






Media Watch: 1999 (Jan.-Mar.)
March
- "Incremental High Speed Rail: The possible dream" by William C.
Vantuono, Railway Age, March 1999, page 16. QUOTES: "The demise of
Florida Overland eXpress brings the high speed rail movement to a juncture, and
it's time we realize that our track record with 200-mph TGV-type systems
clearly shows that further attempts at such massive undertakings are
ill-advised, despite good intentions... It's time to choose a firm direction
and give priority to more-realistic alternatives... What we should be
doing is more of those projects... like the Amtrak Cascades Talgo, which has
attracted scores of new riders to intercity rail, and which would not have been
possible without the commitment of BNSF to making incremental right-of-way
improvements..."
- "Residents back trains in survey by railroad" By Larry
Sandler, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, March 30, 1999. QUOTE: "Most
Wisconsin residents support the use of limited state funding to expand
passenger train service, according to a statewide poll commissioned by a
railroad that wants $75 million in public money to do just that."
- "Rights
of way: Transit officials ponder putting land to better use" by Angela
Gonzales, The Business Journal (Phoenix), 29 March 1999. QUOTES:
"Maybe, [Maricopa County supervisor Don] Stapley said, officials could
close Grand Avenue to all automobiles and make it a transit line..."
- "Light rail Supporters gain momentum for Mesa-Phoenix
link" by Mike Padgett, The Business Journal of Phoenix, 29
March 1999. QUOTES: "A proposed light-rail system linking the downtowns of
Phoenix, Tempe and Mesa has been thrust from the wings into the
spotlight."
- "Phoenix Councilwoman Peggy Bilsten, chairwoman of the city's
transportation committee, said other modes of transportation are the key to
encouraging commuters to leave their cars at home... 'I'm a supporter of light
rail,' Bilsten said. 'I absolutely think it will work. I think light rail is
very important to the success of this community. And at the rate this city is
growing, we've got to move on it.'"
- "Gov. Jane Hull's Transportation Vision 21 Task Force is expected to
review a March 1998 report from the Phoenix-Tucson High Speed Rail Task Force.
It recommended a system of five daily trains with a two-hour travel time
between the cities."
- "Train A-Comin'" Fort Worth Star Telegram 29 March
1999. Groundbreaking in downtown Ft. Worth for the expansion of the Trinity
Rail Express line from Dallas into Ft. Worth. QUOTE: "As early as the fall
of next year, you should be able to park your car in downtown Fort Worth or
other Tarrant County locations and hop a train to Dallas. You can leave your
road rage behind as you enjoy riding a double-decker Trinity Railway Express
car."
- "Update: 2,000 a day ride Altamont train" The
Sacramento Bee, 29 March 1999. QUOTES: "The Altamont Commuter Express
that connects Stockton and San Jose by train debuted in October... The two
trains together carry about 2,000 riders each day, and are generally about 80
percent full... A recent survey showed that 79 percent of train riders had been
driving to work alone in their cars."
- "Rimsza seeks sales tax boost" By Chris Fiscus and Mary
Jo Pitzl The Arizona Republic March 24, 1999, page B1. QUOTES:
"Phoenix Mayor Skip Rimsza... joined by six of the city's eight council
members, ...pledged to go back to the voters next spring for an unspecified tax
increase for transit improvements and a bond election... The promise to pursue
another transit election may be enough to win U.S. Senator Jon Kyl's backing of
federal funding for a Valley light-rail project..."
- "Backing up all the talk" Editorial, The Arizona Republic
March 24, 1999, page B6. QUOTE: "Yesterday, Phoenix Mayor Skip Rimsza's
troubling indecisiveness came to and an abrupt and welcome end... there has
been talk, but few specifics, about how to improve Phoenix's woefully
inadequate transit system. ...Rimsza has outlined a strategy to schedule
elections that would create a Sonoran Desert Preserve; ...improve the city's
transit service, including a light rail system... the City Council can do
Phoenix proud by backing the mayor and getting to work on scheduling the
elections."
- "Rimsza's tax focus: Parks, transit, police" By Chris
Fiscus and Mary Jo Pitzl The Arizona Republic March 24, 1999.
- "'New Urbanism' takes off" by Connie Cone Sexton, The
Arizona Republic March 24, 1999, West Valley section. Second in a series on
strong communities. QUOTE: "It's Friday afternoon in the West Valley, and
a light-rail train hums along Grand Avenue, giving a lift home to commuters.
