






Media Watch: 2001
October
- "Sleek
or boxy? Residents get say on Valley's light-rail style," Arizona
Republic, 19 October 2001. QUOTES: "Light-rail planners have come up with
four train styles and are asking residents to pick one and offer ideas for
specific exterior amenities, such as window types. Preliminary designs show
three contemporary cars with small variations while the fourth is an older
style used by Portland, Oregon... while the trains won't begin hauling
passengers until 2006, planners said a final rail car design must be ready by
next summer.
- "Amtrak
travelers: Forget Phoenix" by Mary Jo Pitzl, Arizona Republic, 17
October 2001.
- Letter: Comment on Closing of
Phoenix Station by William Lindley, 12 October 2001. Printed in the East
Valley Tribune newspapers on 17 October 2001.
- "Light
rail sparks transit-tax debate," Arizona Republic, 12 October
2001.
- Letter: Comment on Closing of
Phoenix Station by William Lindley, 12 October 2001.
- "Transit
issue an emotional trip All options included in single vote" by Dennis
Godfrey, The Arizona Republic 10 October 2001.
- "Transit
vote's 'little tickets'" The Arizona Republic 10 October 2001.
- Maricopa Grand Opening: 16
October 2001
September
- "Travelers taking train again" by Mary Jo Pitzl The
Arizona Republic 27 September 2001. QUOTES: "Ronnie Miller lugged two
overstuffed duffel bags and a bulging suitcase into Union Station, Phoenix's
old rail depot, preparing for a 28-hour ride to San Francisco... Like the
Millers, more Americans are sticking to the ground, turning to trains and buses
if they need to travel... Even in Phoenix, where taking a train takes
determination, Amtrak is drawing unprecedented interest..."
- "Airline
rescue should be first step to better transportation system" by Jon Talton,
Arizona Republic, 26 September2001. ABSTRACT: Talton calls for high
speed and intercity rail as part of a national transportation system
June
- "Glendale
tax promises more buses, light rail" by Dennis Godfrey, Arizona
Republic, 16 June 2001.
- "Glendale
closer to vote on transit: Council to decide on transportation plan in 2
weeks" Arizona Republic, 13 June 2001. QUOTES: "Glendale took
another step toward asking its voters to approve a half-cent sales tax increase
for transportation improvements... Light rail is the glamour item in the
proposal. Council members spent much of a three-hour meeting discussing a
proposed two-mile corridor to be built in the city. They concluded that no
specific route should be identified but that the line should run either along
Bethany Home Road or Northern Avenue."
- "Light
rail roaring toward overrun?" Arizona Republic, 9 June 2001. QUOTE:
"Building the Valley's electric rail line could cost $187 million more than
residents were told a year ago, according to a recent application for federal
money to help fund the project."
May
April
- GLENDALE -- "$1
billion transit blueprint includes light-rail link to Phoenix" by Lori
Baker, The Arizona Republic, 20 April 2001. QUOTE: "A $1 billion
proposed transportation package includes financial incentives for Phoenix to
speed up construction of its light-rail transit line from Chris-Town Mall at
19th Avenue to 43rd Avenue, where it would connect with Glendale's light-rail
system. The light-rail line is part of a bigger transportation package Glendale
residents could vote on Nov. 6 if the City Council opts to ask for a half-cent
sales-tax increase to pay for the improvement package."
- PHOENIX -- "Kids
speak for station on rail line" The Arizona Republic, 20 April 2001.
QUOTE: "The two dozen students had never been to Phoenix City Hall or the City
Council's chambers. But it didn't take them long to make themselves at home...
The council's transportation and technology subcommittee listened large last
week. Although it wasn't an original recommendation, it agreed to buy land at
32nd Street and build a station, money permitted."
- PHOENIX -- "Central
Corridor ready to become more than a wall of skyscrapers " by Jon Talton,
The Arizona Republic 18 April 2001. QUOTE: "As it emerged in the 1960s,
the Central Corridor was a rationalization for land speculation that hurt
downtown and created a view-killing wall of skyscrapers. Now, thanks to a
combination of urban residential projects and the planned light-rail system, we
could finally realize the corridor's promise."
- GLENDALE -- "Panel
ponders tax hike for transit" by Lori Baker The Arizona Republic 18
April 2001. QUOTE: "Expanded bus service, light-rail transit and improvements
to 30 street intersections are among proposed Glendale transportation
improvements that would be funded by a half-cent sales-tax increase. The
Glendale Citizens Advisory Committee for Transportation Issues will decide
April 26 whether to recommend a transit tax on the Nov. 6 ballot. Tempe and
Phoenix voters have approved similar plans and are in the midst of improving
their transit programs."
- "Fears,
cheers for light rail: Many keep track of proposed 20-mile system"
Arizona Republic, 17 April 2001. QUOTE: "Waves of fear and optimism are
rolling through Phoenix, Tempe and Mesa along the 20-mile route of the Valley's
proposed light-rail system."
