DCTA board appoints new president






Jim Cline was recently
selected as the new president of the Denton County Transportation Authority,
local media report. Cline will begin his new position on March 1. Denton County
is part of the Dallas-Ft. Worth Metroplex.

Metra approves final design for CREATE’s Englewood Flyover






The CREATE Program partners are pleased to announce
that the Chicago area’s Metra Board of Directors has approved the final design
contract for the 63rd and State Improvement Project (CREATE Project P1, Englewood
Flyover). TranSystems Corp. was awarded the $5.65-million contract. The flyover
will carry the north-south Metra Rock Island commuter rail line over the
east-west Norfolk Southern/Amtrak line (a federally designated High Speed Rail
Corridor), eliminating conflict between 68 Metra Rock Island trains and
approximately 60 freight and Amtrak trains that presently cross at grade each day.

Ian Jarvis appointed Vancouver, B.C., TransLink CEO






TransLink’s Board of
Directors has chosen to go with organizational and regional experience in its
choice of a new leader for the organization by appointing one of TransLink’s
original executives, Ian Jarvis, as the transportation authority’s new Chief
Executive Officer. The Board appointed Jarvis interim CEO last November and,
according to Chair Dale Parker, the decision to forego an executive search for
a permanent replacement for Tom Prendergast was based on Jarvis’ ‘deep and long
experience’ in the organization and the strong endorsement he received within
TransLink and from its stakeholders.

St. Louis Metro Transit Board advances long-range plan






Helping more people get
to work and stimulating job growth and economic development are the goals of a
30-year long-range plan unanimously approved Feb. 12 by the St. Louis Metro Transit
Board of Commissioners. Called "Moving Transit Forward," the plan for the
future of transit in the region presents the results of nearly a year of
in-depth study by Metro officials and staff from the East-West Gateway Council
of Governments (EWGCG), the region’s planning agency.

BART statement on FTA letter on Oakland Connector






BART has received FTA
Administrator Peter Rogoff’s letter stating that the FTA has rejected BART’s
plan to meet the FTA’s standards of full compliance with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act. This letter cites no substantive deficiencies in BART’s latest
draft action plan to correct Title VI deficiencies identified in a December
2009 audit. Instead, the basis of the FTA Administrator’s rejection rests
solely on the fact that BART’s plan contains a timetable with an end date
beyond September 30, 2010-the deadline for awarding stimulus fund grants.

Racine firm devises sophisticated machinery for nation’s train lines

When railroads were first stretching their tentacles across vast new parts of this country, each new expanse of track was bought with Herculean human labor, the Racine, Wis., Journal-Times reports. No longer. Maintaining and replacing the rails still requires manpower, but far less of it. Mechanization has replaced much of what the gandy dancer and the sledgehammer achieved.

Nashville mayor eyes mass transit






If the convention center
was a colossal and contentious public project, wait until you see Nashville Mayor
Karl Dean’s next undertaking: a multi-year, multibillion-dollar effort to
renovate Middle Tennessee’s mass transportation system, the Tennessean reports.
The payback to residents of the greater Nashville area, Dean says, will be a
mass transit system to rival that of Denver, Charlotte and Austin.

Tampa, Fla., seeks to combine rail corridor plan






Rather than choosing
between North Tampa to Downtown and Downtown to West Shore corridors to launch
Tampa’s first light rail route, local planners may combine them in a funding
proposal to federal officials later this year, the Tribune reports. And plans
for the initial northern terminus for a light rail line could be extended to
the northeast beyond Skipper Road to the vicinity of Cross Creek, just beyond
Interstate 75, to make the project more attractive to potential federal
investments.

Rail spur plan crosses hurdle; on to final design






A proposed 3.3-mile rail
spur linking the Omya quarry on Foote Street in Middlebury, Vt., with the main
line west of the Otter Creek can now proceed to final design and property
acquisition, as the Federal Highway Administration has determined the estimated
$34.3-million project could meet federal environmental standards, the Addison
County Independent
reports.

Revised plans proposed to quiet disruptive train horns






Proposed changes to
Scottsbluff, Neb., city intersections could put establishing a quiet zone
throughout the community on the fast track, the Star-Herald reports. City
Manager Rick Kuckkahn told the Scottsbluff City Council that a current plan "could
completely silence the town (of train horns)."

Railroad yards still help propel local economies






A morning swig from a
plastic milk jug, the refrigerator where it was kept and the spoon used to
shovel that first bite of breakfast – the journey these everyday items take
from raw materials to finished products started at local railroad yards,
according to the Redlands, Calif., Daily Facts.

UP investing $29 million for track improvements near Houston, Texas






Union Pacific will improve
Houston’s transportation infrastructure with a $29 million investment to
improve the rail line that runs from Spring, Texas, to the Washington Avenue
Corridor. Work on the 23-mile stretch of railroad tracks will begin on the line
that parallels the Hardy Toll Road February 18. Crews also will make track
improvements to the
rail line located along Washington Avenue between downtown
Houston and Hempstead Road.

Work on LIRR spur could start in March






A New Jersey-based company
was awarded a $3.49-million construction contract to rebuild the Long Island Rail
Road rail spur that leads into the Calverton, N.Y., Enterprise Park and hopes
to get working on the railroad in March, local media report. The Riverhead Town
Board awarded the contract to Railroad Construction Co. Inc., of Paterson, the
lowest bidder. The highest bid came in at $6.7 million.

Railroad Crossroads






Although
a private company has found it uneconomical to maintain rail lines through
Aroostook County, Maine, it would be uneconomical for mills and other major
employers in the region to be left without rail service. This is the dilemma
facing state officials who are currently grappling with a budget shortfall of
nearly $440 million, according to an editorial in the Bangor Daily News.

Florida governor gives support for Jax-Miami rail line






Florida Gov. Charlie Crist
said that he plans meetings today with political and financial institutions in
South Florida that are interested in bringing to life the long-gone
Jacksonville-to-Miami passenger route along Florida East Coast Rail Road
tracks, the St. Augustine Record reports.