Chicago-Quad Cities-Iowa City HSR receives $230 Million federal grant

The Federal Railroad Administration awarded $230 million in federal funding to expand high-speed passenger rail service between Chicago, the Quad Cities and Iowa City.

The Iowa Legislature has already appropriated $3.5 million for the project and must approve an additional $16.5 million for the Iowa portion to proceed, said the Iowa Department of Transportation’s rail office. In addition, Iowa lawmakers would need to provide an estimated $3 million annually in government operating subsidies.

The 219-mile route between Chicago and Iowa City, using BNSF Railway and Iowa Interstate Railroad tracks, would be completed by 2015, providing twice daily round trip Amtrak service. Initially, trips would take less than five hours at an initial top speed of 79 mph. Supporters hope speeds could eventually hit 100 mph.

The rail line is part of the Midwest High-Speed Rail Network that will connect cities around the region and tie together the regional economy. The Iowa line will test green concepts such as biofuels, biolubricants and other eco-friendly initiatives. The grant is one of several that the Federal Railroad Administration will announce this week as it rolls out the second round of competitive funding to develop high-speed rail corridors across the nation.

Jackson & Lansing Railroad Company to acquire 47 Miles of track from NS

The Jackson & Lansing Railroad Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Adrian & Blissfield Rail Road Company, a Michigan-based company, has acquired 47 miles of track from Jackson, MI, to Lansing from Norfolk Southern.

The Adrian & Blissfield Rail Road operates number of freight and dinner train companies in Southeastern Michigan including the Old Road Blissfield Dinner Train, the oldest operating dinner train in the U.S., plus the Old Road Dinner Train Charlotte.

The transfer of track was approved by the Surface Transportation Board.

"The Adrian & Blissfield has shown growth in its freight business in the past two years from the previous year," said Mark Dobronski, A&B RR and J&LRR president. "Our Revenues for 2010 are on pace to exceed last year. The new addition of track capacity is expected to help the company grow even more."

2010 Professional Environmental Excellence Award to David C. Clark of BNSF Railway

The Association of American Railroads awarded the 2010 Professional Environmental Excellence Award to BNSF Railway Director of Environmental Remediation David C. Clark. Based in Topeka, Kan., Clark has 35 years of environmental experience all within the rail industry. The award was presented at the annual Railroad Environmental Conference at University of Illinois, Urbana.

"The concept of environmental excellence is vitally important to railroads – it not only helps our companies with efficiency and sustainability, but also benefits the communities we serve and move through every day," said AAR President and CEO Edward R. Hamberger. "David Clark is a wonderful example for all rail employees in his dedication to BNSF and the industry’s overall progress in achieving environmental excellence."

Clark is a professional engineer and for the past 16 years has been focused on directing the remediation activities for the BNSF system. Today, he oversees a staff of nine environmental professionals who handle all historical site cleanups, serve as primary contacts with environmental emergency response and oversees the environmental aspects of property transactions. Over the past several years, he has established several critical company programs, such as:

– a program to help track expenditures and cost projections for the company’s $75 million annual remediation program with nearly 400 sites system wide;

– a central laboratory management program that has cut $15 million in lab-related expenses over the past eight years and includes regular audits to ensure only the highest quality data, and

– a preferred consultant program that has reduced the number of consultants working on remediation sites from 35 to 6, saving $3 million annually and ensuring more uniform project oversight.

In addition to the many ways he has helped BNSF, Clark also has been an active an influential leader among environmental professionals within the railroad industry. He has served on committees at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, AREa Committee 13, as well as the AAR Environmental Affairs and Tank Car committees.

Clark was one of five railroad industry professionals nominated for the award which recognizes an individual who has demonstrated outstanding performance in environmental awareness and responsibility during the year.

The four other nominees are as follows (alphabetically):

Linda S. Holmes is a Huntington W. Va.-based supervisor of environmental field services for CSX Transportation Inc., where she has been an accomplished environmental leader during her 29 year career with the company. Her expertise and oversight has resulted in 100 percent environmental compliance at 44 company facilities, including one of the largest locomotive heavy repair shops in North America. Holmes also was the first female to obtain the company’s certification as a Hazardous Materials Sentinel. Among the many innovative company programs she has initiated, is a pilot to improve the storage and packaging of fluorescent lamps to be recycled; a program in the company’s major car repair facilities to replace products with high-VOC compounds with water-based, low-VOC coating compounds, and a special modification of oil belt skimmers that has dramatically improved operation and maintenance costs. Her outstanding operation of a wastewater treatment plant in Newport News, Va., has earned several Silver Star Awards, while her sustainability efforts last year in a major rail yard resulted in a Platinum Award.