- "Hear
the lonesome whistle blow from deep in that traffic jam" by Jon Talton,
Arizona Republic, 9 April 2001. QUOTES: "Phoenix is by far the largest
city in America with no intercity passenger rail service, yet another sign of
our backwardness and paralysis. I've had a lot of time to think about that,
stuck in traffic jams between Phoenix and Tucson or stuck in airplanes on the
tarmac in LA... California, which grapples with urban congestion similar to
ours, has become ever more aggressive in diverting more money from freeways to
trains. The Bay Area is laced with commuter train routes. San Diego and Los
Angeles are linked by 11 daily round-trips. Not us. We sit in isolation,
sitting longer, wondering why."
- "10 Most Improved Transit Systems" Metro Magazine, April
2001, page 40. QUOTE: "Phoenix Transit... Bus rapid transit, cross town skip
services and light rail are all headed to Phoenix in the near future (2003,
2002 and 2006, respectively)."
- "Get
state on track" Letter by William Lindley, Arizona Republic, 7 April
2001. QUOTE: "southern Arizona has hundreds of miles of eight-lane highway
we're not using."
- "7
light rail stations seen for 5.8 miles of Tempe" Arizona Republic 5
April 2001. QUOTES: "Tempe could send part of its rail train underground and
realign two streets to make way for a light-rail route that will snake through
the city... Part of the rail line runs just south of Arizona State University's
intercollegiate athletics building, near a planned station at Fifth Street and
College Avenue. The university is expanding that facility to the existing
railroad tracks. That means as much as 600 feet of light rail could run
underground or the track could be rerouted to avoid the expansion and better
accommodate pedestrians... Meantime, a station on Apache Boulevard, just east
of Loop 101 (Price Freeway), would be built with a park-and-ride lot for
hundreds of cars; a proposed Apache/McClintock Drive station, though not yet
approved, could also have a smaller park-and-ride lot."
March
- "Tempe
designs light-rail bridge" Arizona Republic 28 March 2001, page B1.
"Tempe is making a public pitch starting this week to design a light-rail
bridge over Town Lake and change the location of one station." (alternate
location)
- SRP to provide Commuter Rail study funds. From
Permit conditions: "On
Feb. 12, 2001, the Arizona Power Plant and Transmission Line Siting Committee
recommended by a 6-to-1 vote that Salt River Project (SRP) be granted a
certificate of environmental compatibility (CEC) for its Santan Expansion
Project (called "the Project" in the text below) in Gilbert, Arizona. The
Committee recommended that the certificate include the following conditions
listed below. Many of these conditions are attempts to solve potential problems
brought forward during the several months of testimony before the Arizona Power
Plant and Transmission Line Siting Committee. SRP fully embraces these changes
and will work diligently to make them successful. ... Condition 12 SRP shall
actively work with all interested Valley cities, including at a minimum, Tempe,
Mesa, Chandler, Queen Creek and Gilbert, to fund a Major Investment Study
through the Regional Public Transit Authority to develop concepts and plans for
commuter rail systems to serve the growing population of the East Valley. SRP
will contribute a maximum of $400,000 to this effort."
- "Proposed stations will slow rail trip" Arizona Republic, 23
March 2001, page B1 (East Valley) "A light-rail train expected to whisk
passengers between Phoenix and the East Valley will stop so frequently it owuld
take 45 to 55 minutes to get from one end to the other of the 20-mile
route."
- "Had
enough? Time to get serious about transportation options" by Jon Talton,
Arizona Republic 21 March 2001, page B1. Talton dismisses dismisses four
"Big Lies" -- Transit doesn't pay for itself; Transit means we'll be forced out
of our cars into dense city-center housing; Light rail is a boondoggle; Nobody
will ride it.
- "Amtrak urged to
focus on viable routes: Split train operations, facilities, panel says"
Houston Chronicle, 21 March 2001. QUOTES: "National rail company Amtrak
can become profitable only by shedding its government responsibilities and
focusing exclusively on commercially viable train service, a federal panel
says."
- "Panel says Amtrak
suffers 'fundamental institutional flaws'" Fox News, 20 March 2001. QUOTE:
"Amtrak, which has lost money every year since its creation in 1971, suffers
from 'fundamental institutional flaws' and should no longer be expected to
balance business and governmental responsibilities, a reform panel says in a
new report."
- The Amtrak Reform Council has issued its second annual report,
available online.
- CALIFORNIA -- "Get
on Track, California" San Francisco Chronicle 5 March 2001. QUOTE:
"If California wants help with its transportation worries, it should look no
further than the little-used train tracks running through most communities.
Rail travel, long ignored in a car-crazy state, has a renewed role to
play."
- COLORADO -- "
State: '03 best
for RTD tax" Denver Post, 3 March 2001 (with map). QUOTE:
"Colorado's leading transportation official said it would be better to ask
metro Denver voters in November 2003 for billions of dollars for transportation
projects rather than next year. RTD is considering asking voters in the
six-county metro area next year for a sales tax hike to pay for a network of
commuterrail lines across the metro area, along with other transit
improvements."
- COLORADO -- "
RTD to seek
sales-tax hike for rail" Denver Post, 2 March 2001. QUOTE: "RTD says
it can build a network of commuter-rail lines across the metro area by 2012 if
voters approve a sales-tax increase to raise more than $2 billion."
