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Just the Ticket

Three hours separate Bluff City and Music City on an I-40 straight shot Memphis drivers know all too well.

“Oh, Jackson is bigger than I remember! Look kids, the Tennessee River! Ha, Bucksnort! There’s the Batman Building!”

Any Memphian who has routinely made that drive will have at one point wished for (a Buc-ee’s, of course, but also) a rail line to connect the two cities. This is especially true for any Memphian who has ever boarded the City of New Orleans train for a hands-off-the-wheel trip to another city up or down the rails.

But those choo-choo wishes here fade into the same place as win-the-lottery daydreams. Passenger rail is for those East Coast types or some European travel show on PBS. This is Tennessee. We won’t even expand Medicaid to save lives, let alone build a statewide train set so the fancies can swan around like they’re Rick Steves. So, I-40 drivers’ dreams go poof, they sigh, turn off the cruise control, and wait to pass a Big G Express truck in the left lane.

But a few things have happened recently to give those rail dreams a flicker of hope.

In 2021, Congress passed President Joe Biden’s massive Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. It promised $1.2 trillion in transportation and infrastructure projects with $550 billion for new projects. That pot of money opened the Federal Railroad Administration’s (FRA) Corridor Identification and Development program. Flush with $1.8 billion, it will help cities and states pick new routes for intercity passenger rail service.

In 2022, the Tennessee General Assembly publicly but quietly directed a state-housed group of experts called the Tennessee Advisory Commission for Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR, pronounced TASS-err) to study the feasibility of passenger rail here.

The bipartisan bill was sponsored by the unlikely duo of Sen. Ken Yager, a Republican from the far-east corner of Tennessee (Bristol), and Rep. Antonio Parkinson, a Democrat from the far-west corner (Memphis). But they had one thing in common — rail could help their cities. For Yager, Bristol could connect to Virginia’s ever-growing rail system. Memphis could connect to Nashville and beyond, and all of it could bring in people and their money.

“I have all the faith and confidence that [TACIR is] going to bring us back something completely comprehensive, whether it shows that rail is feasible or not,” Parkinson said when he introduced the bill. “It might not even be feasible, but whatever alternatives are available for us, we just need something to connect all of our people and all the tourists that come into our state.”

But as Parkinson introduced the bill to just even study the idea, GOP members quickly questioned the cost of rail. Many thought the idea was a good one (if not at least a pretty one), and no one voted against the study. But some knew already the Feds would not pay for the lines, nor the equipment, nor the resources it would take to maintain it. Hawk mode, it seemed, was already engaged.

In March 2023, Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly announced on X that “it’s time to bring the Choo Choo back to Chattanooga! This week, I submitted an application for federal funds in partnership with [the mayors of Atlanta, Nashville, and Memphis] to begin planning for a new Amtrak route through our cities.”

It’s unclear just where in line that application is now. But if the project is picked, the cities will get $500,000 to earnestly study routes and crunch numbers.

While rail in Tennessee has seen a flurry of activity over the last couple of years, Parkinson said it could take up to 15 years for a new passenger train to leave a station here. TACIR said if the process gets started and leaders remain committed to it, a train line could be operational in a hasty seven years.

Rail action could likely see the floors of the Tennessee state House and Senate in its next session this winter. Parkinson added that any rail ideas would need buy-in, also, from the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) and Gov. Bill Lee’s office.

For now, lawmakers are likely mulling the TACIR study and, maybe, gauging where the political winds blow on it. Also for now, it still takes three hours of hands-on-the-wheel, going-the-speed-limit driving for an I-40 nonstop trip between Memphis and Nashville.

Central Station Hotel seen from South Main Street (Photo: Calvin L. Leake | Dreamstime.com)

A Rail Assessment

Rail travel shriveled across the U.S. over the last few decades. While Tennessee was never famous for its great passenger systems, the state certainly had more lines than it does today.

For example, ever wonder why Nashville’s beautiful Union Station luxury hotel is called a “station,” sits on train tracks, but has no trains? Well, it used to. It was once a major stop on Amtrak’s Floridian line, a 1,400-mile route that ran from Chicago, through Nashville, to Miami. But Amtrak stopped the service in 1979.

