The
National Railroad Passenger Corporation, doing business as Amtrak
, is a government-owned
corporation that was organized on May 1, 1971 to provide
intercity passenger train service in the
United
States
. "Amtrak" is a
portmanteau of the words "America" and "track".
It is
headquartered at Union Station
in Washington,
DC
.
All of Amtrak's
preferred stock is
owned by the U.S. federal government. The members of its
board of directors are appointed by the
President of the United
States and are subject to confirmation by the
United States Senate.
Common stock was issued in 1971 to railroads
that contributed capital and equipment; these shares convey almost
no benefits but their current holders declined a 2002 buy-out offer
by Amtrak.
Amtrak employs nearly 19,000 people.
It operates passenger
service on of track primarily owned by freight railroads connecting
500 destinations in 46 states and three Canadian provinces
. In
fiscal year
2008, Amtrak served 28.7 million passengers, representing six
straight years of record
ridership.
Despite this recent growth, the United States still has one of the
lowest inter-city rail usages in the developed world due to the
relatively developed interstate
freeway and
airline modes of transportation, and very
long distances between cities (giving airlines a significant time
advantage).
History
Amtrak's
origins are traceable to the sustained decline of private passenger
rail services in the United States
from about 1920 to 1970. In 1971, in
response to the decline,
Congress and
President Nixon created
Amtrak. The Nixon administration secretly agreed with some
railroads that Amtrak would be shut down after two years. After
Fortune magazine exposed the manufactured mismanagement in
1974, Louis W. Menk, chairman of the Burlington Northern Railroad
remarked that the story was undermining the scheme to dismantle
Amtrak. For its entire existence, the company has been subjected to
political cross-winds and insufficient capital resources, including
owned railway. Amtrak's ridership has maintained consistent
growth.
Passenger rail service before Amtrak

Amtrak's old logo from 1971 to 2000,
the "inverted arrow," dubbed by critics as the "pointless
arrow."
On July 6, 2000 Amtrak unveiled "...a new logo whose
shape and suggestion of movement convey the comfort and uniqueness
of the rail experience."
From the middle 1800s until approximately 1920, nearly all
intercity travelers in the United States moved by rail. By 1910,
close to all of intercity passenger trips were by railroad. The
rails and the trains were owned and operated by private, for-profit
organizations. Approximately 65,000 railroad passenger cars
operated in 1929.
For a long time after 1920, passenger rail's popularity diminished
and there were a series of pullbacks and tentative recoveries. Rail
passenger revenues declined dramatically between 1920 and 1934, but
in the mid-1930s, railroads reignited popular imagination with
service improvements and new, diesel-powered
streamliners, such as the gleaming silver
Pioneer Zephyr and
Flying Yankee. Even with the
improvements, on a relative basis, traffic continued to erode and
by 1940 railroads held 67% of passenger-miles in the United States.
World War II broke the malaise. During
the war, troop movements and restrictions on automobile fuel
generated a sixfold increase in passenger traffic from the low
point of the Depression. After the war, railroads rejuvenated
overworked and neglected fleets with fast and often luxurious
streamliners — epitomized by the
Super
Chief and
California
Zephyr — which inspired the last major resurgence in
passenger rail travel.
The postwar resurgence was short-lived. In 1946, there remained 45%
fewer passenger trains than in 1929, and the decline quickened
despite railroad optimism. Passengers disappeared and so did
trains. Few trains generated profits; most produced losses.
Broad-based passenger rail deficits appeared as early as 1948 and
by the mid-1950s railroads claimed aggregate annual losses on
passenger services of more than $700 million (almost
$5 billion in 2005 dollars using CPI). By 1965, only 10,000
rail passenger cars were in operation, 85% fewer than in 1929.
Passenger service was provided on only of track, a stark decline.
Passenger rail service in the United States showed the signs of
underinvestment. Rail facilities suffered from decrepit equipment,
cavernous and nearly empty stations in declining urban centers, and
management that seemed intent on driving away the few remaining
customers. The 1960s also saw the end of
railway post office revenues, which had
helped some of the remaining trains break even.
Causes of decline of passenger rail
The causes of the decline of passenger rail in the United States
were complex. Until 1920, rail was the only practical form of
intercity transport, but the industry was subject to government
regulation and labor inflexibility. By 1930, the railroads had
constructed, with private money, a vast and efficient
transportation network, but when the federal government began to
construct the
National Highway
System they found themselves faced with unprecedented
competition for passengers and freight with automobiles, buses,
trucks, and aircraft, all of which were heavily subsidized by the
government road and airport building programs. At the same time the
railroads were subject to property and other taxes. Every foot of
rail was taxed, and some localities treated them like cash cows. In
1930, the US had of track, compared to about today. Some routes had
been built primarily to facilitate the sale of stock in the
railroad companies; they were redundant from the beginning.These
were the first to be abandoned as the railroads' financial
positions deteriorated, and the rails were routinely removed to
save money on taxes. Many rights of way were destroyed by being
broken up and built over, but others remained the property of the
railroad or were taken over by local or state authorities and
turned into
rail trails, which could be
returned to rail service if necessary.
Government regulation and labor issues
The first interruption in passenger rail's vibrancy coincided with
government intervention. From approximately 1910 to 1921, the
Federal government introduced a populist rate-setting scheme,
followed by nationalization of the rail industry for
World War I. Ample railroad profits were erased,
growth of the rail system was reversed, and railroads massively
underinvested in passenger rail facilities during this time.
Meanwhile, labor costs advanced, and with them passenger fares,
which discouraged passenger traffic just as automobiles gained a
foothold.
The primary regulatory authority affecting rail interest from early
twentieth century was the
Interstate Commerce
Commission (ICC). The ICC played a leading role in rate-setting
and intervened in other ways detrimental to passenger rail. In
1958, the ICC was granted authority to allow or reject
modifications and eliminations of passenger routes
(
train-offs). Many routes required beneficial pruning, but
the ICC delayed action by an average of eight months and when it
did authorize modifications, the ICC insisted that unsuccessful
routes be merged with profitable ones. Thus, fast, popular rail
service was transformed into slow, unpopular service. The ICC was
even more critical of corporate mergers. Many combinations, which
railroads sought to complete, were delayed for years and even
decades, such as the merger of the
New York Central Railroad and
Pennsylvania Railroad, into
what eventually became
Penn
Central, and the
Delaware, Lackawanna
and Western Railroad and
Erie
Railroad into the
Erie
Lackawanna Railway. By the time the ICC approved the mergers in
the 1960s,
disinvestments by the
federal government, years of deteriorating equipment and station
facilities and the flight of passengers to the air and car had
taken their toll and the mergers were unsuccessful.
