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Amtrak and TxDOT to study new service from SHV to DFW


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#41 Texan Eagle

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Posted 03 March 2012 - 11:23 PM



This again is another boondoggle and waste of money on the part of Texdot. Shreveport population = 218k, metro = 500k. Houston population = 2 million, metro almost 6 million. Texdot is dancing all around the real issue of Houston to Dallas rail service. First they wasted a bunch of money studying Houston to Austin with a meandering route through Hearne that would take 5-6 hours vs Greyounds 3 hours. The direct route was abandoned by the SP in the 1960's and Hwy 290 built on part of the ROW. Now this Shreveport thing. Strangely, SWA doesn't fly to Shreveport. lol. Greyhound runs at least 6 departures a day to Shreveport on a 3-4 hour schedule. American Airlines flys there several times a day. It's all just a smoke screen to hide from the real issue, and that is direct rail service between DFW and Houston on a four hour schedule. That would complete the so called 'Texas Triangle' of DFW/SAS/HOU/DFW. This is the basic route structure for passenger rail in Texas. Other destinations should be service by bus feeder lines, both highway and local metro. If we are to the point of starting up rail service between Dallas and Shreveport or adding the so called Crescent Star then the rest of the country must have the best rail service in the world. Before I did a 'Star' I would think about Texas to Colorado or bringing back the Lone Star or making the Sunset Limited daily or restoring SL service to Florida.


In an ideal world, the mid-west and southern states would have a corridor-style rail service between their major cities, connecting to the existing LD routes. Something like this-

Also, pigs would fly.


Until that happens, don't get your hopes high on any new corridors actually seeing the light of day in this part of the country.


I like the idea of a service Dallas-Little Rock-Memphis, and I see you've chosen the abandoned but still usable Rock Island line Little-Rock-Memphis, which has always been the most direct. I think if you are trying to have a corridor rather than express service Dallas-Houston though, you should have it serve Bryan-College Station since it is a pretty significant intermediate point, especially once you consider all of the student population there.


Don't read too much into the routes. I merely connected the cities using Google Maps so the routes you see are actually roads, not railroad tracks!

About College Station, yes, I would also love to see that being included in the scheme of things if and when Texas gets serious about inter-city corridor rail, but the location of that town is such that I have yet not been able to figure out what would be the best way to connect it- on Dallas-San Antonio leg, San Antonio-Houston leg or Houston-Dallas leg.. one of the sections will need to take a significant detour from the shortest path, the question is, which one would make most sense, or rather, least negative impact on the popularity of the train among city to city travelers.

#42 sldispatcher

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 09:06 AM

Looking at the UP and KCS system maps, if the FTW-Shreveport corridor service does come into existence, it looks like it could possibly be extended to Baton Rouge and New Orleans over KCS. Whether there would be any political support in LA for it, don't know, but wonder if a New Orleans to Shreveport to Dallas/FTW day corridor train would get enough business.


As a Shreveport resident, I'm not sure I believe that a SHV - FTW only train is the wisest move. I agree and stand wholeheartedly with the above statement. I would definitely be interested in knowing how a FTW-NOL corridor train might perform. Then you raise the issue of casino traffic access. The only way to do that by using either the KCS or UP routes from Dallas area, would be to cross the Red River bridge and then down a short, but little used piece of connecting track to KCS's line towards Baton Rouge and New Orleans. That track could also be the method in which the train is turned each day. KCS's line to BTR is not signalled.

Otherwise, to gain access to the UP to head south, they could use that same short track and a small connector to cross over at UP's Red River Bridge..up the hill and down towards Hollywood yard where they would take the wye and head south to Nachitoches and Alexandria. Track is CTC. Problem, is that to gain access to Baton Rouge, they'd have to use the track from Livonia over to Baton Rouge...and then to either IC or KCS to get to NOL. Other choice is to bypass BTR and stay on UP..but that would miss a major metropolitan area by 20 miles or so.