So, what does Tennessee have now as far as real, people-moving rail service, not meant as nostalgia machines? Very little.

Amtrak stations at Memphis and Newbern to the north are the only two such stations in the state. It’s another sort of feather in West Tennessee’s cap. It seems glitzy, but ridership figures dull the story. Ridership was still below pre-pandemic levels last year when about 40,000 boarded the train here. That’s roughly 3 percent of the Memphis MSA population. That ridership figure is down from a recent high of about 72,000 in 2017, or about 6 percent of the population. The station was on a shortlist for closure with looming budget cuts in 2017, but it was saved with the stroke of a Congressional pen.

Amtrak’s only train running through Tennessee, the City of New Orleans, runs between Chicago and New Orleans. The route through Tennessee follows the Mississippi River along the western border of the state, making only two stops, one in Newbern (close to Dyersburg) and another in Memphis at Central Station on South Main Street. Memphis is the state’s busiest station. While ridership here may have ducked during and after the pandemic, numbers climbed through the aughts, growing 15 percent between 2010 and 2018.

Nashville’s WeGo Star (formerly known as the Music City Star) began operations in 2006 and remains the state’s lone commuter rail line. The train runs east from Downtown Nashville to nearby Lebanon with several stops along the way on a 32-mile line. It was heralded as a helping hand to remove some congestion from the city’s famously jammed interstates. Ridership figures there haven’t bounced back to pre-pandemic levels, either, down by about 67 percent in fiscal year 2022. A WPLN story in July said that number rose to 40 percent of pre-pandemic levels this year, and now about 400 people ride the WeGo Star each day.

Trolleys move people in Memphis, but mostly tourists. Even though they run regularly enough (and usually on time), when was the last time you heard someone talk about their commute to work and say, “You won’t believe what happened on the trolley this morning”? However, sharp-eyed Memphians may have glimpsed sleek, modern streetcars on the Madison Line last year. The Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) is testing the new cars that could, one day, regularly carry commuters. The rail trolley system here is the only one in the state.

That’s really it. Other Tennessee trains do carry passengers, but do so for pleasure’s sake, not efficiency. That is, unless you count Lookout Mountain workers taking the Incline Railway.

Proposed rail infrastructure could connect Memphis to the rest of Tennessee and to states like Virginia and Georgia. (Photo: TACIR)

What’s Proposed

Parkinson said when he proposed a transportation study from TACIR, it wasn’t only about rail. It was about moving people across the state and beyond, and about economic opportunities.

“I wanted to keep it broad enough for us to look at everything — not just rail — but any alternatives,” he said. “I wanted to know what those alternatives were, whatever the future of transport is. And if not rail, then what’s the future of transportation so we can be on the front end of it?”

The legislation he sponsored wanted a top-to-bottom review of the idea. That review had to look at physical train tracks in Tennessee, show what an intercity rail network would look like, and find alternatives to rail that might get the same job done. Lawmakers also wanted to see what kinds of projects like these have been done over the last decade. They wanted to hear from three other states about their rail projects. They wanted to know about possible stakeholders, costs, ridership estimates, operations, equipment, and more.

Two recommendations from the study made headlines when it was released in July. One, an intercity passenger rail system could “improve mobility and the state’s economy,” meaning it could work. Two, the group recommended five routes built in five phases.

The first would connect Nashville, Chattanooga, and Atlanta. To this, many Memphians likely sighed a unanimous “well, of course, Nashville ….” But the decision was based on moving the most people, connecting larger swathes of the country via rail, and existing infrastructure, like rail lines at airports in Chattanooga and Atlanta.

The next proposed route would connect Memphis and Nashville. The route was mentioned in 2020’s massive Southern Rail Plan from the Feds but was given a lower priority, though details on why were not given. That plan, however, saw the route as best suited as a link from the East to Midwest cities served by the City of New Orleans.