Taxation
At the same time, railroads carried a substantial tax burden. A
World War II–era excise tax of 15% on passenger rail travel
survived until 1962. Local governments, far from providing needed
support to passenger rail, viewed rail infrastructure as a ready
source for property tax revenues.
In one extreme example, in 1959 the
Great Northern
Railway, which owned about a third of one percent (0.34%) of
the land in Lincoln County, Montana
, was assessed more than 91% of all school taxes in
the county. To this day, railroads are generally taxed at a
higher rate than other industries, and the rates vary greatly from
state to state.
Railroads also were saddled with antiquated work rules and an
inflexible relationship with
trade
unions. Work policies did not adapt to
technological change. Average train
speeds doubled from 1919 to 1959, but unions resisted efforts to
modify their existing 100 to 150
mile work days. As a
result, railroaders' work days were roughly cut in half, from 5–7½
hours in 1919 down to 2½-3¾ hours in 1959. Labor rules also
perpetuated positions that had been obviated by technology. Between
1947 and 1957, passenger railroad financial efficiency dropped by
42% per mile.
Today, the burden of nascent railroad worker pensions, including
those of freight railroad workers, are financed by Amtrak,
regardless of whether such workers were ever employed by Amtrak or
worked in passenger railroad service. In effect, Amtrak subsidizes
the pensions of thousands of railroad workers who would otherwise
not receive any pension.
Subsidized competition
While passenger rail faced internal and governmental pressures, new
challenges appeared that undermined the dominance of passenger
rail: highways and commercial aviation. The passenger rail industry
wilted as government backed these potent upstarts with billions of
dollars in construction of highways and government-owned airports
and the air traffic control system.
As cars became more attainable to most Americans, this newfound
freedom and individualization of transit became the norm for most
Americans because of the increased convenience. Government actively
began to respond with funds from its treasury and later with fuel
tax funds to build a non-profit network of roads not subject to
property taxation that rivaled and then surpassed the for-profit
network that the railroads had built in previous generations with
corporate capital and government land grants. All told between 1921
and 1955 governmental entities, using taxpayer money and in
response to taxpayer demand, financed more than $93 billion
worth of pavement, construction, and maintenance.
In the 1950s, a second and more formidable threat appeared:
affordable commercial aviation. Government at many levels supported
aviation. Governmental entities built sprawling urban and suburban
airports, funded construction of highways to provide access to the
airports, and provided air traffic control services.
Rail Passenger Service Act
In the late 1960s, the end of passenger rail in the United States
seemed near. First had come the requests for termination of
services; now came the
bankruptcy
filings. The legendary
Pullman
Company became insolvent in 1969, followed by the dominant
railroad in the
Northeastern
United States, the
Penn Central, in
1970. It now seemed that passenger rail's financial problems might
bring down the railroad industry as a whole. Few in government
wanted to be held responsible for the extinction of the passenger
train, but another solution was necessary.
In 1970, Congress passed and President
Richard Nixon signed into law, the
Rail Passenger Service Act.
Proponents of the bill, led by the
National Association
of Railroad Passengers (NARP), sought government funding to
assure the continuation of passenger trains. They conceived the
National Railroad Passenger Corporation
(
NRPC), a hybrid public-private entity that would
receive taxpayer funding and assume operation of intercity
passenger trains. The original working
brand
name for NRPC was
Railpax, but shortly before
the company started operating it was changed to
Amtrak. There were several key provisions:
- Any railroad operating intercity passenger service could
contract with the NRPC, thereby joining the national system.
- Participating railroads bought into the NRPC using a formula
based on their recent intercity passenger losses. The purchase
price could be satisfied either by cash or rolling stock; in
exchange, the railroads received NRPC common stock.
- Any participating railroad was freed of the obligation to
operate intercity passenger service after May 1, 1971, except for
those services chosen by the Department of Transportation as part
of a "basic system" of service and paid for by NRPC using its
federal funds.
- Railroads that chose not to join the NRPC system were required
to continue operating their existing passenger service until 1975
and thenceforth had to pursue the customary Interstate Commerce
Commission (ICC) approval process for any discontinuance or
alteration to the service.
Nearly everyone involved expected the experiment to be short-lived.
The Nixon administration and many Washington insiders viewed the
NRPC as a politically expedient way for the President and Congress
to give passenger trains the one "last hurrah" demanded by the
public. They expected Amtrak to quietly disappear as public
interest waned. Proponents also hoped that government intervention
would be brief, but their view was that Amtrak would soon support
itself. Neither view has yet proved correct. Popular support has
allowed Amtrak to continue in operation longer than critics
imagined while financial results have made infeasible a return to
private operation.
Non-participating railroads
Only six railroads that were still offering long-distance passenger
service declined to join Amtrak in 1971.
Early days
Amtrak began operations May 1, 1971. Amtrak's first passenger
train, Train 173 (
Clocker), departed New York Penn
Station at 12:05 a.m. on May 1 en route to Philadelphia 30th Street
Station with a GG1 inherited from Penn Central. The corporation was
molded from the passenger rail operations of 20 out of 26 major
railroads in operation at the time. The railroads contributed
rolling stock, equipment, and capital.
In return, they received approval to discontinue their passenger
services, and at least some acquired
common
stock in Amtrak. Amtrak received no
rail
tracks or
right-of-way at its inception.
Railroads that shed passenger operations were expected to host
Amtrak trains on their tracks, for a fee.
There was a period of adjustment. However, Amtrak was making
numerous renovations and improvements. All Amtrak's routes were
continuations of prior service, although Amtrak pruned about half
the passenger rail network. Of the 364 trains operated previously,
Amtrak only continued 182. On trains that continued, to the extent
possible, schedules were retained with only minor changes from the
Official Guide of the
Railways. Former names largely were continued.
Several
major corridors became freight-only, including New York Central Railroad's
Water Level Route across New York
and Ohio
and Grand Trunk Western Railroad's
Chicago
to Detroit
service, although service soon returned to the
Water Level Route with introduction of the Lake Shore Limited. Reduced
passenger train schedules created headaches.
A 19-hour layover
became necessary for eastbound travel on the James Whitcomb Riley between
Chicago
and Newport
News
.
Amtrak inherited problems with stations, most notably
deferred maintenance, and redundant
facilities resulting from competing companies that served the same
areas.
On
the day it started, Amtrak was given the responsibility of
rerouting passenger trains from the seven train terminals in
Chicago
(LaSalle, Dearborn, Grand Central, Randolph,
Chicago Northwestern Terminal, Central, and Union) into just one,
Union Station. In New York City, Amtrak had to pay to
maintain Penn Station
and Grand Central Terminal
because of the lack of track connections to bring
trains from upstate New York into Penn Station, a problem not
rectified until the building of the Empire Connection in 1991.