The train coasts to a stop and dozens of passengers hop off, some heading for
cars in the adjacent lot, others strolling to an outdoor market featuring
vegetables picked from a nearby field. This bustling scene is only a dream, but
it's one that's not so impossible, urban planners say."
- "Our future is riding on transit" by Roc Arnett, Tribune
newspapers, 22 March 1999, page A13. Mr. Arnett, Maricopa County's
representative on the Arizona Transportation Board, writes that "...new
pavement alone will not take our transportation system into the 21st
century. We must begin now to lay the groundwork for a true 'multimodal' system
that incorporates all of the tools from what I call the 'mobility tool box.'
...[which] must include the entire range of transportation alternatives.
Expanded mass transit, van pools and car pools, commuter rail and light rail,
bike an pedestrian trails and park-and-ride lots must all be part of the
mix..."
- "Kyl must help keep rail idea on track" The Arizona
Republic, Editorial, 14 March 1999, page B6. QUOTE: "A light rail line
envisioned for the Valley is heading toward a make-or-break juncture, and U.S.
Sen. Jon Kyl needs to exert himself in Washington to make sure that the
planning stays on track."
- "Light rail on agenda of public meetings" The Arizona
Republic, 13 March 1999. QUOTE: "A series of public meetings will be
held next week on plans to build light rail in the Valley... Federal and local
dollars have paid for the planning to date. Not an inch of rail could be built
until local voters approve spending tax money for the construction phase."
- SAN ANTONIO/AUSTIN --
Cost of I-35 commuter rail fuels debate over its value San
Antonio Express-News, 11 March 1999. QUOTE: "San Antonians could be
hopping trains to Austin in less than a decade... it would cost about $475
million to start a commuter rail service connecting the two cities."
- "Transit backers push tax vote: Lack of local funding blocks
federal money" The Arizona Republic, 11 March 1999; by Mary Jo
Pitzl and Jeff Barker. QUOTES: "Talk of putting a transit tax before
Phoenix voters is back on track, speeded along by the fading prospects of
winning federal dollars for a local light-rail project... The Valley
Connections project calls for a 25-mile system running from downtown Mesa to
west-central Phoenix, with the initial link connecting the Tempe and Phoenix
downtowns."
- "Amtrak resumes station work" The Arizona Republic, 11
March 1999, page B5. QUOTE: "Passengers could be climbing on and off
Amtrak's Sunset limited here [in Maricopa] by this fall. The delay-plagued
project is moving forward again..."
- ACELA High Speed Trains
- "Residents
make pitch for public transit" Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 10
March 1999. QUOTE: "Community activists used a public hearing on a
proposed $20 billion state highway plan Tuesday night to urge the state
Department of Transportation to spend less money on highways and more on public
transit. 'This is not the Department of Highways. This is not DOH,' Ald. Donald
Richards said. 'This is DOT -- the Department of Transportation.'
Environmentalists, transit supporters and advocates for the homeless dominated
the crowd of about 100 people at the hearing at the Zoofari Conference Center.
They focused less on what was in the 21-year highway plan than on what wasn't
in it: plans for more buses and trains."
- "Aggressive driving worst in places with few commuting
options" CNN Interactive, 9 March 1999. Phoenix, third in the nation
for aggressive driving, needs better public transportation, report says.
- "Rail fastest, cheapest airport-city connector" Akron
Beacon Journal, 9 March 1999. QUOTE: "In the last few years, Lufthansa
German Airlines and Swissair in particular have been enthusiastic boosters of
rail service to the major airports they serve. The two airlines have replaced
or sharply limited the number of short-haul flights they offer to their hub
airports, and instead cooperate with rail lines to sell joint air-rail
tickets."
- "Transit plan spurs downtown development" Puget Sound
Business Journal, 8 March 1999. QUOTE: "On the road to livelier
downtowns, several South End cities are hitching rides with Sound Transit...
It's no accident that the two activities -- improving transportation service
and revitalizing downtowns -- are occurring simultaneously."
- "Traffic tempts commuters to trains: Caltrain's 8.6 million riders
is highest since 1954" San Jose Business Journal, 8 March 1999.
QUOTE: "Highway 101's traffic congestion on the Peninsula is spelling good
times for Caltrain ridership."
