Via Rail makes contingency strike plans

Via Rail Canada revealed a contingency plan should a work stoppage occur next week. The plan calls for running a skeleton schedule of train services across Canada if ticketing vendors and maintenance staff go on strike.

Tavares, Fla., picks up remaining tab for Dora Canal railroad bridge project

Tavares, Fla., City Council members decided to pick up the $84,000 tab remaining to begin work on the $1.3 million project Dora Canal railroad bridge project. The city had already received the majority of the necessary funds from a federal stimulus grant through the state Department of Transportation, which covered 75 percent of the project. But city officials had struggled to find help with matching the rest of money.

Amtrak schedules track work in Empire Corridor






Beginning Monday, June
21, the schedule for Amtrak trains operating between Niagara Falls,
Albany-Rensselaer and New York will be adjusted to accommodate track work and
engineering projects. The temporary schedule changes are designed to ensure
Amtrak trains continue to operate without lengthy delays.

VRE railroad bridge repairs will start next month






Work to repair the
concrete exterior of the railroad bridge in downtown Fredericksburg, Va., will
begin next month, local media report. The Virginia Railway Express Operations
Board picked the lowest bidder among three competing construction firms to
perform the work.

Reductions proposed in N.Y. subway, bus service

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority is preparing additional service changes for the fall and winter, including trims to rush-hour service on several popular buses and the No. 7 train, even as New Yorkers are bracing for the loss of two subway lines and dozens of bus routes in less than a week, according to The New York Times.

Vietnam scraps $56B bullet train project

Vietnamese legislators rejected a proposed bullet train over its $56 billion cost – the assembly’s first rejection of a major proposal submitted by the all-powerful Communist government, the Associated Press reports.

Study begins on James Bay railroad






The first tentative steps
toward building an ore haul railway to the James Bay Lowlands began this past
winter, Northern Ontario Business reports. Helicopters moved drills into place
as geologists tested frozen riverbanks north of Nakina, taking core samples to
determine where bridges can be built to haul ore from a chromite open pit in
the Far North’s ‘Ring of Fire’ exploration camp.

$100 million CSX deal in Massachusetts






Elected officials closed of
a $100-million deal with CSX Corp. to launch commuter rail service to the South
Coast and increase service for Central Massachusetts commuters, the Telegram
and Gazette
reports. The agreement, announced by the governor and other
officials, allows the state to buy more than 30 miles of track from Taunton to
the Fall River and New Bedford area, which is crucial to passenger service.

Final environmental report for proposed BART extension to Livermore






BART has completed the
Final Program Environmental Impact Report (FPEIR) for an extension between the
Dublin/Pleasanton Station and the City of Livermore, Calif. The FPEIR consists
of a "Response to Comments" (Volume 2), which publishes BART’s
replies to public comments about the project together with the previously
issued Draft Program Environmental Impact Report (Volume 1). Both volumes of the
FPEIR are now available.

 

AAR statement on Teamsters Rail Conference employee survey






(The following statement
was issued by Association of American Railroads President and CEO Edward R.
Hamberger in response to the Teamsters Rail Conference employee survey titled "High
Alert 2") "Feedback from rail employees can be useful in improving worker
communication and training techniques. However, it is important to keep this
subjective survey in context: This is not a study or report on railroad
security. It is an unscientific survey of the perceptions of a small percentage
of the freight railroad workforce about security.

Alaska railroad to begin herbicide spraying after nearly three decades






Alaska Railroad Corp. has
received a permit from state regulators to spray the herbicide AquaMaster (key
ingredient Glyphosate) and Agri-Dex, a substance to help spread it, along 30
miles of track between Seward and Indian, Seward City News reports. The
railroad has not used chemical weed control for the past 26 years due to
widespread public opposition and an inability to obtain the needed permits. The
Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation permit is for two years. But
earlier this month six Alaska environmental groups and the Native Village of
Eklutna intervened to delay DEC from activating the permit. The groups are
hoping that the agency will reverse its decision altogether.

 

Windsor-Detroit rail tunnel promises 2,200 jobs






Backers of a proposed
$400-million Detroit River rail tunnel announced June 17 they have launched the
first steps toward construction, The Windsor Star reports. CP Railway, Borealis
Infrastructure and the Windsor Port Authority have joined together to work on
building a new double-stack high-clearance tunnel to replace the existing rail
freight tunnel constructed in 1909.