In many
cases Amtrak had to abandon service into the huge old Union Station such as
Cincinnati, Saint Paul, Buffalo, Kansas City, Houston, and Saint
Louis, and route trains into smaller Amtrak-built facilities down
the line (although Amtrak has pushed to start reusing some of the
old stations, most recently Cincinnati Union Terminal
, and Kansas City Union Station
).
On the
other hand, merged operations presented efficiencies such as the
combination of three West Coast trains into the Coast Starlight, running from Los
Angeles
to Seattle
. The Northeast Corridor received an
Inland Route via
Springfield
, Massachusetts
, thanks to support from New York
, Connecticut
and Massachusetts
. The
North Coast Hiawatha was
implemented as a second
Pacific
Northwest route.
The Milwaukee
to St. Louis
Abraham
Lincoln and Prairie
State routes also commenced. The first all-new
Amtrak route, not counting the
Coast
Starlight, was the
Montrealer/
Washingtonian. That route was inaugurated
September 29, 1972, along
Boston and Maine Railroad and
Canadian National Railway
track that had last seen passenger service in 1966.
Amtrak soon had the opportunity to acquire railway. Following the
bankruptcy of several northeastern railroads in the early 1970s,
including Penn Central which owned and operated the
Northeast Corridor, Congress passed the
Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976.
A large part was
directed to the creation of a Conrail, but in addition the
law enabled transfer to Amtrak of the Northeast Corridor railway
from Boston,
Massachusetts
to Washington, D.C.
That track became Amtrak's jewel and helped
Amtrak generate significant revenues. While the Northeast Corridor
ridership and revenues were higher than any other segment of the
system, the cost of operating and maintaining the corridor proved
to be overwhelming. As a result, Amtrak's federal subsidy increased
dramatically. In subsequent years, short route segments not needed
for freight operations were transferred to Amtrak. Nevertheless, in
general, Amtrak remained dependent on freight railroads for access
to most of its routes outside of the northeast.
Amtrak's early years are often called the "Rainbow Era," which
refers to the
ad hoc arrangement of the
rolling stock and locomotives from the various eligible donor
railroads. This rolling stock, which for the most part still bore
the pre-Amtrak colors and logos, formed the multi-colored consists
of early Amtrak trains. By mid-1971, Amtrak began purchasing some
of the equipment it had leased, including 286 second-hand E and F
units, 30 GG1 electric locomotives, and 1290 passenger cars, and
continued leasing even more motive power. By 1975 the official
Amtrak color scheme was painted on most Amtrak equipment. Newly
purchased locomotives and rolling stock began appearing by 1975 as
well.
Amtrak fell far short of financial independence in its first
decade, but it did find modest success rebuilding trade. Outside
factors discouraged competing transport, such as fuel shortages
which increased costs of automobile and airline travel, and strikes
which disrupted airline operations. Investments in Amtrak's track,
equipment and information also made Amtrak more relevant to
America's transportation needs. Amtrak's ridership increased from
16.6 million in 1972 to 21 million in 1981.
Leaders and political influences
Unlike many large businesses, subsequent to its formation Amtrak
has had only one active investor: the
U.S. government.
Like most investors, the Federal government has demanded a degree
of accountability. Determination of congressional funding and
selection of Amtrak's leadership have been infused with political
considerations. As discussed below, funding levels and capital
support have varied over time.
Like many railroads, some members of Amtrak's board have had little
or no experience with railroads. Conversely, Amtrak also has
benefited from the interest of highly motivated and politically
oriented public servants. For example, in 1982, former
Secretary of the Navy
and retired
Southern Railway
head
W. Graham Claytor, Jr. brought his
military and railroad experience to the job. Graham Claytor earned
distinction as a lawyer (he was president of the Harvard Law Review
and law clerk to U.S. Judge
Billings
Learned Hand and Supreme Court Justice
Louis Brandeis); as a transportation
executive (he joined the Southern as vice president-law in 1963,
became president in 1967, and retired in 1977, five years before he
took over the command at Amtrak); and as a public servant (he was
President Carter's Secretary of the Navy, Deputy Secretary of
Defense, and, briefly, Acting Secretary of Transportation, all
between his two railroad careers). Claytor came out of retirement
to lead Amtrak after the disastrous financial results during the
Carter administration (1977–1981). He was recruited by then
Secretary of Transportation, Drew Lewis, and Federal Railroad
Administrator Robert Blanchette, both Reagan appointees. Despite
the fact that Claytor frequently opposed the Reagan Administration
over Amtrak funding issues, he was strongly supported by
John H. Riley, an
attorney who was the highly skilled head of the
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA) under the Reagan Administration from
1983–1989. Secretary of Transportation
Elizabeth Dole also tacitly supported Amtrak.
Claytor, the longest serving Amtrak CEO at 12 years, clearly
enjoyed a good relationship with the Congress and was perceived by
many in the rail industry and government to have done an
outstanding job of running Amtrak. Due to limited federal funding,
Claytor was forced to use short-term debt to keep most of its
operations running. 1988 Democratic Presidential nominee
Michael Dukakis served as Amtrak's vice
chairman of the board and was nominated as a director by President
Clinton in 1998.
In the 1990s, Claytor was succeeded at Amtrak's helm by a
succession of career public servants.
First, Thomas Downs, who had overseen the Union Station
project in Washington, D.C.
, which experienced substantial delays and cost
overruns, assumed the leadership. Amtrak faced a serious
cash crisis during 1997. However, Tim Gillespie, Amtrak's highly
regarded vice president for government affairs for almost two
decades, persuaded Congress to include a provision in the Taxpayer
Relief Act of 1997 that resulted in Amtrak receiving a
$2.3 billion tax refund that resolved their cash crisis. In
January, 1998, after Amtrak weathered this serious cash shortfall,
George Warrington succeeded Downs.
Warrington previously led Amtrak's Northeast Corridor Business
Unit. Warrington ran into trouble with Congress and the
Administration through lavish spending and extensive borrowing.
When he attempted to mortgage Penn Station in New York City he ran
into a fire storm of opposition in Congress. Warrington stepped
down shortly thereafter.
In April 2002,
David L. Gunn was selected as president. Gunn had a
strong reputation as a straightforward and experienced manager.
Years
earlier (between 1991 and 1994), Gunn's refusal to "do politics"
put him at odds with the Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit Authority board of directors, which
included representatives from the District of Columbia and suburban
jurisdictions in Maryland
and Virginia
. Gunn was an accomplished public servant and
railroad person and his successes before Amtrak earned him a great
deal of credibility, despite a sometimes-rough relationship with
politicians and labor unions.