Well before TACIR recommended the Memphis-Nashville line, mayors of Memphis, Nashville, Atlanta, and Chattanooga had done one better and applied to the FRA’s Corridor ID Program. That application seeks to get rail done quickly with minimal investment.

Letters of support for the application flowed from every corner of every state involved right into the mailboxes of Pete Buttigieg, secretary of transportation, and Amit Bose, administrator of the FRA. Many of those letters refer to the proposed route as the Sunbelt-Atlantic Connector Corridor, even though that name does not yet even appear in any Google search.

“Each of our four cities are leading transportation and tourism hubs in their own right, and such a service would connect many millions of residents from beyond our municipal and state borders to reliable and frequent rail travel opportunities,” wrote Dennis Newman, executive vice president of strategy and planning for Amtrak.

Many of the letters read the same, including mentions of how the route could expand the economy and mobility, drive higher workforce participation and equity, advance “our international climate commitments,” and push tourism and leisure travel.

But letters from Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland and U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) mention one Memphis-specific need of the proposed route: BlueOval City. Work is underway now on the massive, Haywood County campus that will house Ford’s production line for its electric F-Series pickup trucks and batteries.

“The Memphis region will most benefit from the opportunity to help connect the 5,800 new workers needed to power the coming BlueOval City,” Strickland and Cohen wrote in their letters. “This mega-campus is envisioned to be a sustainable automotive manufacturing ecosystem. The $5.6 billion battery and vehicle manufacturing campus just outside of Memphis will be the largest in the Ford Motor Co. world.”

TDOT studied BlueOval City’s transportation needs, but only a passing mention of it made TACIR’s final report. TDOT aimed to figure out ways to move what it said could be between 5,800 to 7,000 employees from Memphis, Jackson, and nearby areas to the site, “and to try to avoid a surge in congestion along the I‐40 corridor.”

They came up with three ideas. Two of them are mixtures of buses and vanpools with start-up price tags ranging from $8.6 million to $14.6 million. Another option included a passenger rail system with a price tag between $490 million and $600 million. All of these transit options “would be used only by BlueOval workers,” according to TACIR documents.

While the 234-mile Memphis-Nashville route came in second, it does have a few things going for it, adding to its feasibility. For one, freight tracks already exist between the cities. Also, the TACIR study found lower freight volume between them, causing fewer supply-chain disruptions. The route is mostly flat, making it easier to build. While the population it would serve is smaller than the route to Atlanta, it would still connect a collective 3.4 million people in both cities and the roughly 171,000 folks who live in the 29 cities between them. Finally, other transportation infrastructure already exists in both cities.

Another Memphis route recommended by the TACIR study would enhance service from here to Chicago. Amtrak now runs this route once a day. But the study suggested connecting two other train routes — the Illini and Saluki routes — to increase daily frequency and mobility between the states.

Photo: Iandewarphotography | Dreamstime.com

The Money Barrier

Money will easily be the biggest barrier to making any Tennessee passenger rail dreams come true. They’re not cheap to build, they’re not cheap to run, and the state will likely have to pay for most, if not all, of it.

“The experience of other states suggests that costs can range from the hundreds of millions of dollars for more straightforward passenger rail projects to billions of dollars for more intensive projects,” reads the TACIR report. ”For example, Virginia estimates spending $4.1 billion on capital projects over 10 years.”

For costs to run a rail network, TACIR looked to North Carolina, another state making major investments in passenger rail. State-supported Amtrak routes there between 2015 and 2019 ranged from about $14 million to $17 million each year.

But as the study pointed out, Tennessee has, for years, committed millions upon millions of dollars, and staff, and other resources, to roads.

“As a result, [Tennessee] has a first-class road network,” the study said. “The experience of other states demonstrates that a similar approach can be used to overcome the barriers to establishing passenger rail.”

When asked about costs as a barrier, Parkinson was quick to say that, “operationally, they lose money.”

“But when you think about the indirect impact to the cities, to those towns, and those rural areas that are going to benefit from it, it would prove profitable from the rippling effect,” he said.

Others agree. The Southern Rail Plan said the Nashville-to-Atlanta route could produce a total economic output of $18.2 billion and support over 17,000 construction jobs. For travelers, the route could save $1.8 million every year.

