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Apr
11

2017 MOW Spending Report

Rail News Home MOW April 2017 Part 1 : 2017 MOW Spending Report Part 2 : 2017 MOW Spending Report - Class Is Part 3 : 2017 MOW Spending Report - Regionals/Short Lines Part 4 : 2017 MOW Spending Report - Passenger Railroads Rail News: MOW

Thirty of the 61 railroads that provided 2017 budgets have increased spending.Photo – Union Pacific Railroad By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Managing EditorAfter perusing the submitted surveys and other available information that helped me assemble this year’s spending report, a few things stand out about the referenced maintenance-of-way (MOW) programs.Many budgets appear to be fairly flat again, as has been the case the past few years. Thirty of the 61 Class Is, short lines, regionals and passenger railroads that provided 2017 budgets in MOW surveys collected in February and March (from among more than 200 distributed surveys) or during presentations have increased spending while nine others have slotted the same amount compared with 2016 levels. Yet, half of the year-over-year increases are very slight, barely or not quite covering higher labor and material costs associated with inflation.Conversely, 23 others trimmed their budgets — some substantially — and a dozen or so cited funding challenges. For example, the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority cut its spending by one-third year over year (to $44.4 million) because of budget constraints.Overall, there are fewer program breakdowns in the 2017 report, down to 65 total (see note below) from 72 and 75 in the 2016 and 2015 reports, respectively. Similar to the murky political climate, MOW appeared to be a “don’t go there” topic for a number of railroads — including some that have often participated in past surveys — perhaps given economic or traffic-growth concerns.Among those that did respond, a few mentioned delaying certain work or curtailing program aspects in 2017. One was Norfolk Southern Railway, which opted to reduce the amount of work equipment it acquires.Nonetheless, there still will be a lot of equipment in play and a lot of greenbacks invested this year in MOW. On the freight side, U.S. railroads are projected to spend $22 billion — or about $60 million per day — to maintain their networks, according to the Association of American Railroads. That includes the nearly $9 billion budgeted by Class Is and small roads in the report.In terms of passenger rail, the report lists 21 MOW budgets totaling more than $3 billion, a portion of the nearly $90 billion that the American Public Transportation Association estimates U.S. transit systems need to reach a state of good repair.As they chip away at their MOW programs, railroad managers expect to face many of the same challenges of previous years, such as scrounging up the necessary funds or finding available track time. For the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), dealing with aging infrastructure and limited resources is a constant uphill battle.“[Our] unmet capital need is approximately $13 billion and there hasn’t been a state capital bill since 2009, [so] finding funding for critical projects is a challenge,” CTA officials wrote in their survey.Following are the MOW slates for 65 freight and passenger railroads, which figure to keep seeking ways to overcome hurdles while carrying out this year’s programs.Editor's Note: The passenger railroad section of the 2017 MOW Spending Report includes a program breakdown from the San Francsico Municipal Transportation Agency that wasn't included in the report's print edition. next page
Keywords Browse articles on maintenance of way Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority Norfolk Southern Association of American Railroads American Public Transportation Association Chicago Transit Authority Contact Progressive Railroading editorial staff.

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Apr
10

DART to review downtown Dallas subway route options

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

Georgia Port Authority advances Savannah Harbor expansion

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

TTC powers up third rail on Line 1 subway extension

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

Short Line Safety Institute launches latest round of safety advice

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

L.A. Metro partners with navigation app to offer grade crossing alerts

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

NCDOT obtains grant to reduce locomotive emissions

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

Trump to nominate Kan as USDOT undersecretary

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

Five teams vie for California's high-speed rail operations

4/10/2017    

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Apr
10

From the editor: Real-world rail stories at Railroad Day on Capitol Hill

Rail News Home Federal Legislation & Regulation April 2017 Rail News: Federal Legislation & Regulation

— By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., EditorOn March 2, railroaders, suppliers and rail shippers met with congressional leaders for the annual Railroad Day on Capitol Hill. Congressional offices hosted meetings for 456 visitors — a Railroad Day record, according to the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association.As they have in previous years, the rail lobbyists for the day asked their elected representatives to oppose bigger and heavier trucks, and preserve “balanced regulation” and the short-line tax credit. Regarding the latter: They requested that their respective congressional reps cosponsor the Building Rail Access for Customers and the Economy Act, or BRACE Act. The legislation calls for making permanent the 45G tax credit, which expired Dec. 31, 2016. With all the tax reform talk, 45G has a real shot at becoming permanent this year, some believe.From the meetings I sat in on, and from the conversations I had throughout the long day in D.C., it once again was clear that rail citizen advocates continue to get better at making their voices heard on Capitol Hill. Some of the more effective connections I witnessed involved railroaders and customers tag-teaming lawmakers or aides on the merits, say, of 45G. They connected it to jobs, to the efficient movement of goods, to the dot-connecting that is rail when it works.In their zeal, some railroaders couldn’t help asking legislators/aides what they thought of the Trump administration’s talk of a $1 trillion infrastructure package. Considering that few details had been issued, and given the competing priorities (from health care to tax reform to any number of otherwise uncategorizable things we continue to read about), most lawmakers I heard demurred or attempted to tamp down expectations — for direct investment, certainly. Perhaps for good reason: Unveiled March 16, President Trump’s proposed federal budget would cut the U.S. Department of Transportation’s budget by 13 percent and terminate federal support for Amtrak’s long-distance service; eliminate the Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (aka TIGER) discretionary grant program; and limit funding for the Federal Transit Administration’s Capital Investment Program to projects with existing full funding grant agreements only.Meanwhile, rumblings about the infrastructure bill persisted as this issue went to press. Some congressional leaders maintain it’ll pass this year; others say they hope to pass something in time for the 2018 election cycle. So, the legislative murkiness likely will linger awhile. Which is one reason Railroad Day participants were encouraged to tell their real-world rail stories on the Hill. From what I saw and heard, they did.
Keywords Browse articles on Railroad Day 45G tax credit BRACE Act infrastructure bill Trump TIGER grants Amtrak Federal Transit Administration Contact Progressive Railroading editorial staff.

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Apr
07

Smart Sand to expand UP-served transload facility in Wisconsin

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

City short-lists five firms to submit operator bids for New Orleans Public Belt

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

Corpus Christi port scraps plans for container terminal

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

ASLRRA establishes short-line education fund

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

CN honors 32 shippers' sustainability efforts

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

FTA approves MBTA's scaled-down Green Line light-rail extension plans

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

Toyota honors BNSF’s service performance for third straight year

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

Toyota honors BNSF's service performance for third straight year

4/7/2017    

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Apr
07

Track problems caused recent Penn Station derailments, Amtrak's Moorman says

4/7/2017    

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Apr
06

Iowa DOT issues 2017 version of state rail plan

4/6/2017    

Rail News: Federal Legislation & Regulation

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