Gunn was polite but direct in response to congressional criticism
of Amtrak, and his tenure was punctuated by successes in reducing
layers of management overhead in Amtrak and streamlining
operations. Amtrak's Board of Directors removed Gunn on November 9,
2005. The board then appointed
David Hughes, Amtrak's Chief Engineer,
as interim CEO. Given Gunn's solid performance, many Amtrak
supporters feared that Gunn's departure was Amtrak's death knell,
although those fears have not been realized. On August 29, 2006
Alexander Kummant was named as
Gunn's permanent replacement effective September 12, 2006. Kummant
resigned on November 14, 2008. The board appointed Amtrak COO
William Crosbie as interim CEO. On November 26, 2008, the board
appointed
Federal
Railroad Administration chairman
Joseph H. Boardman as interim Amtrak President and
CEO for one year.
The list of
Presidents of Amtrak includes:
Modern history (1980s to present)
Ridership stagnated at roughly 20 million passengers per year
amid uncertain government aid from 1981 to about 2000. Ridership
increased in the 2000s after implementation of capital improvements
in the Northeast Corridor and rises in automobile fuel costs.
Amtrak set its sixth straight year of record ridership, with 28.7
million passengers for the 12 months ended September 30, 2008.
According to Amtrak, an average of more than 70,000 passengers ride
on up to 300 Amtrak trains per day.
In the 1990s, Amtrak's stated goal remained
operational
self-sufficiency. By this time, however, Amtrak had a large
overhang of debt from years of underfunding, and in the mid-1990s,
Amtrak suffered through a serious cash crunch. To resolve the
crisis, Congress issued funding but instituted a
glide-path to financial self-sufficiency, excluding
railroad retirement tax act payments. Passengers became "guests"
and there were expansions into express freight work, but the
financial plans failed. Amtrak's inroads in express freight
delivery created additional friction with competing freight
operators, including the
trucking industry.
Delivery was delayed of much anticipated high-speed trainsets for
the improved
Acela Express service,
which promised to be a strong source of income and favorable
publicity along the
Northeast
Corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C. Through the late
1990s and early 2000s, Amtrak could not add sufficient express
freight revenue or cut sufficient other services to break even. By
2002, it was clear that Amtrak could not achieve self-sufficiency,
but Congress continued to authorize funding and released Amtrak
from the requirement.
Amtrak's leader at the time, David L. Gunn, was polite but direct
in response to congressional criticism. In a departure from his
predecessors' promises to make Amtrak self-sufficient in the short
term, Gunn argued that
no form of passenger transportation
in the United States is self-sufficient as the economy is currently
structured. Highways, airports, and air traffic control
all require large government expenditures to build and
operate, coming from the
Highway Trust
Fund and
Aviation
Trust Fund paid for by user fees, highway fuel and road taxes,
and, in the case of the
General Fund,
by people who own cars and do not.
Before a
congressional hearing, Gunn answered a demand by leading Amtrak
critic Arizona
Senator John McCain to
eliminate all operating subsidies by asking the Senator if he would
also demand the same of the commuter airlines, upon which the citizens of Arizona are
dependent. McCain, usually not at a loss for words when
debating Amtrak funding, did not reply.
Under Gunn, almost all the controversial express freight business
was eliminated. The practice of tolerating
deferred maintenance was reversed to
eliminate a safety issue.
Amtrak's previous chief, Alexander Kummant, was committed to
operating a national rail network, and he did not envision
separating the Northeast Corridor (the rail line from Washington DC
to Boston that is primarily, though not completely, owned by
Amtrak) under separate ownership. He said that shedding the
system's long distance routes would amount to selling national
assets that are on par with national parks, and that Amtrak's
abandonment of these routes would be irreversible. Amtrak is
seeking annual congressional funding of $1 billion for ten
years. Kummant has stated that the investment is moderate in light
of Federal investment in other modes of transportation.
Public funding
Amtrak commenced operations in 1971 with $40 million in direct
Federal aid, $100 million in Federally insured loans, and a
somewhat larger private contribution. Officials expected that
Amtrak would break even by 1974, but those expectations proved
unrealistic and annual direct Federal aid reached a 17-year high in
1981 of $1.25 billion. During the
Reagan administration,
appropriations were halved. By 1986, Federal support fell to a
decade low of $601 million, almost none of which were capital
appropriations. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Congress
continued the reductionist trend even while Amtrak expenses held
steady or rose. Amtrak was forced to borrow to meet short-term
operating needs, and by 1995 Amtrak was on the brink of a cash
crisis and was unable to continue to service its debts. In
response, in 1997 Congress authorized $5.2 billion for Amtrak
over the next five years—largely to complete the
Acela
capital project—on the condition that Amtrak submit to the
ultimatum of self-sufficiency by 2003 or liquidation. Amtrak made
financial improvements during the period, but ultimately did not
achieve self-sufficiency.
In 2004, a stalemate in Federal support of Amtrak forced cutbacks
in services and routes as well as resumption of deferred
maintenance. In fiscal 2004 and 2005, Congress appropriated about
$1.2 billion for Amtrak, $300 million more than President
George W. Bush had requested. However, the company's
board requested $1.8 billion through fiscal 2006, the majority
of which (about $1.3 billion) would be used to bring
infrastructure, rolling stock, and motive power back to a state of
good repair. In Congressional testimony, the Department of
Transportation's inspector-general confirmed that Amtrak would need
at least $1.4 billion to $1.5 billion in fiscal 2006 and
$2 billion in fiscal 2007 just to maintain the status quo. In
2006, Amtrak received just under $1.4 billion, with the
condition that Amtrak would reduce (but not eliminate) food and
sleeper service losses. Thus, dining service were simplified and
now require two fewer on-board service workers. Only
Auto Train and
Empire Builder services continue regular
made on-board meal service.
State governments have partially filled the breach left by
reductions in Federal aid.
Several states have entered into operating
partnerships with Amtrak, notably California
, Pennsylvania
, Illinois
, Michigan
, Oregon
, Missouri
, Washington
, North
Carolina
, Oklahoma
, Wisconsin
, Vermont
, Maine
, and
New
York
, as well as the Canadian
province of British Columbia
, which provides some of the resources for the
operation of the Cascades
route.
With the dramatic rise in gasoline prices during 2007–2008, Amtrak
has seen record ridership. Capping a steady five-year increase in
ridership overall, regional lines saw 12% year-over-year growth in
May 2008. In October 2007, the
Senate passed S-294, "Passenger Rail
Improvement and Investment Act of 2007" (70–22) sponsored by
Senators
Frank Lautenberg and
Trent Lott. Despite a veto threat by
President Bush, a similar bill passed the House on June 11, 2008
with a veto-proof margin (311–104).
The final bill, spurred on by the
September
12 Metrolink collision
in California and retitled "Rail Safety Improvement
Act of 2008", was signed into law by President Bush on October 16,
2008. The bill appropriates $2.6 billion a year in Amtrak
funding through 2013.
