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May 16, 2008
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APTA > Government Affairs > APTA Testimony  

Reauthorization of the Surface Transportation Board

before the

Senate Subcommittee on

Surface Transportation and Merchant Marine

KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON, CHAIRMAN

PRESENTED BY

WILLIAM W. MILLAR

PRESIDENT

AMERICAN PUBLIC TRANSIT ASSOCIATION

WASHINGTON, D.C.

*******

March 2, 1999

*******

American Public Transit Association
1201 New York Avenue, N. W.
Washington, DC 20005

(202) 898-4000

APTA is a nonprofit international association of over 1,200 member organizations including transit systems; planning, design, construction and finance firms; product and service providers; academic institutions, and state associations and departments of transportation. APTA members serve the public interest by providing safe, efficient and economical transit services and products. Over ninety percent of persons using public transportation in the United States and Canada are served by APTA members.

The American Public Transit Association (APTA) is pleased to submit this testimony for the hearing record requesting that Congress, as part of the pending reauthorization of the Surface Transportation Board (STB), establish a process which will require due consideration of the public interest whenever a state or regional passenger rail agency seeks use of a rail freight corridor. We believe that such a process will be critical to the mobility and well being of the traveling public, as well as in the long-term interest of both freight and passenger interests.

Historically, America’s rail corridors have been used for both freight and passenger purposes. At one time, both were operated by the private sector under laws governing public utilities. These laws recognized the public interest in the system. As passenger operations became unprofitable, private railroads were relieved of the obligation to operate passenger service directly. Services were often taken over and supported financially by public entities.

Today, rail passenger service across America is in the midst of a rebirth. Nearly fifty new or extended rail systems have been added since the 1980s. The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA 21), enacted by Congress last year, itself provides funding for over 200 new rail projects.

Many of these projects and the communities they serve would benefit enormously through the use of existing rail freight corridors. Where capacity exists, using existing rights-of-way simply makes more sense and is more economical to the taxpayer than acquiring and bulldozing new corridors. When the use of a freight line is required, the rail passenger agency will typically seek to negotiate an agreement on a range of issues, including lease payments, schedules and dispatching, cost sharing of maintenance and capital investments, liability, and other matters.

Unfortunately, when a rail passenger service requires use of a freight corridor, the negotiation process does not include a mechanism for consideration of public interest factors that may be associated with the passenger service. Freight railroads unilaterally can - and have - denied access to passenger rail agencies. In other instances, the terms of the access have been deemed by the passenger agency to be unreasonable. Public agencies so denied have no recourse, and the result is a very difficult environment for negotiating fair agreements.

The normal way a state or regional public transit agency would gain access to property needed for public improvements would be through eminent domain proceedings. However, state law based condemnation authority does not extend to property owned by freight railroads, which come under the interstate authority of the federal STB.

APTA asks Congress, as part of pending efforts to reauthorize STB, to provide state and regional rail agencies the same statutory rights to access as Amtrak has. The Rail Passenger Service Act of 1971 (RPSA), which created Amtrak, has a very thorough process regarding the use of freight-owned track and other facilities. In the event of a failure to agree, RPSA provides that the STB shall order the use of track and other facilities on such terms and for such compensation as STB finds just and reasonable.

Essentially, the STB’s role is to determine whether an impasse exists and to provide freight railroads with reasonable compensation for the access provided to and the service provided by Amtrak. By putting pressure on both sides, this model has worked well and the STB has rarely been called upon to intervene in these disputes.

While Amtrak was assigned responsibility for intercity rail passenger service, regional rail passenger service performed the equally important role of providing regional rail passenger service. Congress did not anticipate at the time of Amtrak’s enactment how much commuter rail service would grow in the next 28 years, and the number of new passenger rail systems to be created that would require access to the railroad network. Regional rail ridership today far eclipses that of Amtrak. Today commuter railroads alone carry over 17 times as many passengers as Amtrak and account for 55 percent more passenger miles.

APTA suggests that statutory language similar to that which applies to Amtrak should be made applicable to state and local public agencies responsible for the provision of rail passenger service. Disputes would be resolved by the STB only when a prolonged impasse in negotiations occurs, or when the parties, in the judgement of STB, are not negotiating in good faith.

Justification for such an action can also be found in the ICC Termination Act of 1995, wherein Congress specifically allowed rail carriers, including eligible passenger rail authorities, to seek access to railroad terminals using public interest criteria as the basis. The STB has authority to prescribe terms in these cases if parties cannot agree.

APTA and the Association of American Railroads (AAR) have met to discuss the possibility of an industry-wide framework to help facilitate the negotiation of local agreements. We have begun to identify common issues contained in such agreements and normal industry practices or costs related to each of those issues. In these talks APTA has emphasized the need for some form of a dispute resolution process, a position that has also been taken by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO).

In conclusion, APTA and its members want to work cooperatively with private railroads to ensure that our nation continues to be served with an efficient and effective freight passenger network. We recognize that freight railroads are profit-making enterprises that cannot be expected to subsidize passenger services. Nonetheless, we believe that the ability to petition STB for the resolution of disputes and public interest issues needs to apply to state and regional rail passenger agencies just as it applies to Amtrak. The future mobility of millions of Americans will be affected by the outcome.

Thank you for the opportunity to testify. I would be pleased to provide any additional information that might be useful to the Subcommittee.

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