- "New Amtrak Northeast chief plans `more sensitive'
service" Philadelphia Inquirer, 8 March 1999. Stan Bagley will
be the new CEO of Amtrak Northeast.
- UTAH -- "Plenty of west-east light-rail questions still need
answers" Salt Lake City Deseret News , 7 March 1999. QUOTE:
"One station will be just outside Rice-Eccles Stadium, and university
officials want to make sure light-rail construction won't interfere with Utah
football games during the next two seasons. Another station tentatively planned
for the Huntsman Center might be moved around the corner onto Wasatch Drive.
Light rail's pending arrival means the university might not have to build a
planned parking deck..."
- NORTHERN VIRGINIA -- "PRTC to Add Rail Service And Parking Move Anticipates Effect Of
'Mixing Bowl' Project" Washington Post, 6 March 1999. QUOTE:
"Virginia Railway Express... ridership is up 50 percent during the last 12
months."
- ATLANTA -- "U.S. lawmakers
weighing in on MARTA direction" The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, 6 March 1999. With links to MARTA related news and
information.
- SAN JOSE / SAN FRANCISCO -- "Electrification fails vote; Line from S.J. to San Francisco to
run later on weeknights. " 5 March 1999, San Jose Mercury News.
QUOTE: "A sweeping plan to electrify the Peninsula's commuter rail line
didn't pass muster Thursday. But Caltrain riders may take solace in another
action approved by the rail line's parent agency: the addition of two more
late-night trains between San Jose and San Francisco."
- SACRAMENTO -- "Can
shortage of parking be good for city? Push mass transit, officials
urged" Sacramento Bee, 4 March 1999. QUOTE: "Downtown
Sacramento is developing a parking problem, and midtown architect Andrea
Kincaid thinks that's a good thing. Kincaid sees a lack of parking as one of
the hallmarks of a great city -- a Chicago, a New York, a San Francisco. She
calls the looming shortage of up to 4,000 parking spaces 'an opportunity we
would be foolish to lose.'"
- SAN ANTONIO -- "VIA sales tax proposal opens debate over rail" San
Antonio Express-News , 3 March 1999. QUOTE: "Donze Lopez, [Chamber
of Commerce] vice president for governmental affairs... said chamber volunteers
already are clamoring to organize a fact-finding tour of Dallas' new light-rail
system, commuter rail line, historic trolley system and carpool lanes."
- DENVER -- "I-25 widening could take 5 or 12 years" Denver
News, 2 March 1999. QUOTE: "Widening Interstate 25 will take five
years or more than 12... The schedule calls for moving the first earth in 2001
and opening the expanded freeway and a parallel light-rail line in 2006... Tom
Norton, executive director of the Department of Transportation... said 'As a
multimodal corridor, it only makes sense to build both (the wider interstate
and light rail) at the same time.'"
- "Texas Think Tank Blasts Commuter Rail Systems" Reuters,
2 March 1999. QUOTE: "A San Antonio-based think tank released a scathing
report Monday criticizing light rail and commuter rail systems in Texas and
across the country." Study says "It would be cheaper to lease every
passenger a brand new BMW or Lexus in perpetuity than it is to operate the
commuter rail systems in Los Angeles and San Diego" but neglects to say
how much it would cost to add sufficient highway capacity for all those fancy
new cars.
- "Letters to the Editor: Does valley's public transit fall short
... or is reporter overly critical?" San Jose / Silicon Valley
Business Journal, 1 March 1999. Readers contribute their comments about
whether San Jose's public transportation system works well.
- "Question remains: Light rail or no light rail?"
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 1 March 1999. QUOTE: "Initial reactions
to the idea of a limited transit system linking downtown attractions are
ranging from cautious optimism to outright enthusiasm among downtown business
leaders, scholars and transit advocates."
- "Talgo Signs Long-Term Maintenance Contract With Amtrak and
Washington State Department of Transportation" Business Wire, 1 March
1999.
February
- "Southland-Sacramento Amtrak Train Begins" Los Angeles
Times, 28 February 1999. QUOTE: "Last week, Amtrak began running one
train per day on the route, leaving from Bakersfield at 5:45 p.m. and arriving
in Sacramento at 11:15 p.m.; the southbound train leaves Sacramento at 6:20
a.m. Bakersfield-Sacramento."
