Day: July 3, 2009
From: http://www.trainfestival2009.com
Saturday July 25 and Sunday July 26, 2009. Enjoy a steam excursion powered by PM #1225 (Sat.) or NKP #765 (Sun.). These special trains will leave Owosso at 9:30am sharp headed to Alma. Once in Alma, you will have the opportunity for lunch and shopping on your own. After a 2 hour layover, the train will return to Owosso. Admission to the event is also included in your ticket. All ticket prices are $90.00, no charge for children under 2. See website for additional info.
SummeRail at C.U.T. – Saturday, August 8, 2009 1:00 pm to 10:00 pm and Railroad Show and Sale in the Rotunda – 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Cincinnati Union Terminal, 1301 Western Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio. http://cincinnatirrclub.org/summerail.htm
Railroad Crossing Systems Manufacturer Safetran Planning $2.8 Million Expansion in Marion, Kentucky – The company, which manufactures crossing components and systems for the railroad industry, plans to make the improvements to its 110,000 square-foot facility on Industrial Drive in Marion, according to an announcement from the office of Governor Steve Beshear. The 24-acre site is a short distance from Safetran’s corporate headquarters in Louisville.
Established in 1920, Safetran has five facilities. In addition to the two in Kentucky, Safetran has operations in California, New York and Florida. The company’s products include electro-mechanical signal devices and the control systems that activate them; communications systems; and complete signal system design and construction.
The Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority gave preliminarily approval for more than $2.2 million in tax incentives for the project as well as a $525,000 economic development bond to assist Safetran in the expansion. – Submitted by Chuck Hinrichs
Scanner Chatter…
Today while listening to my scanner I heard a dispatcher and conductor having a conversation about when the CSX dispatchers will be relocated. The dispatcher told him that they would be moved and working in Nashville by Monday, June 29th. That just a couple weeks away. Looks like we will be hearing “SD Dispatcher Nashville” instead of “SD Dispatcher Jacksonville” on our scanners in the very near future. – David Porter
I think the move will effect the Henderson Sub as well, “SA Dispatcher” – Chuck Hinrichs
As you may have heard, for the past few months a new, larger museum has been under construction at the Casey Jones Village in Jackson, TN. It replaces the old gift shop/theatre/museum and is sandwiched between the steamer and the Jones house (both of which are still there). A grand opening for the new museum is scheduled for June 19. I drove by the area last week and crews are still scrambling outside to finish.
Also, out in the parking lot, restoration of the “Judge Milton Brown” passenger car is well under way. It has been painted in GM&O colors, but not yet lettered. The car will house offices and studio for the local American Family Radio affiliate. More info about AFR and a video of moving the car can be found at http://wamp.afr.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=106&Itemid=148
– Cliff Downey
Above left: W860 coming out of siding at South Kelly. Above Right: W860 is stopped and Q688 is passing at 10 mph. (Photos by Chuck Hinrichs)
CSX had a military movement on the Henderson Sub on Tuesday afternoon, June 9. The train, W860-07, was south bound and Jim Pearson alerted me to the movement early in the afternoon. W860 took some three hours weaving it’s way through the track work around Nortonville and I finally caught up with it at Kelly.
Power was a UP and an SP GE pulling a 22 car train of green DODX 6 axle flat cars with a pair of tanks on each car. The train was moving with some wide load restrictions.
W860 took each siding and when meeting an opposing train came to a complete stop while the passing train was limited to 10 mph. I have no information as to the source or destination of the movement. Submission and photos by Chuck Hinrichs
Guest Submission by Phil Randall
Reprinted from The Tennessean
By Christina E. Sanchez
• THE TENNESSEAN • May 25, 2009
Clarksville, Murfreesboro or Gallatin could become the second link in Nashville’s commuter rail network, but transit planners say which corridor is built next could depend on which community is best at raising money.
State lawmakers took a step last week toward allowing local leaders to do that. They passed a bill — now awaiting the governor’s signature — that would allow local governments to, through ordinance or referendum, set up a funding source dedicated to public transportation projects.
It also would give regional transportation authorities in the state the power to borrow money by issuing bonds.
“To become a world-class city, you have to have ability to move masses of people,” said Greg Atkins, executive director of the Tennessee Public Transportation Association.
“You have to have other options than just the automobile. But right now we don’t have the money to match federal dollars for light-rail programs.”