February
- WISCONSIN -- "Amtrak
service to Fond du Lac stalled" Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, 28
February 2001. QUOTE: "Amtrak's proposed Milwaukee-to-Fond du Lac service isn't
likely to start until late this year at the earliest, railroad representatives
said Wednesday."
- "
Transportation targeted in proposed US budget cuts" Reuters, 28 February
2001. QUOTE: "The White House budget blueprint released Wednesday proposed
increased funding for major aviation, highway and mass transit programs but
wanted transportation spending in other areas reduced by $2.1 billion... The
White House plan also called for $521 million in Amtrak funding."
- Tempe asks
fast track to stadium Arizona Republic, 26 February 2001. At Tempe's
request, the regional transit authority is considering speeding up construction
of the electric train line so it will be running when the Cardinals' stadium
opens in four years.
- TEXAS --
Dallas
"DART seeks options to get cities on board" Dallas Morning News, 26
February 2001. QUOTE: "Once faced with keeping member cities from fleeing,
Dallas Area Rapid Transit now faces the equally difficult task of figuring out
how to accept new members. More than a dozen cities surrounding Dallas have
approached the once-scorned agency with visions of buses and trains serving
their residents. DART has developed a tentative proposal to extend commuter
rail service more easily to nonmember cities, which could improve the region's
worsening traffic snarls. At the same time, it must consider the 13 cities that
have dedicated almost $4 billion to build and run the agency's trains, buses
and high-occupancy vehicle lanes since 1984."
- "Rapid
transit study OK'd by Chandler" Arizona Repubic, 24 February 2001.
Chandler is the latest city in the Valley to hop on the rapid transit
bandwagon. The City Council unanimously approved a major investment study
Thursday that will look into various methods of high capacity transit -
including a light rail system that would connect to the light rail system
planned for Phoenix, Tempe, Mesa and Glendale. The major investment study will
most likely begin in May and look at various rapid transit options like light
rail, commuter rail, elevated rail, monorail and bus rapid transit. It will
then decide which option is most feasible for Chandler.
- Tempe chosen for
football stadium Arizona Republic, 14 February 2001. The site is
adjacent to the light rail alignment, and UPRR tracks where regional rail may
run.
- Stadium
not just football to Tempe Arizona Republic, 14 February 2001.
QUOTE: "Tempe said in its proposal that it would lobby for a second light-rail
stop near the stadium, which will be located at Washington Street and Priest
Drive."
- City
asked to aid firms along light-rail route Arizona Republic, 14
February 2001. QUOTES: "Those who took the microphone at a recent light-rail
meeting didn't waste time explaining what they hope will happen... Construction
of the light-rail route, which will begin at Chris-Town Mall and run along 19th
Avenue, Camelback Road, Central Avenue, Washington Street and then into Tempe
and Mesa, will start in 2003 and conclude in late 2006. Voters approved the
project last spring."
- Glenn Jones'
map of Amtrak's proposed Crescent Star. 14 February 2001.
- CALIFORNIA -- "Altamont
Line Getting New Trains" San Francisco Chronicle, 13 February 2001.
QUOTE: "Relief is just around the bend for passengers of the Altamont Commuter
Express, who cram their way onto two overcrowded daily trains between the San
Joaquin Valley and Silicon Valley. ACE officials announced plans yesterday to
begin running a third round-trip train March 5, with a fourth daily train on
track for a fall start."
- HOUSTON -- "Legal
Fight Stalls a City's Plan for Light-Rail Relief" Houston Journal,
13 February 2001.
- FORT MADISON, IOWA -- " Amtrak, City
Meet" The Hawkeye, 12 February 2001. QUOTE: "City and economic
development officials will meet with Amtrak to discuss moving the Amtrak ticket
office from its location in the rail yards at the foot of 20th Street to the
restored Santa Fe Depot Museum."
- "Businesses on edge
over light-rail impact" Arizona Republic, 7 February 2001. with
map.
QUOTE: "The Valley's planned light-rail system may be a boon to Phoenix
commuters, but property owners along Camelback Road call it a bust... On
Thursday, the business coalition will discuss the impacts and offer suggestions
to ease the pain... Publicity about the rail project has been heavy and will
include more details later this spring or early summer when environmental
impacts are published... [R]esearch has shown in other cities with light rail
that property values go up instead of down, as feared by Camelback
owners."
- Amtrak's 20 year
capital plan calls for, among other things, 333 new Superliner cars for
long-distance travel. This would be 1/3 of the resulting long distance fleet. 2
February 2001. (Press
release)
January
- "Airport
light-rail route explored: Link to people mover might cost another $300
million" Arizona Republic, 2 January 2001. QUOTES: "Phoenix intends
to pursue the idea of running the future light-rail transit line through Sky
Harbor International Airport to ease congestion and provide a more efficient
link to a proposed $200 million people mover that would whisk passengers from
terminal to terminal. The people mover would be virtually worthless without the
link, say critics of a plan to build the light rail line north of the
airport."
ARPA News Page