Amtrak taking over maintenance of NS Michigan line on February 16

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afigg

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Amtrak issued a news release with an update on the status of the NS tracks that were sold to Michigan and the track work plans for the corridor for the next 3 years. What, you were expecting the upgrades to be done quickly? Amtrak is taking over responsibility for the tracks on February 16, so no more NS imposed slow orders out of the blue. Some excerpts from the news release:

CHICAGO and LANSING – Amtrak and the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) are gearing up for track improvements along the former Norfolk Southern Railway (NS) route used by Amtrak Wolverine Service and Blue Water trains from Kalamazoo to Central and Eastern Michigan. Amtrak has responsibility for this infrastructure, effective Feb. 16.As announced in December 2012, MDOT used a grant from the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) to purchase of 135 miles of NS railroad for $140 million. The line is directly connected to the Amtrak-owned Michigan District, which runs 97 miles from Kalamazoo to Porter, Ind. The result is nearly 80 percent of the route between Detroit and Chicago is publically owned and will be maintained for passenger trains at higher speeds.

The goal is to expand the 110 mph top speeds for Amtrak trains from the current 80 miles, starting eastward with the 22-mile segment between Kalamazoo and Battle Creek. Travel times will be reduced as more improvements are made. Last year, Amtrak shaved about 20 minutes from the 2001 schedules on the Amtrak-owned segment of the corridor and the plan is to further reduce the travel time between Detroit and Chicago to about five hours.

The $140 million used to purchase the line included FRA High-speed Intercity Passenger Rail Program grant funds, plus a state match of $37.5 million. The FRA also awarded $196.5 million to MDOT for major track and signal improvements on this corridor, to be performed by Amtrak. NS will also transfer rail traffic control (train dispatching) to Amtrak in phases during the next three years.
Those taking the Michigan trains tomorrow on the 110 mph segment will get free cake!

Passengers riding Amtrak trains in the higher-speed segment in Michigan and Indiana will be offered complimentary cake and beverages tomorrow (Feb. 15) to celebrate the first anniversary of 110 mph (177 kph) service.
 
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Amtrak issued a news release with an update on the status of the NS tracks that were sold to Michigan and the track work plans for the corridor for the next 3 years. What, you were expecting the upgrades to be done quickly?
Often the paperwork takes longer than the actual work on the ground! (See also "Point Defiance Bypass" and "Englewood Flyover".) That's not a criticism; transferring legal title to a huge swath of land, setting up a maintenance contract, agreeing on dispatching transfer, making engineering plans, it's all important and complicated stuff.

In this case, I'm very pleased to see that the paperwork is finally done. The upgrades should actually happen when planned, unless more paperwork crops up...
 
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