Controversy
Government aid to Amtrak was controversial from the beginning. The
formation of Amtrak in 1971 was criticized as a bailout serving
corporate rail interests and union railroaders, not the traveling
public. Critics assert that Amtrak has proven incapable of
operating as a business and that it does not provide valuable
transportation services meriting public support, a "mobile
money-burning machine." They argue that subsidies should be ended,
national rail service terminated, and the Northeast Corridor turned
over to private interests. "To fund a
Nostalgia Limited is
not in the public interest." Critics also question Amtrak's energy
efficiency, though the U.S. Department of Energy considers Amtrak
among the most energy-efficient forms of transportation.
Proponents point out that the government heavily subsidizes the
Interstate Highway System,
the
Federal Aviation
Administration, many airports, among many aspects of passenger
aviation. Massive government aid to those forms of travel was a
primary factor in the decline of passenger service on privately
owned railroads in the 1950s and 1960s. In addition, Amtrak pays
property taxes (through fees to host railroads) that highway users
do not pay. Advocates therefore assert that Amtrak should only be
expected to be as self-sufficient as those competing modes of
transit.
Along these lines, in a June 2008 interview with Reuters, Amtrak
President Alex Kummant made specific observations: $10 billion
per year is transferred from the general fund to the Highway Trust
Fund; $2.7 billion is granted to the FAA; $8 billion goes
to "security and life safety for cruise ships." Overall, Kummant
claims that Amtrak receives $40 in federal funds per passenger,
while highways are subsidized at a rate of $500–$700 per
automobile. Moreover, Amtrak provides all of its own security,
while airport security is a separate federal subsidy. Kummant
added: "Let's not even get into airport construction which is a
miasma of state, federal and local tax breaks and tax refinancing
and God knows what."
According to the
United States
Department of Transportation's
Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, rail and mass transit are considerably more
subsidized on a per passenger-mile basis by the federal government
than other forms of transportation; the subsidy varies year to
year, but exceeds $100 dollars (in 2000 dollars) per thousand
passenger-miles, compared to subsidies around $10 per thousand
passenger-miles for aviation (with general aviation subsidized
considerably more per passenger-mile than commercial aviation),
subsidies around $4 per thousand passenger-miles for intercity
buses, and automobiles being a small net contributor through the
gas tax and other user fees rather than being subsidized. On a
total subsidy basis, aviation, with many more passenger-miles per
year, is subsidized at a similar level to Amtrak. The analysis does
not consider social costs and benefits, or difficult to quantify
effects of some regulation, such as safety regulation.
Critics, such as the Cato Institute's Randal O'Toole, argue that
gasoline taxes amount to user fees because people are taxed to the
extent they use the roads. However, there is still a significant
amount of road spending that is not covered by the gas tax. It
covers little of the costs for local highways and in many states
little of the cost for state highways. Taking these facts into
account, though, O'Toole claims on page 2 of his report that "in
2006, Americans paid $93.6 billion in tolls, gas taxes, and other
highway user fees. Of this amount, $19.3 billion was diverted to
mass transit and other non-highway activities. At the same time,
various governments—mainly local—spent $44.5 billion in property,
sales, or other taxes on highways, roads, and streets. The net
subsidy to highways was $25.1 billion, or about half a penny per
passenger mile." O'Toole's road budget and passenger-mile numbers
are disputed. In the same year, Amtrak receives direct subsidies of
just over $1 billion, or 22 cents per passenger mile.
Labor issues
Many trade union jobs were saved by the bailout, and Amtrak itself
finances the pensions of most railroad employees, even if they had
never worked for Amtrak directly or never worked in passenger
railroad service.
In recent times, efforts at reforming passenger rail have addressed
labor issues. In 1997 Congress released Amtrak from a prohibition
on contracting for labor outside of the corporation (and outside
its unions), opening the door to privatization. Since that time,
many of Amtrak's employees have been working without a contract.
The most recent contract, signed in 1999, was mainly
retroactive.
Still, though, the influence of unions is a strong force against
change. Amtrak has 14 separate unions to negotiate with, because of
the fragmentation of railroad unions by job. Plus, it has 24
separate contracts with those unions. This makes it difficult to
make substantial changes, in contrast to a situation where one
union negotiates with one employer. Former Amtrak president Kummant
seems poised to follow a cooperative posture with Amtrak's trade
unions. He has ruled out plans to privatize large parts of Amtrak's
unionized workforce.
In late 2007 and early 2008, however, major labor issues came up, a
result of a dispute between Amtrak and 16 unions over healthcare,
specifically which employees healthcare should be available to. The
dispute was not resolved quickly, and the situation escalated, to
the point of President Bush declaring a Presidential Emergency
Board to resolve the issues. It was not immediately successful, and
a strike was threatened, to begin on January 30, 2008. In the
middle of that month, however, it was announced that Amtrak and the
unions had come to terms and January 30 passed without a strike. In
late February it was announced that three more unions had worked
out their differences, and as of that time it seems unlikely that
any more issues will arise in the near future.
Amtrak operations and services
Amtrak is no longer required by law, but is encouraged, to operate
a national route system.
Amtrak has some presence in all of the 48
contiguous states except Wyoming
and South
Dakota
. Service on the Northeast Corridor, between Boston
, Massachusetts
, and Washington, D.C.
, as well as between Philadelphia
and Harrisburg
, Pennsylvania
, is powered by overhead wires; for the rest of the
system, diesel locomotives are used. Routes vary widely in
frequency of service, from three trips weekly on the Sunset Limited (Los
Angeles
, California
, to New Orleans
, Louisiana
), to weekday service several times per hour on the
Northeast Corridor, (New York City
to Washington, D.C.) Amtrak also operates a captive
bus service, Thruway Motorcoach,
which provides connections to train routes.
The most popular and heavily used services are those running on the
Northeast Corridor (NEC), which
include the
Acela Express,
and
Northeast Regional.
The NEC
serves Boston,
Massachusetts
; New York
City
; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
; Baltimore, Maryland
; Washington, D.C.
; and many communities between. The NEC
services accounted for 10.0 million of Amtrak's
25.7 million passengers in fiscal year 2007. Regional services
in California, subsidized by the
California Department of
Transportation are the most popular services outside of the NEC
and the only other services boasting over one million
passengers per annum. The
Pacific
Surfliner,
Capitol
Corridor and
San
Joaquin services accounted for a combined 5.0 million
passengers in fiscal year 2007.
Four of
the six stations busiest by boardings are on Amtrak's NEC: New York
(first), Washington
(second), Philadelphia
(third), and Boston
(sixth). The other two of the top six are Chicago
(fourth) and Los
Angeles
(fifth).