- "Talgo Trains Now Featured As Part of Amtrak Cascades Service
Between Seattle, WA and Vancouver, BC" Excite Business Wire, 26
February 1999. QUOTE: "Talgo's pendular technology trains are now featured
as part of Amtrak West's new Amtrak Cascades service between Seattle and
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada announced Talgo, Inc. CEO, J.P. Ruiz."
- Editorial: "No regional transit is the real ill" The
Arizona Republic, 25 February 1999, page B6. A spate of recent highway
accidents highlights the Valley's lack of a better regional public
transportation system.
- "Amtrak's 'Talgo' train chugs through debut run" The
Daily Herald, Everett, Wash., 25 February 1999.
- "TRAX highballing toward yule finish" Salt Lake City
Deseret News, 25 February 1999. QUOTE: "The Utah Transit Authority
may choose to open its TRAX light-rail system in November 1999 instead of March
2000. UTA's construction contractors are way ahead of schedule on the 15-mile
line between 10000 South in Sandy and the Delta Center."
- "Businesses to study light rail downtown: Limited system could
link attractions for visitors " Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 24
February 1999. QUOTE: "Business leaders will begin a push today for a
transit system -- possibly light rail -- that would let tourists,
conventioneers and downtown workers ride between downtown attractions, Miller
Park and the lakefront. At the urging of the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association
of Commerce, the Wisconsin District Center Board is to vote today on whether to
apply for several million dollars in federal money to study how public transit
can serve the Midwest Express Center and other major attractions."
- Railwatch Report
- "Railroad crossing safety faulted, defended" CNN
Interactive, 23 February 1999. QUOTE: "...a study released Monday by
RailWatch, a Texas-based coalition of 300 local officials from across the
country, concludes that federal and state regulators fail to effectively
oversee the rail system, and railroad companies do not take enough action to
prevent accidents."
Responses:
- "Rail Safety Group's Support Questioned" Washington
Post 26 February 1999; Page A25. QUOTE: "Rockville Mayor Rose Krasnow
and a number of other local officials across the country got a surprise this
week. They discovered they were being touted as 'supporters' of RailWatch, a
nonprofit organization that is demanding that Congress investigate the rail
industry's 'alarming safety record.'"
- FRA Disputes Report Critical of Rail Safety CNN, 23 February
1999. QUOTE: "The Federal Railroad Administration on Tuesday defended its
regulation of the nation's railroads, saying a report critical of national rail
safety contains numerous inaccuracies and distortions."
- "Amtrak Station marks opening" San Antonio Express-News,
20 February 1999.
- "Valley train preview for VIPs: Direct service after 28
years" Sacramento Bee 20 February, 1999. Direct passenger
service between Sacramento and the San Joaquin Valley returns.
- "Wyden
seeks support to revive train service" The Oregonian, 19
February 1999. QUOTE: "The senator plans to press Amtrak to restore the
Pioneer, which ran from Portland to Boise, Denver and Chicago."
- "A rail authority would derail parochial plans" Commentary, by
Robert A. Hart, Arizona Republic West Valley Community, 17 February
1999. QUOTES: "I continue to be concerned with the lack of a regional
approach to solving the Valley's, and indeed the entire state's, transportation
needs... What is sorely needed now is establishment of a state rail authority.
We should be examining, in addition to Valley Connections, the use of present
tracks of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe and Union Facofic lines."
- "Time
to Knock Heads and Board the Train" by James Flanigan, Los Angeles
Times, 17 February 1999. QUOTE: "Commuters stuck in traffic may not
believe it, but California, and especially Southern California, could become a
center for the most advanced rail transportation systems in the world."
- High Speed Ground Transportation Association Editorial on FOX
Project, press release, 17 February 1999.
- "Train
Is Commuters' ACE in the Hole: Ridership Is Growing Steadily on San Joaquin to
Silicon Valley Route" Los Angeles Times, 14 February 1999.
- "Transit task force formed: [Governor] Hull wants answers on
roads, rail, funds" by Mary Jo Pitzl, The Arizona Republic, 11
February 1999, page B1. Group will look at planes, trains, and automobiles.
First meeting will be 1pm, March 3 at the Capitol.