In the end, could be the foot in the door for the South Central - DAL - DEN - SEA/PDX route that would close many gaps in western service...but alas, won't see that anytime soon either.

Could it be done? Sure, but would the corporation, unions, politicians and respective governments come to an agreement to make it viable/reliable? Very doubtful. All of them have a role in the success and the mess we find ourselves in.

(BTW, I am a staunch Conservative who is quite pro-rail/pro-long distance rail...just not in favor of keeping it structured as it is now).

#43 henryj

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 09:49 AM

I think if you are trying to have a corridor rather than express service Dallas-Houston though, you should have it serve Bryan-College Station since it is a pretty significant intermediate point, especially once you consider all of the student population there.


I would agree with you Johnny as that route has the most traffic potential. But for start up it would be much more expensive than the BNSF route because of the freight traffic and UP would require a lot of improvements to upgrade the line to accommodate 4 1/2 hour service. Either route requires substantial grade crossing improvements in the urban areas and Houston needs a real passenger station. Recently there has been some suggestions to utilize the downtown post office as the new intermodal center which would be great as it sits where the old SP station used to be. Dallas of course still has their Union Station and uses it for light rail and TRE. However, even there they only have the outside platform available for intercity service. To get the 'Texas Triangle' service going is going to require substantial investment in infrastructure. San Antonio desparately needs a central station and some track rework to speed up entry and exit times in both directions.

Henryj. Trains I have ridden: Sunbeam, Sam Houston Zephyr, Valley Eagle, Houstonian, Sunset Limited, Twin Star Rocket, Texas Eagle, Texas Zephyr, Texas Chief, California Zephyr, City of Portland, City of San Francisco, Coast Daylight, Canadian, Winnipeger, San Diegan, Flying Crow, Spirit of St. Louis, Pennsy NEC. Amtrak: Lone Star, Crescent, NEC, Broadway Ltd, LSL, Maple Leaf, The International, EB, CS, Sunset Limited, City of New Orleans, CZ, Cascade, Eagle, Cardinal, Meteor, Acela plus many excursions.


#44 Guest_Ray_*

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 12:12 PM

Look at the CCC Cleveland-Columbus-Cincy that has been studied for 30-40 years-It is a well informed assumption around here that $$$$ studies is political kickback to consulting firms. Our subway took 70 years to get built which is now in the form of Bus BRT only lanes for 4.5 miles.

#45 George Harris

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 12:23 PM

The BNSF Dallas to Houston needs quite a bit of work, but at least the alignment is fairly straight. A rail relay, a good T&S (that's tie and surfacing) job, probably to the tune of about 1/3 new ties, and likely some signal work and of course grade crossing protection would be needed, but then, excluding the signal work that has been funded with virtually no publicity for almost the entirety of the Vermonter's one train a day route north of Springfield, Mass. Likewise, there has been similar work done on Uncle's dime for such things as Gulfport to Hattiesburg MS under the guise of improved port access. It would be most useful if a deal could be made to use the UP (ex-SP) route between Dallas and Corsicana.

Do the above and with a 90 mph limit, a reliable schedule of just under 4 hours could be achieved. (The BNSF line had a 90 mph speed limit in the past before the ICC outlawed 80 plus for the signal system they had.) It would be better to go for 110 mph, speed up some of the slow spots, and try for a schedule closer to 3 hours.

#46 henryj

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 02:40 PM

The BNSF Dallas to Houston needs quite a bit of work, but at least the alignment is fairly straight. A rail relay, a good T&S (that's tie and surfacing) job, probably to the tune of about 1/3 new ties, and likely some signal work and of course grade crossing protection would be needed, but then, excluding the signal work that has been funded with virtually no publicity for almost the entirety of the Vermonter's one train a day route north of Springfield, Mass. Likewise, there has been similar work done on Uncle's dime for such things as Gulfport to Hattiesburg MS under the guise of improved port access. It would be most useful if a deal could be made to use the UP (ex-SP) route between Dallas and Corsicana.