Tennessee state numbers say 141 million tourists spent $29 billion here last year. Most of those originated from nearby states, all of which could be connected to Tennessee by rail. How could that impact tourism spending here? The closest analogue is a 2020 study from the Southern Rail Commission. It found that if rail brought even 1 percent more tourists to Alabama, it would generate an additional $11.8 million each year.

But For Now …

Where Tennessee will land on passenger rail is anyone’s guess. It will take a lot of time and cost a lot of money. That’s even if the idea gets off the ground, and getting there is promising to be a fist fight in the state capitol.

Now, however, most Memphians will do what we’ve always done: fill up the tank, buckle up, hit the gas, and, maybe, dream of a rail system one day. But we’ll definitely dream of a Buc-ee’s, preferably near Bucksnort.

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State Panel Recommends Tennessee Rail System

A state panel has recommended building a rail service to connect Tennessee’s major cities, and say a line from Nashville to Chattanooga to Atlanta should be first. 

Details of the service and how the state might construct it are outlined in a new report issued by the Tennessee Advisory Council on Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR), a state group that examines complex policy questions and how government bodies work together. The Tennessee General Assembly asked the group to study the feasibility of an inter-city rail service last year. 

The 139-page report says rail service across the state could “help increase connectivity and facilitate tourism and other economic development initiatives in Tennessee.” TACIR said that state officials should submit their findings to the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). 

Credit: state of Tennessee

The agency is already reviewing applications for rail lines submitted by the cities of Memphis, Nashville, Chattanooga, and Atlanta. TACIR recommended that the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) submit its report to support the application.

Tennessee Democrats urged Governor Bill Lee to do so quickly, saying “passenger rail has tremendous potential to improve mobility and grow the state’s economy,” and that federal funds for rail planning are available through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Plan.

“This informative report confirms what we rail advocates have been saying for years,” House Democratic Caucus Chair Rep. John Ray Clemmons (D-Nashville) said in a statement. “Toll lanes and wider roadways are not feasible stand-alone solutions to our transportation woes.  

”We have a tremendous opportunity here to improve Tennesseans’ quality of life by connecting our cities, growing local economies and easing traffic congestion along some of our busiest corridors.

“The bottom line is that Amtrak wants to be here, and the federal government has the funds to help us. It is time for the Lee administration to stop making excuses and say ‘yes’ to passenger rail in Tennessee.”  

Credit: state of Tennessee

TACIR said the top priority for rail service in Tennessee should be a line that connects Nashville and Atlanta through Chattanooga. The Southeast Corridor Commission estimated that a Nashville to Atlanta route could potentially produce a total economic output of $18.2 billion, the report says.

That route could support over 17,000 jobs, TACIR said, ”but the potential economic benefits of any given passenger rail service go beyond direct investment.” It opens people and communities up for business, leisure, and tourism. The Nashville-to-Atlanta route could produce time savings for passengers up to $1.8 million per year. 

The report said the second priority for rail service here would be a route to connect Memphis and Nashville. TACIR ranked it second because of population size. 

Credit: state of Tennessee

“The route would connect Tennessee’s two largest cities, and connecting areas with large populations is often a key to success for passenger rail projects, although neither of these cities has as many people as Atlanta,” reads the report. 

But the route would give Nashville (and other cities along the route) a connection to Memphis’ Amtrak service, which runs from Chicago to New Orleans, the report said. Freight volumes on existing lines from Memphis to Nashville are lower than other cities. Also, the route lacks “geographic barriers” of other proposed lines, apparently meaning the lack of hills and mountains would make it easier to build.

The report also suggests that TDOT create a department for rail services to oversee planning and manage any future projects. Rep. Jason Powell (D-Nashville) sponsored legislation that would have created a department of mass transit at TDOT but the bill was delayed to next year’s session. 

Powell sponsored the legislation that directed TACIR to study rail in Tennessee. He said, “Tennesseans want to get on board with a robust passenger rail network in our state. When you look at the existing Amtrak routes across the United States, there is a gaping void across Tennessee,” Powell said. 