In other states, it’s beer drinkers, people who rent cars and retail shoppers who pay to support public transportation. Local leaders have not said what option they might select in Middle Tennessee, but they plan to discuss it Wednesday during a regional transportation summit.
Cumberland Region Tomorrow, a nonprofit growth and planning group, will host the meeting for leaders of 10 counties to look at building regional transit systems.
First transit line cost $42M
Michael Skipper, executive director of the Nashville Metropolitan Planning Organization, said the legislation is a first step toward realizing regional transportation.
“Locally, it clears some significant hurdles for us to come together as a region to start thinking seriously about alternatives to highway congestion and higher fuel prices,” Skipper said.
Funding was the biggest obstacle when the Nashville region studied possible commuter rail corridors in the 1990s.
The path selected for what came to be the Music City Star was between Lebanon and Nashville, on track owned by the short-line Nashville & Eastern Railroad. At a startup cost of $42 million, it provided the cheapest option because it required virtually no new track and promised few problems with scheduling around Nashville & Eastern’s freight traffic. But it was also the route that would produce the fewest riders.
Corridors to the northeast, serving Hendersonville and Gallatin, and southeast, serving Murfreesboro, would have had the most demand, the studies showed. Those tracks are owned by rail giant CSX, which maintains a busy freight schedule. No agreement could be reached for use of those lines for transit.
But either commuter route could still happen, said Paul Ballard, chief executive officer for the Metropolitan Transit Authority, which operates the Nashville-Lebanon commuter rail line.
New track would be built because CSX would be unlikely, as in the past, to agree to share the existing rail.
“We have to be able to attract significant federal dollars,” Ballard said. “The federal funding could pay up to 80 percent of project costs. But local governments have to have a way to meet small local share of 10 percent.”
The state must contribute the last 10 percent.
Push for Clarksville line
The newest push for commuter rail has been between Clarksville and Nashville, the northwestern corridor.
A feasibility study shows that the line could be planned and completed in five to eight years at an estimated cost of $144 million. The yearly operating costs would be about $5 million.
The Clarksville Urban Metropolitan Planning Organization has been actively working on the project.
The line would use existing right-of-way owned by the Nashville & Western Railroad, sister company to the Nashville & Eastern. One obstacle, though, is that the track between Clarksville and Ashland City, representing about half of the most likely commuter route, has been dismantled.
More than six miles of the rail bed in Cheatham County has been turned into the Cumberland River Bicentennial Trail, a popular walking path that draws users from throughout Middle Tennessee.
Skipper said people have to remember that any project will require time to plan and build transportation infrastructure, but that planning must start early.
“Any substantial plan to connect the two areas with transit will rely on our ability to establish a dedicated source of funding to help leverage federal funds to pay for it,” Skipper said.
“Those federal funds are currently going to other cities and regions that are ahead of us on this issue.”
Several chapter members and other guests visited Bill Thomas’s Hook Line & Singer Railway last Saturday, June 13, at his home in Madisonville. Trains ran a bit sluggishly at first due to all the crushed vegetation which has grown around and through track so robustly with recent and frequent rains.
Thanks to all who dropped by. We hope to do this again in the fall – BYOB (Bring your own [leaf] bag)
From our President
Those of you that gathered in Hopkinsville last month for our customary satellite meeting were treated to an excellent program by David Hayes. He took us around Ecuador and we didn’t even have to leave our seats.
I saw a couple of recession news items of interest. Our balance of payments with China should improve a little with the order last fall for six hundred 6000 horsepower locomotives; half from General Electric and half from Electro Motive Diesel. These have not been too popular in the States and several railroads are turning them in or retiring them, mostly in favor of 4300 horsepower units. But China is trying to modernize their railroads and this is one of their steps in that direction. Most of these engines will be shipped as kits with final assembly in China.
I was somewhat surprised by the number of coal trains that Union Pacific hauled out of the Wyoming Powder River Basin in 2008. They set an all time record of 13,212 trains hauling 204.6 million tons of coal which was about 5 percent more than the previous year. Last December they moved about 36 trains per day. Wow!
As I write this we are getting ready to go to Alaska to visit my brother-in-law and we should be riding the Alaska Railroad while we are there. I’ll fill you in later.
I hope to see all of your smiling faces at our next meeting on June 22, at the Center in beautiful downtown Madisonville. We should be having a great program by Wallace Henderson.