Do the above and with a 90 mph limit, a reliable schedule of just under 4 hours could be achieved. (The BNSF line had a 90 mph speed limit in the past before the ICC outlawed 80 plus for the signal system they had.) It would be better to go for 110 mph, speed up some of the slow spots, and try for a schedule closer to 3 hours.


Thing is George, all that could be easily done for less money than trying to restore Houston Austin or some of the other boondoggles TEXDOT has come up with lately and you would have a viable corridor between Texas two largest population areas. The Aggies get a bus connection from college station. You could also connect Huntsville and Sam Houston State with the same bus route. The other two sides of the triangle(DFW/SAS/HOU) already have service, all you have to do is add to it.

Henryj. Trains I have ridden: Sunbeam, Sam Houston Zephyr, Valley Eagle, Houstonian, Sunset Limited, Twin Star Rocket, Texas Eagle, Texas Zephyr, Texas Chief, California Zephyr, City of Portland, City of San Francisco, Coast Daylight, Canadian, Winnipeger, San Diegan, Flying Crow, Spirit of St. Louis, Pennsy NEC. Amtrak: Lone Star, Crescent, NEC, Broadway Ltd, LSL, Maple Leaf, The International, EB, CS, Sunset Limited, City of New Orleans, CZ, Cascade, Eagle, Cardinal, Meteor, Acela plus many excursions.


#47 sldispatcher

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 03:36 PM

The BNSF Dallas to Houston needs quite a bit of work, but at least the alignment is fairly straight. A rail relay, a good T&S (that's tie and surfacing) job, probably to the tune of about 1/3 new ties, and likely some signal work and of course grade crossing protection would be needed, but then, excluding the signal work that has been funded with virtually no publicity for almost the entirety of the Vermonter's one train a day route north of Springfield, Mass. Likewise, there has been similar work done on Uncle's dime for such things as Gulfport to Hattiesburg MS under the guise of improved port access. It would be most useful if a deal could be made to use the UP (ex-SP) route between Dallas and Corsicana.

Do the above and with a 90 mph limit, a reliable schedule of just under 4 hours could be achieved. (The BNSF line had a 90 mph speed limit in the past before the ICC outlawed 80 plus for the signal system they had.) It would be better to go for 110 mph, speed up some of the slow spots, and try for a schedule closer to 3 hours.



Certainly makes sense. I think LA-SAN is a good model for speed, etc. I think some people out in the "real world" also get too tied up worrying too much about the full length route rider of trains (FLRRT). It's the folks going back and forth along the the intermediate stops, that truly benefit. As the air service in this country contracts, many of these smaller towns and cities are simply going to lose their scheduled carriers at their respective airports...it's not a matter of if but when. Handwriting is on the wall.

The trick is frequency and reliability..and an alternative when things go south. Put those 3 together and it would work.

#48 afigg

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 05:07 PM

About College Station, yes, I would also love to see that being included in the scheme of things if and when Texas gets serious about inter-city corridor rail, but the location of that town is such that I have yet not been able to figure out what would be the best way to connect it- on Dallas-San Antonio leg, San Antonio-Houston leg or Houston-Dallas leg.. one of the sections will need to take a significant detour from the shortest path, the question is, which one would make most sense, or rather, least negative impact on the popularity of the train among city to city travelers.

Running a Dallas-Houston route through College station is one of the options in the $15 million TX DOT preliminary engineering and NEPA documentation project. The application and supporting documents for the project can be found here. Applied for $18 million, got $15 million. The project will look at 3 alternative routes: UPRR, BNSF, and a green field route following I-45. More links to the Texas DOT HSIPR applications are here.

#49 Ispolkom

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 05:14 PM

-It is a well informed assumption around here that $$$$ studies is political kickback to consulting firms.