The study said creating a rail service in Tennessee would cost millions of dollars and take at least a decade to complete, adding that dedicated bus routes to connect the state’s cities could be done much sooner and would alleviate some traffic problems and promote travel.  

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Memphis Passenger Rail Talks Surface in Congressional Amtrak Hearing

Passenger-rail planning in Tennessee surfaced briefly this week in a Congressional hearing with Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner with a bit of recent news regarding Memphis. 

In a previous story, the Flyer described efforts underway by a state group to deliver a passenger-rail plan to legislators and other state officials next month. The Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR) has been working on a rail plan since 2022, when the Tennessee General Assembly passed a bill requesting one.  

While TACIR works to meet the July deadline, several Tennessee cities filed an application with the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) for grant money to help them begin to plan for a possible rail route for passengers.

In March, Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly announced that his city had teamed up with Atlanta, Nashville, and Memphis in the submission that could draw $500,000 in planning funds for a route that would connect those cities. 

“It’s time to bring the Choo Choo back to Chattanooga!” Kelly tweeted at the time. 

That application surfaced in a hearing this week of the U.S. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) asked Amtrak’s Gardner about passenger rail movement in the state. 

“The state has submitted a corridor identification application to the [FRA] for service from Memphis east to Nashville, onto Chattanooga and to Atlanta,” Gardner said. “That’s a very interesting corridor, one that holds a lot of promise.” 

Gardner said the application is a “first critical step” in the passenger-rail-planning process. If nothing else, it simply gets the state and the cities into the federal system, to stand in line and be ready for funds when they become available. 

Credit: House Committee on Infrastructure and Transportation

Cohen said a rail line between Nashville and Memphis is more important now that Ford Motor Co. is building BlueOval City in Haywood County, just a few miles east of Memphis between the city and Nashville. 

Also, Cohen said the “area’s not served by air transportation, commercial air.” No direct flights exist from Memphis International Airport to Nashville International Airport. Spirit Airlines will get you there with an 11-hour layover in Orlando (for $211), according to a search at Kayak. Delta Airlines will deliver Memphians to Nashville in just over three hours with a stop in Atlanta for $359, also according to Kayak. 

Bus service from Memphis to Nashville has been around awhile, offered by many different companies. A one-way Greyhound ticket costs $42 (on a recent search) and takes about three hours and 45 minutes. FlixBus and Megabus run the route, too. BizBus began offering the route last month in a service that promised comfortable seating, Wi-Fi, and an onboard attendant for about $50.        

“I have heard a great amount of support [for passenger rail] in Memphis and Nashville,” Cohen said during Tuesday’s hearing. “People in Memphis want to go to Nashville, the state capital, for all kinds of reasons. And people in Nashville have even more reasons to leave and come to Memphis. So, there’s this great synergy of energy there.”

One recent commenter on the Memphis subreddit spelled their desire for a Memphis-Nashville connector pretty plainly. 

“As someone who recently had to drive to Nashville with a massive case of diarrhea, I would’ve LOVED a mode of travel that had its own bathroom,” u/newcv wrote in the most upvoted comment about the issue. 

While state officials await TACIR’s report, they have signaled their support to the feds of passenger rail in Tennessee. Howard “Butch” Eley, commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT), has given that support in two letters to the FRA. 

“Addressing growing transportation congestion in Tennessee’s major urban areas and along major commuting and commerce routes throughout our state is of paramount importance to [TDOT] as we work to meet the state’s growth, prosperity, and mobility needs,” Eley wrote to the FRA in March. “We believe Tennessee is an important state in the national discussion of long-distance passenger rail service. 

“Between 2010 and 2020, Tennessee grew by nearly 600,000 people and our state continues to be a leader in job growth and economic development. Tennessee is also a major tourist destination and visitors to our state come to all parts of our state to experience our rich culture of music and entertainment as well as our natural and scenic beauty.”

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State Officials Plan Passenger Rail System to Connect Tennessee’s Big Four Cities

Imagine catching a train to Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, or Little Rock. 