- "High-speed rail: Time to make a federal case out of it" by James
E. Coston, The Chicago Tribune, 7 February 1999. QUOTES: "The
problem is not that high-speed rail infrastructure is so expensive, but that
U.S. legislators simply are not accustomed to fitting substantial volumes of
passenger-train infrastructure into their transportation budgets. Were they to
do so, the return on investment would be very appealing. An existing 79-mph
freight/passenger railroad can be upgraded to handle 110-mph passenger trains
for about $2 million per track mile, including advanced signaling systems...
This may sound like big-ticket civil engineering, but it's a pittance compared
to what highways cost."
- "All aboard Utah light rail" Salt Lake City Deseret
News, 7 February 1999. QUOTE: "In a recent article regarding light
rail, Lee Davidson quoted from researchers of The Reason Public Policy
Institute, a Libertarian organization in Los Angeles, including Robert W.
Poole, president of the foundation and director of its transportation research,
and report author Peter Samuel. Some years ago, I used to be a light-rail
opponent. Then I might have believed these arguments. I no longer accept
distortions of the truth as fact."
- "Fruit by rail: Local firm will piggyback on passenger
trains" Detroit Free Press, 3 February 1999. QUOTE: "Bob
Walker and Frank Unger are trying to resurrect a business the nation's
railroads lost to trucks many years ago. They have formed a Detroit-based rail
company, ExpressTrak LLC, to ship food and other perishables across the nation
in temperature-controlled train cars. But instead of using slow freight trains,
the entrepreneurs will hook the cars to the rear of Amtrak passenger
trains."
January
- January 1999 ARPA UPDATE
- "New era dawning at Grand Canyon: Park plans to use $2.5-million
donation for restoration of buildings, mass transit system" CNN
Interactive, 29 January 1999.
- KANSAS CITY -- "Amtrak pledges $2 million to return service to Union
Station" The Kansas City Star 29 January 1999
- "Federal funds for Valley transportation projects"
The Arizona Republic, 29 January
1999, page B2. QUOTE: "Rep. Ed Pastor came to town Thursday, and he was
bearing gifts -- three transportation grants that will pump millions of federal
dollars into Valley projects... Phoenix will receive about $4 million for an
environmental impact statement, preliminary engineering, and other costs to
study a 22-mile light-rail project in Phoenix, Tempe, and Mesa. The preliminary
engineering will focus on a 13-mile segment from Phoenix through Tempe."
- "Big gift to park raises concerns" The Arizona
Republic, 29 January 1999, page A1. QUOTES: "An Arizona foundation's
$2.5 million pledge kicked off an international drive to raise $350 million for
a light-rail train, education campus, and new bike and walking paths at
Grand Canyon National Park, but park advocates worry that the nation's
parks could become too commercialized." "...the light-rail system
should be operating between Tusayan and the planned Canyon View Information
Plaza at Mather Point by 2002."
- Amtrak pledges funds to high-speed network Chicago Sun
Times, 29 January 1999. QUOTE: "Amtrak, the U.S. passenger intercity
rail system, said Thursday it will spend $25 million... to spur development of
a high-speed rail network in nine Midwestern states... Amtrak will provide $6
million to prepare Chicago's Union Station, the Chicago-Detroit corridor, and
other projects for high-speed rail service. "
- WISCONSIN -- "Midwest High-Speed Rail Coming: Wisconsin's Governor Announces
Amtrak Will Spend $25M To Begin Rail Network In 9 Midwestern States"
Channel 4000/AP, 28 January 1999. QUOTE: "Amtrak will spend $25
million to begin a rail network designed to link nine Midwestern states with
high-speed passenger trains, Wisconsin's governor announced Wednesday
night."
- "Amtrak Council Elects New Chairman" PR Newswire, 28
January 1999. Paul Weyrich, president of the Free Congress Foundation, was
re-elected as chairman of the Amtrak Reform Council.
- "Death of Florida bullet train project highlights doubts about
U.S. system" CNN Interactive, 27 January 1999. QUOTE: "Anne
Chettle, spokeswoman for the Washington-based High Speed Ground Transportation
Association, said Bush's decision [to stop construction on the Florida FOX
project] shows why if high-speed rail is to spread across the United States, it
will have to be done in increments. Typically, that means straightening track
curves, rebuilding existing stations and buying trains with higher top speeds
-- exactly what Amtrak is doing in the Northeast Corridor."
- PORTLAND, OREGON -- "Commuters overflow Gateway park and ride" The
Oregonian, 27 January 1999. Tri-Met parking garages filled up almost from
the first day of the light rail operation, and planners look to add spaces to
accomodate the rising demand.