Amtrak trains have both names and numbers. Train routes are named
to reflect the rich and complex history of the routes and the areas
traversed by them. Each scheduled run of the route is assigned a
number. Generally, even-numbered routes run northward and eastward,
while odd-numbered routes run southward and westward. Some routes,
such as the
Pacific
Surfliners, use the opposite numbering system, inherited
from the previous operators of similar routes, such as the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway.
Some of the trains used more often:
Northeast
Midwest
West Coast
East
Rail passenger efficiency versus other modes

Standard locomotive used for
Capitol Corridor and
San Joaquin service

Standard
Pacific Surfliner
trainset
Per passenger mile, Amtrak is 18 percent more energy-efficient
than commercial airlines and automobiles, though the exact figures
for particular routes depend on load factor along with other
variables. Advanced technology further increases efficiency:
regenerative
braking on the
Acela Express, for example, reduces
electric-energy consumption by 8 percent. Passenger rail is
also competitive with other modes in terms of safety per
mile.
|
Mode |
Revenue per passenger mile |
Energy consumption per passenger mile |
Deaths per 100 million passenger miles |
Reliability |
|
Domestic airlines |
12.0¢ |
3,182 BTUs |
0.02 deaths |
82% |
|
Intercity buses |
12.9¢ |
3,393 BTUs |
0.05 deaths |
N/A |
|
Amtrak |
26.0¢ |
2,100
BTUs |
0.03
deaths |
74% |
|
Autos |
N/A |
3,458 BTUs |
0.8 deaths |
N/A |
Intermodal connections
Intermodal
connections between Amtrak trains and other transportation are
available at many stations. Most Amtrak rail stations in
downtown areas have connections to
local
public transport.
Amtrak
also code shares with Continental Airlines, providing service
between Newark Liberty International
Airport
(via its Amtrak station
and AirTrain Newark)
and Philadelphia
30th St
, Wilmington
, Stamford
, and New Haven
. Amtrak also serves airport stations at
Milwaukee
, Oakland
, Burbank
, and Baltimore
.
Amtrak
coordinates Thruway Motorcoach
service to extend many of its routes, especially in California
.
Gaps in service
Outside the Northeast Corridor, Amtrak is a niche player in
passenger transportation. In 2003, Amtrak accounted for just 0.1%
of U.S. intercity passenger miles (5,680,000,000 out of
5,280,860,000,000 total, of which private-automobile travel makes
up the vast majority).In fiscal year 2004, Amtrak routes served
over 25 million passengers, while, in calendar year 2004,
commercial airlines served over 712 million passengers.
Amtrak provides some rail service in 46 states.
The only states that
have never been served by Amtrak are Hawaii
and
Alaska
, which is
served by the Alaska
Railroad. South Dakota
has not seen any passenger rail service since 1971
when the Milwaukee
Road divested its passenger rail operations to Amtrak which in
turn did not include South Dakota in its basic system.
Wyoming
lost rail service in the 1997 cuts, and in early
2008 lost the Denver-Casper motorcoach service. Amtrak
serves some states only nominally through stations along borders
and/or away from major population areas, such as in Idaho or in
Kentucky.
Many major cities in the Midwest, West, and
South have two or fewer trains per day, such as Atlanta
, Denver
, Cincinnati
, Houston
, Indianapolis
, and Minneapolis–Saint Paul
.
Amtrak's reliance on freight railroads also has caused its service
elimination.
Passenger rail service was entirely
discontinued to Phoenix
, Arizona
, in 1997, after the Union Pacific Railroad, which owns
the tracks that served Phoenix, announced that it was abandoning
the right of way. Amtrak did not have the funds to maintain
the trackage.
Today, the city proper is served only by
Thruway Motorcoach, although Amtrak rail service is available about
to the south in the rural town of Maricopa
(Phoenix passengers also travel often to Tucson
or Flagstaff
by car or Greyhound bus to pick up those Amtrak trains
which continue to make stops in those cities). In 1983, the
Palmetto was truncated from
St.
Petersburg, Florida
to Tampa, Florida
because Amtrak was unable to take on the costs of
maintaining the Seaboard
Coast Line Railroad drawbridge, which took the train over Tampa
Bay.
Damage to railroad track caused by
Hurricane Katrina interrupted service on
the
Sunset Limited.
Originally the train departed from Orlando,
Florida
, but the track damage along the Gulf coast caused
the train to originate at New Orleans, Louisiana
. Although the track's owner, CSX, completed repairs by early 2006, Amtrak service has
not resumed over four years later, leaving the intermediate
stations between Jacksonville, Florida
and New Orleans without any Amtrak
service.
Several significant Amtrak routes have been eliminated because of
lack of funding since 1971, creating other gaps.
In 1979 the National Limited, the east–west train
feeding Kansas
City
, Missouri
, with New York and Washington, D.C., was cut,
leaving Chicago
as the only throughway for direct links between the
Midwest and East. The North Coast Hiawatha,
between Chicago and Seattle
, provided only reduced service between Chicago and
the Pacific Northwest. The last link with the vaunted Chicago
–Florida
services of such trains as the City of Miami, the Dixie Flagler, and the South Wind, was broken when the Floridian was discontinued in
October 1979. In 1985 the local Minneapolis/Saint Paul to
Duluth
service was eliminated and replaced with thru
motorcoach service. In 1997, the Desert Wind and Pioneer were discontinued, along with
service to Las
Vegas
, Boise
, and all of
Wyoming. In 2003, Amtrak discontinued the
Kentucky Cardinal, ending
all service to Louisville
. In 2005,
Three Rivers (a reborn
Broadway Limited) was
nixed, removing the only direct New York–Chicago service through
central Pennsylvania.
Although Little Rock, Arkansas
(Texas Eagle)
and Memphis,
Tennessee
(City of New
Orleans) both have Amtrak service, there is no longer a
direct connection between the two cities. Passengers wanting
to travel between them must venture to Chicago to the north or New
Orleans to the south and change trains in order to get there.
Train speeds, frequency and usage (ridership): international
comparisons
By European and Japanese standards, the speed of intercity Amtrak
trains (outside of the Northeast Corridor) is regarded as extremely
slow. This is in large part because most Amtrak intercity service
operates on the trackage of the major freight railroads; freight
traffic tends to have priority over Amtrak traffic, resulting in
trains sitting idle on the track for as long as an hour or more
while waiting for freight traffic to clear.
Another major reason for the slowness is that advancement in the
speed of intercity rail service, begun as early as the 1930s, were
significantly set back by a 1940s
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA) rule which required enhanced safety
features for all trains traveling above a
79mph
limit. Since the infrastructure required for
cab signaling,
automatic train stop and other
enhancements was considered uneconomical in the sparsely-populated
American West at that time, this rule effectively killed further
development of high speed rail outside of the Northeast, where the
Pennsylvania Railroad and
others had installed cab signaling beginning in the 1930s. No other
English-speaking country adopted this rule, and while the United
Kingdom, Canada, and Australia all operate trains at 100 mph
(160 km/h) or higher using conventional lineside signaling,
few trains in the United States operate above outside of the
Northeast Corridor.