Gary L. Honeyman is a Laramie, Wyo.-based, manager of environmental site remediation at Union Pacific Railroad (UP). He is responsible for site remediation projects that have produced tremendous community benefits. For example, he’s helped establish a 72-mile trail that received the EPA Phoenix Award, a 2.5-mile walking loop that attracts thousands of people annually, as well as a successful light-rail operation. He also has championed a change in UP’s approach to site remediation, proving the business case to change the remediation solution from monitoring to removing contaminated material. Expanding the concept across the railroad has saved $12 million over five years. In one case involving a local transit district, Honeyman developed a cost-effective soil management plan that ensured impacted soils generated during construction were properly managed without interfering or delaying construction, saving the company an estimated $2 million and ensuring the project was completed on time. This project was so successful that the transit agency plans to use it as a model for three future light rail development projects.

Harri Liivamägi, P.Eng., CRM, is a Winnepeg, Manitoba-based environmental engineer with 32 years at Canadian National Railway (CN). After beginning his career with CN as a summer student on engineering survey crews, today he is well respected by his colleagues and environmental regulators at all levels of government. He has successfully arranged the mitigation of significant hazardous materials releases at both derailments and facilities at 39 major derailments and 15 facility incidents. In one such case, his suggestion to burn off diesel fuel at two unrelated, remote derailment sites successfully eliminated fuel in the environment, preventing impacts along the shores of a nearby creek and lake as well as the town’s downstream drinking water supply. At a derailment site involving a locomotive fuel tank spill of 3000 gallons into an adjacent ice covered lake, Liivamägi suggested hiring a nearby native community’s commercial fishermen to install sorbent booms under the ice by using the fishers’ ice jiggers. The ice jiggers are normally used by winter fishers to install fish nets under the ice.

Susan M. McFaul is a Chicago-based field environmental specialist with Amtrak. Since joining the railroad in 2005, she is responsible for environmental compliance and activities at the Chicago yard and has a critical role in certain environmental functions throughout the Central Division. Her leadership over the last five years included establishing a recycling program at the Chicago Yard which has resulted in a 37 percent increase in revenue from used oil and scrap by recycling over 160,000 gallons of used oil and 81 tons of steel scrap. McFaul trains nearly 1000 employees annually on various regulatory and compliance issues, and conducts regular job briefings and trouble-shooting sessions with waste water treatment and fueling operators, vendors, and other contractors. She also lead an energy audit Amtrak’s Brighton Park facility in Chicago which has resulted in reduced energy consumption costs of over $50,000 per year, making Brighton Park the first facility in Central Division to comply with the company’s initiative to reduce energy usage and costs.

AAR and TTCI Announce Establishment of Research Advisory Board






The Association of American
Railroads and the Transportation Technology Center, Inc., established a TTCI
Research Advisory Board. Developed to provide feedback on AAR’s Strategic
Research Initiatives and on how TTCI can best serve the AAR Affiliates and the
Associates, the board will consist of members drawn from AAR’s Gold Associate
and Affiliate programs.

UP making major investments in track in Wisconsin, Nebraska






Union Pacific will improve
Wisconsin and Illinois’ transportation infrastructures by investing nearly $15
million to improve the freight rail line that runs from Milwaukee, Wis., to
Chicago, Ill. Work on the more than 75-mile stretch of railroad track began
April 23 and is scheduled to be completed by mid-December.

Cleveland RTA receives $10.5 million grant for University Circle station






Excitement abounds within
the University Circle community, as the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit
Authority learned it received $10.5 million from the U.S. Department of
Transportation to reconstruct the 53-year-old University Circle Rapid Station.
Of the $600 million available in competitive federal grants for the
Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) II program
around the country, RTA’s University Circle Rapid Station is one of 42 capital
projects selected and the only Ohio project.

Why Steel Dynamics is making extra-long, 240-foot railroad beams






A fast-growing Northern
Indiana steelmaker has begun making railroad beams three times longer than normal,
the Indianapolis Star reports. The longer rails require fewer welds at
installation and foster quicker safety inspections, both in an effort to cut
expenses and increase railroad durability for the nation’s train industry.