Making that a reality is now in the planning stages, and transportation experts say passenger rail is getting its biggest push in decades. In Tennessee, officials have been working in the background to develop a plan to, maybe, connect the state’s largest cities: Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, and Chattanooga. A federal grant program could help planners here to connect Tennessee to other states via rail. 

In 2022, the Tennessee General Assembly asked the state-housed Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR) to begin studying “the potential for passenger rail service linking the major cities in each of the Grand Divisions of the state.”

Lawmakers wanted to know the condition of existing rail tracks here and who owns them. They wanted to see what a network of rail lines between the cities would look like. How many state-sponsored rail projects have been done over the last decade? What are other states doing on passenger rail?

What are the costs? How many people might ride it? Who would operate it? What kind of property would need to be acquired? Where would passenger stations be built? What kind of equipment — engines, train cars, and the rest — would need to be purchased?

Lawmakers gave TACIR more than a year to answer most, if not all, of those questions. Since then, the commission has logged many hours of hearings and studies. Its report on passenger rail in Tennessee is due in July. 

TACIR’s research plan (the plan to plan the plan, if you will) said lawmakers “believe freedom of movement and an interconnected economy are important aspects of the quality of life for Tennesseans” and for economic opportunities.   

“Sponsors assert that when people can move freely between urban areas in Tennessee, it expands access to entertainment, shopping, and business venues …,” reads the report. “Additionally, sponsors feel it is important to explore feasible options to promote public mobility services as an amenity to bridge the gap between the traditional expectation of unfettered mobility and the modern constraints of transportation costs, congestion, negative environmental effects, and public health concerns.”

It seems Tennessee missed out on millions of dollars of federal funds to identify new rail routes, though. While TACIR is still working on a state plan, a key federal deadline passed.

Last May, the Biden Adminstration announced a $1.8 billion funding program to help states plan new passenger rail lines. This fund was approved by Congress in 2021’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. 

For this, Transportation for America, a transportation advocacy group, called the money a “once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity to boost rail across the country. 

“If Amtrak, states, interstate compacts, regional passenger rail authorities, and localities play their cards right, these historic funding levels coming from the [Federal Railroad Administration — FRA] and the renewed national mandate for Amtrak can result in a much improved and expanded national network of passenger rail,” the group said in a February blog post.

Applications for projects were due in March. A list of projects that get funded is due Saturday. No Tennessee project will be on the list, apparently. 

However, state officials have another potential funding source to plan for rail. On Monday, the FRA opened applications for a $5.8-million program to help states plan rail connections to other states. The deadline for this program is July 10th.   

“Interstate rail compacts will advance passenger rail service such as between cities like Memphis and Little Rock and will provide the mechanism and technical assistance for greater cooperation between states in advancing passenger rail,” Rep. Steven Cohen (D-Memphis) said in a statement Wednesday. “I was proud to have introduced the Interstate Rail Advancement Act and was at the White House when President Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that included its provisions. I will continue to work to improve passenger rail service and continue to advocate a passenger rail line between Memphis and Nashville.” 

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Blackburn: Defund Amtrak, Build Border Wall

U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tennessee) wants to defund Amtrak to build “the wall.”

Ahead of votes on President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure plan, Blackburn said “the American people should not be forced to foot the bill for Joe Biden’s pet project.”

“If Joe Biden truly cared about infrastructure, he would build the wall at our southern border,” Blackburn said in a statement. “Instead, Biden spent hundreds of millions of dollars to not build a wall and allow illegal aliens to flood into our country.”

Blackburn’s one-page amendment to the infrastructure bill would reallocate $1 billion in Amtrak funding “to construct a wall along the international border between the United States and Mexico.’’ 

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee sent 300 Tennessee National Guard troops to the Texas border this summer “quelling the most severe border crisis we’ve seen in 20 years.” The move and his visit to the troops in July were done with little evidence any crisis existed on the border. 

Instead, Lee and other governors sent troops there at the behest of Texas Governor Greg Abbott who claimed, “open-border policies have led to a humanitarian crisis at our southern border as record levels of illegal immigrants, drugs, and contraband pour into Texas.”

