
budget is $66.7 million, or 5.2 percent, more than the 2010 budget due in part
to contractually dictated union wage increases, along with pension and
healthcare obligations. These fixed increases will be partially offset by
management efficiencies that are expected to save nearly $54 million in 2011.
Gord Brown, Member of
Parliament for Leeds-Grenville, David Henderson, Mayor of Brockville, and Yves
Desjardins-Siciliano, General Counsel and Secretary of VIA Rail Canada,
unveiled the design plans for VIA’s new Brockville, Ont., passenger rail
station. Representing an estimated investment of C$4.5 million, the project
will receive C$3 million in funding from the Government of Canada’s Economic
Action Plan. This investment will provide modern, attractive facilities
for passengers, with capacity to meet potential future growth.
Shopping and industry have
mostly given way to entertainment districts and convention centers, but one
thing remains constant in downtown Cedar Rapids, Iowa, The Gazette reports. Studies
have come and gone, but the June 2008 flood disrupted the most recent effort to
address the situation. After the flood, a grant that would have continued the
study went instead to planning the city’s new convention complex.
(The following editorial
appeared in the Badger-Herald) The signing of the Pacific Railway Act by
President Abraham Lincoln in 1862 is lauded as a defining moment in America’s
history. Connecting the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, the transcontinental
railroad represented the epoch of westward expansion.
A divided City Council
approved spending an additional $934,000 in taxpayer money to purchase a small
office building on York Street in Norfolk, Va., that officials say would cause
a safety issue when light rail opens in May, The Virginian-Pilot reports. However,
some council members say Hampton Roads Transit, not the city, should be
responsible for purchasing the building. The transportation agency is
constructing the city’s light-rail line.
November 12-14, Washington,
D.C., Metro will upgrade its platforms, rail bridges, install new crossties and
new track to improve long-term reliability and service. As a result of this
crucial work, which is critical to maintain the railroad in a state of good
repair, trains on all lines will be single-tracking and riders should expect
their trips to take up to 30 minutes longer than usual.
Crews
for Seattle’s Sound Transit are performing utility work along South
Tacoma Way and at the intersection of South 26th and A Streets. This work, in
preparation for the new track for the D-to-M Streets project, is expected to
continue through early December.
A $32.5-million state
investment in 38 rail projects in 28 counties will upgrade and add capacity,
stimulate local economies and provide as many as 2,500 jobs, Pennsylvania Governor
Edward Rendell announced at a York,
Pa., manufacturing and distribution facility.
Daryl Kramp, Member of
Parliament for Prince Edward-Hastings, Neil Ellis, Mayor of Belleville, Ont., and
Yves Desjardins-Siciliano, General Counsel and Secretary of VIA Rail Canada,
unveiled the design plans for VIA’s new Belleville passenger rail station.
With a $32-million grant in
hand, Joliet, Ill., officials are hopeful that a new transportation center will
put the city on the map as a regional transportation hub, the Chicago Tribune
reports. Joliet officials recently learned of the state grant, which came just
one week after the city was turned down for a federal grant for the project.
The state grant, announced Oct. 28, will allow for the construction of a
transportation center immediately south of Union Station.
Rep. Tom Petri (R-Wis.),
who is expected to chair the House Highways Subcommittee of the Transportation
& Infrastructure Committee in the next Congress in 2011, is quoted by the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel that high-speed rail funds being returned to
Washington by Ohio and Wisconsin most likely will be recycled to high-speed
rail projects elsewhere.