Caltrain construction, maintenance update, Oct. 22-29






Work will continue this
week on the new pedestrian underpass at the Caltrain station in Santa Clara,
Calif. 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.

Burien, Wash., Transit Center parking expansion project to break ground






King County and Alliance
Wasatch I, LLC, a joint venture between Alliance Property Group Inc. and
Wasatch Advantage Group, LLC ("Alliance"), are joining Sound Transit,
the City of Burien, Wash., and Pankow Builders to host a groundbreaking Oct. 23
for the park-and-ride expansion project at the Burien Transit Center. The
ceremony, scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m. at the Burien park-and-ride lot,
will kick off construction of a multi-level, 462-stall garage and an adjoining
43-space surface lot that will add 164 spaces to the transit center’s parking
capacity. King County Executive Dow Constantine, King County Councilmember and
Sound Transit Board member Jan Drago, U.S. Congressman Jim McDermott, Burien
Mayor Joan McGilton, and Alliance representatives will be among those speaking
at the event.

WTC Transportation Hub making tangible progress






Major construction progress
is being made to build the World Trade Center Transportation Hub, which will
serve 250,000 people daily, including preparations to install massive Santiago
Calatrava-designed arches to form the roof of the Hub’s mezzanine level and the
floor for the 9/11 Memorial.

Extremely limited LIRR train service Oct. 23-24, Nov. 6-7 for signal cutover






The MTA Long Island Rail
Road is advising its customers October 23-24, and November 6-7, there will be
extremely limited LIRR service, especially between Jamaica Station and Penn
Station, as the LIRR cuts over to a modern signal and switching control system
at Jamaica. During these weekends, the LIRR recommends customers use the LIRR
for essential business travel only

Passenger rail rolls closer to reality in Norfolk, Va.






Shipyard workers paused
to wave at the passengers aboard a Norfolk Southern passenger train as it made
a slow start through the backyards of Chesapeake homes and over the waters
surrounding the Norfolk, Va., Naval Shipyard, the Suffolk News Herald reports. The
grey and blue piles of freight soon turned to a blur of green and red – the
colors of summer turning to fall – as the train picked up speed through the
Great Dismal Swamp and continued over Lake Cohoon and through miles of cotton
and soybean fields.

DC Metro weekend renovation work set for Oct. 22-24






October 22-24, Washington,
D.C., Metro will upgrade its platforms, rail bridges and install communication
cables in support of expanded cell phone service throughout the Metrorail
system on the Red and Green lines 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 will be single-tracking, and so riders should
expect their trips to take up to 30 minutes longer than usual.





Illinois Gov. Quinn announces funding for Moline Transportation Center






Illinois  Governor Pat Quinn was joined by U.S.
Rep. Phil Hare, Federal Railroad Administration Administrator Joseph Szabo,
Illinois Transportation Secretary Gary Hannig and local officials to announce
full funding for the Moline Transportation Center that will serve as a station
for new Amtrak service between Chicago and the Quad Cities. The station project
will create 750 construction jobs. The realization of passenger rail service in
downtown Moline will support approximately 1,600 direct and indirect jobs.

BART breaks ground for Oakland Airport Connector






Congresswoman Barbara Lee,
BART Board President James Fang and Board Member Carole Ward Allen joined local
leaders in government, transportation and building trades to celebrate the
ceremonial groundbreaking on the $484 million Oakland Airport Connector
project. In the short term, construction of this train-to-plane connection will
mean thousands of jobs in a recovering economy. In the long term, this
world-class, 100-percent electric train-to-plane connection between the
Coliseum Station and the Oakland Airport will provide travelers with frequent,
fast and reliable service.

LA Metro applauds U.S. DOT’s $546-million loan






Los Angeles-area Metro
officials applauded the U.S. Department of Transportation announcement of a low-interest
loan of $546 million for the Crenshaw/LAX Transit Corridor project,
representing the largest public works investment in South Los Angeles.

Metra may start over with UP North bridge project






Metra might start over on
its plan to rebuild 22 bridges on the Union Pacific North Line, rebidding the
contract it already awarded for the work while figuring out a way to reduce the
estimated $80 million cost of new retaining walls, officials said, the Chicago Tribune
reports. The Northeastern Illinois 
commuter rail agency is sending the controversial $185 million project
to reconstruct century-old bridges back to its engineers to find a way to keep
two tracks in operation, officials said.