Abbott vowed to build the border wall himself, in the absence of support from Biden. So far, more than $915,000 in donations have been raised on a Texas government website to fund the project.

Blackburn and her Senate colleagues — Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.), and Mike Lee (R-Utah) — released a joint statement criticizing Biden’s plan, calling it a “bait and switch” and “the first step in … a liberal wish list.” They say the bill does not show how the infrastructure will be funded. 

Here’s the statement:

“We can’t spend money we don’t have. Period. Just look at what is happening with inflation. 

We were promised this infrastructure bill was fully paid for, and now we see that it’s not. This was nothing more than a bait and switch. 

$205 billion of this bill was to be paid for with re-purposed COVID funds. The latest proposal only shows $50 billion in COVID funds being used, as well as a lot of the proposed ‘pay-fors’ missing. 

So, we are asking our colleagues: how is this infrastructure spending bill being paid for? We still don’t know. We still don’t have a score on this legislation from the Congressional Budget Office. 

Let’s not forget, this is just the first step in the Democrats’ plan to pass their $5.5 trillion tax and spend liberal wish list. We support infrastructure, but it has to be paid for. This proposal isn’t it.”

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Amtrak Looks to Expand Memphis Service

Amtrak trains could run between Memphis and Chicago twice daily but not before the city and the state of Tennessee get on board with the plan. 

Amtrak officials spoke to the Memphis City Council last week about a plan that could expand rail service into and out of Memphis. 

“Our long-term goal would be to get another train coming through Memphis at Central Station,” said Memphis Councilmember Myron Lowery. “The markets between Chicago and Memphis and Memphis and New Orleans are very productive markets and are increasing on an annualized basis.”

AMTRAK photo/Chuck Gomez

Ridership on the City of New Orleans, the train that runs from Chicago to Memphis to New Orleans and back, rose about 46 percent from 1997 to 2012, according to a study from The Brookings Institution. 

Even with the 253,170 passengers riding the route in 2012, the City of New Orleans line lost $22.8 million. That’s roughly half of the $41.6 million it cost to run the line that year.

Still, the number of passengers getting on and off Amtrak trains in Memphis is rising. More than 73,000 passengers started or ended their rail trips in Memphis in 2012, according to the Brookings report. Amtrak figures show that number rose to more than 76,000 last year. In 1994, only about 38,000 passengers used Amtrak in Memphis. 

The idea to expand service here comes only after an expansion of service in Illinois from Chicago to Champaign and Carbondale. Two more trains are running now on the popular route that links the college towns to Chicago. Those new trains could run farther south to Memphis.

“This is the most likely venue for expanding and adding new service to Memphis,” said Charlie Monte Verde, a government affairs official with Amtrak. “So, the future of expanding rail service in Memphis would be having a train in and out of here to Chicago every single day in each direction.”

The City of New Orleans currently leaves Memphis daily for Chicago, but it only leaves once a day at 10:40 p.m. The trip takes more than 10 hours. The new schedule could see a morning and evening train going each way. 

Before any new service can begin, Amtrak officials told councilmembers they would need to work with state legislators to conduct a feasibility study. That study would show the cost, benefits, and possible ridership numbers for the new service. With approvals in hand, the Tennessee Department of Transportation would work out the details with the Illinois Department of Transportation. Then, they could take the plan to the federal government.

“When the federal government sees an opportunity to work with an aggressive partner or finds a community that really wants to do passenger rail service, that tends to turn on the [financial] faucet,” Monte Verde said. “When that faucet is on, it tends to stay on.”

Amtrak is now on the other side of a federal government program to improve its finances, management, and operations. The Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act gave Amtrak five years (from 2008 to 2013) of oversight from the Office of Inspector General. A report from the probe was published in January to inform future votes in Congress on rail service.

Congress approved nearly $1.4 billion for Amtrak capital and operations in January. Federal legislators also allowed Amtrak to use $81 million from Hurricane Sandy Disaster Supplemental funding to improve service in its Northeast Corridor.