One notable exception is the Southwest Chief, which travels up to
along various stretches of its Chicago
—Los
Angeles
route.
For
example: in Britain, the 393-mile journey from London
to Edinburgh
is completed in around four and a half hours (an
average speed of around 87 miles per hour). In the USA, the
340-mile journey on the Cardinal from New York
to Charlottesville
takes some 7 hours, an average of just under 49
miles per hour; other Amtrak trains are slower still.
Even the
flagship Acela service between New York and Boston
only averages, in its three and a half hour
journey, around 63 miles per hour, in large part due to the age of
the trackage and catenary system, which has been undergoing
renovation in stages since Acela's 2001 introduction. Also,
some segments of track in the Northeast Corridor are too close
together for the Acela carriages to safely tilt while maintaining
FRA-mandated minimum space between trains on parallel tracks.
The comparison is even more stark when Amtrak trains' speeds are
compared with the dedicated high-speed trains of France, Germany,
Italy, Spain and Japan.
Frequency of trains even between major
destinations in the USA (again outside the Northeast Corridor),
compared with European standards, is extremely low – many long
distance main lines in Europe operate to half-hourly frequencies
throughout the day, whereas in the USA many major cities (such as
Indianapolis
and Dallas
) have (at best) a daily intercity rail
service.
For usage of Amtrak trains/routes: see
List of Amtrak routes
The ridership for US intercity lines is again, compared with
European/Japanese standards, remarkably low. The entire passenger
count for a typical Amtrak intercity route would not match the
passenger usage of a single modest station in Europe.
For example, the
route from Chicago to San Antonio (the Texas Eagle), taking in Fort
Worth
and other major cities and towns along its route,
had a ridership in 2008 of just 251,518 passengers; while the
relatively minor station of Lowestoft
(population 55,000) in Suffolk, England had a patronage of over
410,000 for the same period. Some Amtrak routes (for example
the "Heartland Flyer" with its ridership of only 80,892 per annum)
have minuscule ridership compared with European standards. This
discrepancy is due in large part to Amtrak's perceived (as
mentioned above) lower federal funding priority compared to
commercial aviation and the Interstate highway system, which in
turn has traditionally resulted in far greater usage of the
airlines and automobiles for the majority of intercity travel in
the US. This perceived bias against Amtrak is an ongoing source of
criticism and frustration for the strongest Amtrak supporters, who
want Amtrak service, public/political favor and status to be closer
to that of passenger rail service in other parts of the
industrialized world.
Guest Rewards
Amtrak's
loyalty program,
Guest
Rewards, is similar to the
frequent-flyer programs of many
airlines. Guest Rewards members accumulate
points by riding Amtrak and through other activities, and can
redeem these points for free or discounted Amtrak tickets and other
rewards.
Freight
Amtrak Express provides small-package
and less-than-truckload shipping among more than 100 cities. Amtrak
Express also offers station-to-station shipment of human remains to
many express cities. At smaller stations, funeral directors must
load and unload the shipment onto and off the train. Amtrak hauled
mail for the United States Postal Service and time-sensitive
freight, but discontinued these services in October 2004 when the
contract was lost. On most parts of the few lines that Amtrak owns,
trackage-rights
agreements allow freight railroads to use its trackage.
Commuter services
Through
various commuter services, Amtrak serves an additional
61.1 million passengers per year in conjunction with state and
regional authorities in California
, Connecticut
, Maryland
, Virginia
, and Washington
. Amtrak's
Capitol Corridor,
Pacific Surfliner (formerly
San Diegan), and
San Joaquin are funded mostly by a state
transit authority,
Caltrans, rather
than the federal government.
Classes of service
Amtrak has a variety of cabins that suit a variety of needs.
Classes are similar to those used by airlines.
First Class service is currently offered on the
Acela
Express only. Previously First Class was offered on the
Northeast Direct (predecessor to the
Northeast Regional) as well as the
Metroliner up until that service's
discontinuation in 2006. First Class passengers have access to
Amtrak ClubAcela lounges in Washington D.C., Philadelphia, New York
and Boston (lounges offer complementary drinks, personal ticketing
service, lounge seating, conference areas, computer/internet access
and televisions tuned to
CNN). At the
Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., ClubAcelas, passengers can board
their train directly from the ClubAcela. In Philadelphia,
passengers use an elevator while in Washington, passengers leave
through a side door leading to the tracks. Seats are larger than
those of Business Class and come in a variety of seating modes
(single, single with table, double, double with table and
wheelchair accessible). First Class is located in separate cars
from the other classes. First Class includes complimentary meal and
beverage service along with free newspapers and hot towel service.
First Class seats are set in a 1x2 configuration. There are two
attendants per car.
Sleeper Service rooms are considered First Class on long
distance trains. Rooms are classified into roomettes, bedrooms,
family bedrooms and accessible bedrooms. With the price of a room
comes complimentary meals and attendant service. At night, rooms
turn into sleeping areas with fold-down beds and fresh linens.
Complimentary bottled water, newspapers and turn down service is
included as well. Sleeper car passengers have access to the entire
train. Sleeper passengers also have access to the Club Acela
lounges in stations along the Northeast Corridor and access to the
Metropolitan Lounges in Chicago, Miami, New Orleans, Portland (OR),
and Minneapolis/Saint Paul.
Business Class is the minimum class of service on the
Acela Express and is offered as an upgrade on
Regional and other short to long distance trains. Business
Class seats are larger than those in coach. Business Class
passengers have easy access to the cafe car. They also receive
complimentary non-alcoholic beverages and free newspapers. Business
Class seats all have power outlets for electronics. Business Class
seats are located in different areas depending on the train. On
some trains, Business Class is located at the front of the Café
Car. These seats are in a 1x2 style and feature leather upholstery,
cup holders and leg rests. These seats also recline to a more "sofa
recliner style." The other type of Business Class seat is located
in an actual Business Class car. These seats are organized in a 2x2
style and feature more legroom than the coach seats in the other
cars.
Reserved Coach is the standard class of service on most
Amtrak trains (except
Acela). Coach seats are set in a 2x2
configuration and are comparable to
economy class seating on airlines. All
ticketed passengers are guaranteed a seat, although unlike on
VIA Rail Canada and some long
distance train services in Europe, passengers are not assigned to a
specific seat before boarding. If the train is not sold out,
passengers are usually permitted to purchase tickets the day of
departure, or in some cases on-board.