A study is also a way for politicians to claim they are doing something about an issue without actually doing anything, or it can be a sop thrown to the losing side: hey, we're not going to fund your project, but we'll do a study that can later be ignored.

#50 sldispatcher

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 05:26 PM

-It is a well informed assumption around here that $$$$ studies is political kickback to consulting firms.


A study is also a way for politicians to claim they are doing something about an issue without actually doing anything, or it can be a sop thrown to the losing side: hey, we're not going to fund your project, but we'll do a study that can later be ignored.



And for $15 million, I can't believe that some corridor service could have been started up without needing any study whatsoever. A second DAL to SAT service. Service to SHV/BOS. Sending a second or third train to OKC. etc. etc.

#51 henryj

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 11:22 AM


About College Station, yes, I would also love to see that being included in the scheme of things if and when Texas gets serious about inter-city corridor rail, but the location of that town is such that I have yet not been able to figure out what would be the best way to connect it- on Dallas-San Antonio leg, San Antonio-Houston leg or Houston-Dallas leg.. one of the sections will need to take a significant detour from the shortest path, the question is, which one would make most sense, or rather, least negative impact on the popularity of the train among city to city travelers.

Running a Dallas-Houston route through College station is one of the options in the $15 million TX DOT preliminary engineering and NEPA documentation project. The application and supporting documents for the project can be found here. Applied for $18 million, got $15 million. The project will look at 3 alternative routes: UPRR, BNSF, and a green field route following I-45. More links to the Texas DOT HSIPR applications are here.


Interesting document, looks like TEXDOT has at least found someone that knows where the existing rail routes are. Looking at their map they seem to be choosing the old MP route between Bryan and Hearne which is a roundabout way to go vs the old SP route which is directly up highway 6. The MP route encompasses a sharp left turn right in the middle of downtown Bryan followed by a stretch down the middle of a residential street before crossing over Hwy 21 to go north. They follow this to the Brazos river and almost to Valley Jct and then switch over to the DALSA to get into Hearne. That alignment will add time and miles to the route that is already the longest route. If they were really serious about starting up this service, by far the quickest and cheapest way is to use the BNSF route. This study won't be completed until 2014. The biggest boondoggle is the proposed route up I45 which would require billions and billions of dollars to build a whole new ROW and probably rebuild much of I45 plus all new park and ride style stations since I45 bypasses every population center between Houston and Dallas. But, hey, the politicians might like that because they can award more contracts and get more kick backs. I look at this study as a way to avoid doing anything for years other than waste taxpayers dollars.

Henryj. Trains I have ridden: Sunbeam, Sam Houston Zephyr, Valley Eagle, Houstonian, Sunset Limited, Twin Star Rocket, Texas Eagle, Texas Zephyr, Texas Chief, California Zephyr, City of Portland, City of San Francisco, Coast Daylight, Canadian, Winnipeger, San Diegan, Flying Crow, Spirit of St. Louis, Pennsy NEC. Amtrak: Lone Star, Crescent, NEC, Broadway Ltd, LSL, Maple Leaf, The International, EB, CS, Sunset Limited, City of New Orleans, CZ, Cascade, Eagle, Cardinal, Meteor, Acela plus many excursions.


#52 fairviewroad

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 11:45 AM


Bossier's right on the border between Texas and Louisiana (I drove through there one evening last year), before you get to SHV.


No, Bossier City is Shreveports twin city on the east bank of the Red river. It looks like they want to take the train over the river and have the terminal station there as well as one in Shreveport itself.


Bossier City is also home to several of the Shreveport area casinos. Also, Bossier City is the locale of the immense Barksdale AFB, with its scads (thousands? not sure) of young adults. Even those who live off-base seemed to live on the Bossier City side of the river(at least when I lived in the Shreveport area in the 90's). Many of them seemed to get the weekend off and I'm sure would relish an easy, comfortable way to get to Dallas (i.e. anywhere other than Shreveport) for the weekend.



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