- LOUISIANA -- "Casino traffic could bring Amtrak route" Sun
Herald, 27 January 1999. QUOTE: "A steady stream of gamblers coming
from Texas to Shreveport-Bossier City casinos could justify Amtrak taking its
Fort Worth route as far east as Bossier City, officials say."
- "U.S. approves Indiana fast-rail line" Chicago Sun
Times, 26 January 1999. QUOTE: "Officials of the Indiana High Speed
Rail Association learned in a telephone call from U.S. Transportation Secretary
Rodney Slater that their proposed Gary-Lafayette-Indianapolis-Cincinnati route
for 110-m.p.h. trains has been approved."
- "Streamlining Altamont Express" San Jose Mercury
News, 26 January 1999. The ACE commuter trains, are already
"comfortably full," and officials are polling riders and
investigating ways to make the service even more convenient.
- "DaimlerChrysler to buy ABB's 50% stake in Adtranz"
Business Wire, 24 January 1999.
- SAN ANTONIO -- "Portland's successful urban development inspired San Antonio's
new master plan" San Antonio Express-News, 24 January 1999.
- "Amtrak Debuts Sleek Spain-Designed Cars" Los Angeles
Times, 24 January 1999.
- "California's High-Speed Rail Authority Picking Up Speed In Effort
to Bring Cost-Effective Transportation Alternative to Voters" Business
Wire, 22 January 1999.
- "Viad unit to serve meals on Amtrak" The Arizona
Republic, 21 January 1999. Amtrak is out-sourcing its commisary facilities
to Dobbs. Dobbs is a unit of the Phoenix-based Viad corporation.
- FLORIDA -- "Many
eyes turn toward funds freed from bullet train" Miami Herald,
15 January 1999. With cancellation of the FOX high speed project, improvements
and expansions of Miami's Metrorail and the Tri-Rail regional rail trains are
possible.
- "Florida Abandons Rail Project" The Los Angeles
Times, 15 January 1999.
- Florida says no to $6.3 billion bullet train Nando
Times, 15 January 1999. QUOTE: "Gov. Jeb Bush pulled the plug Thursday
on a $6.3 billion project to build a bullet train that would whisk passengers
between Miami, Orlando and Tampa at nearly 200 mph. 'We have to be good
stewards of the taxpayers' money,' he said. "
- DALLAS -- "Work
starts on rail lines to suburbs: DART to serve Plano, Richardson,
Garland" The Dallas Morning News, 15 January 1999.
- "Sleek space set for Amtrak station: Plan to refurbish depot adds
streamlined shapes to its futuristic form" Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, 15 January 1999. QUOTE: "How to transform Milwaukee's
shabby, outdated Amtrak station into an attractive transportation
gateway?"
- "Light-rail plan revived for Mesa-Glendale route" By Mary
Jo Pitzl, The Arizona Republic 14 January 1999. QUOTE: "...plans
are chugging along on a 35-mile light rail network that would connect Glendale
and Metrocenter with downtown Mesa, passing through central Phoenix. The rail
system would run mostly along existing roads, at street level. The first link
could be operating by 2004..."
- "Caltrain to upgrade tracks, stations" San Jose
Mercury News, 10 January 1999. QUOTE: "The Caltrain board has awarded
a $41 million construction contract that will provide upgrades to train tracks,
stations and crossings from San Jose to San Francisco."
- "New trains' width forces Amtrak to speed track work"
Washington Post, 7 January, 1999; by Don Phillips. QUOTE: "Amtrak's
new 150-mph tilt trains, designed to bring a new level of speed and smoothness
to the Washington-Boston corridor late this year, were built four inches too
wide and will be unable to go around some curves as fast as planned, Amtrak and
the Federal Railroad Administration officials confirmed Wednesday."
- SACRAMENTO -- "City, UP to
meet on depot future: Apparent disagreement over Amtrak station"
Sacramento Bee, 6 January 1999. QUOTE: "City, UP to meet on depot
future: Apparent disagreement over Amtrak station"
- "Railroad shuts Tucson facility" The Arizona Republic, 2
January 1999, page B2. QUOTE: "Any product being shipped into or out of
Tucson will have to go by truck or plane from now on -- Union Pacific officials
closed the city's only railroad freight ramp Friday."
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