Unreserved Coach seating is offered on a first come, first
served basis on some of Amtrak's shorter distance and commuter
oriented routes. Until 2005 certain
Northeast Regional trains were
unreserved, running alongside standard reserved trips. The hourly
Clocker trains that ran from New
York to Philadelphia until late 2005 were also unreserved.
Currently the
Pacific Surfliner,
the
Capitol Corridor, and the
Hiawatha are the only trains to
offer unreserved coach seating. Unreserved coach is also used as a
designator when Amtrak through-books an itinerary with a regional
transit operator's commuter service (such as
New Jersey Transit's
Atlantic City Line)
Trains and tracks
Most tracks on which Amtrak operates are owned by freight
railroads. Amtrak operates over all five
Class I railroads in the United States, as
well as several
short lines: the
Pan Am Railways,
New England Central Railroad,
and
Vermont Railway. Other sections
are owned by
terminal railroads
jointly controlled by freight companies or by
commuter rail agencies. The arrangement has
two notable impacts on Amtrak operations. The host railroad is
responsible for maintenance and occasionally Amtrak has suffered
service disruptions from untimely track rehabilitation. When host
railroads have simply refused to maintain their tracks to Amtrak's
needs, Amtrak occasionally has been compelled to pay the host to
maintain the tracks. Also, Amtrak enjoys priority over the host's
freight traffic only for a specified window of time. When a
passenger train misses that window, host railroads may (and
frequently do) direct passenger trains to follow lumbering freight
traffic, severely exacerbating even minor delays and exposing the
host railroad to financial penalties by law.
Tracks owned by Amtrak
Along the Northeast Corridor and in several other areas, Amtrak
owns 730 route-miles of track (1175 km), including 17 tunnels
consisting of of track, and 1,186 bridges (including the famous
Hell Gate Bridge) consisting of of
track. Amtrak owns and operates the following lines:
Northeast Corridor
The
Northeast Corridor between Washington, D.C.
and Boston
via Baltimore
, Philadelphia
, Newark
, New
York and Providence
is largely owned by Amtrak, working cooperatively
with several state and regional commuter agencies. Amtrak's
portion was acquired in 1976 as a result of the
Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act.
The part
of the line from New Haven to the New York/Connecticut border
(Port
Chester
/Greenwich
) is owned by the state of Connecticut
, while the portion from Port Chester to New
Rochelle is owned by the state of New York
. The
Connecticut Department
of Transportation and the
Metropolitan
Transportation Authority operate this line through
Metro-North Railroad.
Philadelphia to Harrisburg Main Line
This line
runs from Philadelphia to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
. As a result of an investment partnership
with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
, signal and track improvements were completed in
October 2006, and now allow all-electric service with a top speed
of to run along the corridor.
Empire Corridor
New Haven-Springfield Line
Other tracks
Amtrak
also owns station and yard tracks in Chicago
; Hialeah
(near Miami
, Florida
, leased from the State of Florida); Los
Angeles
; New Orleans
; New York
City
; Oakland
(Kirkham Street Yard); Orlando
; Portland,
Oregon
; Saint Paul, Minnesota
; Seattle
; and Washington, D.C.
Amtrak
owns the Chicago Union
Station Company (Chicago Union Station
) and Penn Station Leasing (New York
Penn Station
). It has a 99.7% interest in the Washington Terminal Company
(tracks around Washington Union Station
) and 99% of 30th
Street Limited (Philadelphia 30th Street Station
). Also owned by Amtrak is Passenger Railroad
Insurance.
Other infrastructure:
Amtrak Services (Quick Reference)

| Service |
Route |
| Acela Express |
Boston – D.C. |
| Adirondack |
Montreal – New York City (via Albany ) |
| Amtrak Cascades |
Vancouver – Eugene,
Oregon (via Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington ) |
| Auto Train |
Lorton (metro Washington, D.C.)- Sanford (metro Orlando,
Florida)this is a direct express service. |
| Blue Water |
Chicago – Port Huron |
| California
Zephyr |
Chicago – Emeryville (San Francisco) |
| Capitol Corridor |
Auburn – Sacramento – San Jose (via Oakland) |
| Capitol
Limited |
Chicago – Washington D.C. (via Cleveland, Ohio and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ) |
| Cardinal |
Chicago – New York (via Indianapolis/Cincinnati/D.C.) |
| Carl
Sandburg |
Chicago – Quincy |
| Carolinian and
Piedmont |
New York – Raleigh – Charlotte |
| City of New
Orleans |
Chicago – New Orleans |
| Coast Starlight |
Seattle – Los Angeles (via Sacramento/Oakland) |
| Crescent |
New York – New Orleans (via Atlanta) |
| Downeaster |
Portland, Maine – Boston |
| Empire Builder |
Chicago – Portland, Oregon /Seattle (via Spokane) |
| Empire
Service |
New York – Niagara Falls (via Albany) |
| Ethan Allen
Express |
New York – Rutland (via Albany) |
| Heartland Flyer |
Oklahoma City – Fort Worth |
| Hiawatha |
Chicago – Milwaukee |
| Hoosier
State |
Chicago – Indianapolis |
| Illini |
Chicago – Carbondale |
| Illinois Zephyr |
Chicago – Quincy |
| Keystone Service |
New York – Harrisburg (via Philadelphia) |
| Lake Shore
Limited |
New York – Boston – Chicago (via Albany) |
| Lincoln Service |
Chicago – St. Louis |
| Maple Leaf |
New York – Toronto |
| Missouri River
Runner |
St. Louis – Kansas City |
| New
Haven-Springfield Shuttle |
New Haven – Springfield |
| Northeast
Regional |
Boston – New York – Washington – Newport News- Lynchburg,
Virginia- Springfield |
| Pacific
Surfliner |
San Luis Obispo – Los Angeles – San Diego |
| Palmetto |
New York – Savannah |
| Pennsylvanian |
New York – Pittsburgh (via Newark, Philadelphia, Harrisburg and
Altoona) |
| Pere
Marquette |
Grand Rapids – Chicago |
| Saluki |
Chicago – Carbondale |
| San Joaquin |
Bakersfield – Oakland / Sacramento |
| Silver Meteor |
New York – Fayetteville – Miami |
| Silver
Star |
New York – Raleigh – Tampa – Miami |
| Southwest Chief |
Chicago – Los Angeles |
| Sunset Limited |
Los Angeles – New Orleans |
| Texas Eagle |
Chicago – Los Angeles (through San Antonio and Dallas) |
| Vermonter |
Washington – St. Albans |
| Wolverine |
Chicago – Detroit – Pontiac |
Motive power and rolling stock
See also
Rail Companies of Interest
Rail Disasters
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Amtrak System Timetable, Fall 2004/Winter 2005
- Mike Schafer, Amtrak's atlas, Trains June 1991
- Kevin McKinney, At the dawn of Amtrak, Trains June 1991
Further reading
External links