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Railroad Reawakening
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
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Democracy and Elections:
More Unfinished 2008 Election Business: Verifiable Vote Counts
Steven Rosenfeld
DrugReporter:
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Election 2008:
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Environment:
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Kate Sheppard
ForeignPolicy:
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Health and Wellness:
Obama's Plan to End the HIV/AIDS Crisis
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Hurricane Katrina:
From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished
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Immigration:
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Movie Mix:
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Reproductive Justice and Gender:
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Rights and Liberties:
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Sex and Relationships:
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War on Iraq:
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Water:
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"Thank God, men cannot as yet fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth," wrote Henry David Thoreau.
Little did he know what the future held. Though wary of the locomotive, the bard of "Walden" had no idea that flying and driving would not only lay waste to soil and sky but plunder the nation's pocketbook.
Certainly, his heirs do. With airlines now in the red and road warriors stuck on jammed and crumbling highways, many are sounding the anthem for a renaissance in rail. Evidence of that resurgence is at hand. Amtrak ridership rose four percent last month while domestic airlines went down 14 percent. Light rail lines are getting longer. And both light and heavy rail lines grow from coast to coast.
Passenger rail's promise is reflected in the success of the Acela train in the Northeast and high speed rail initiatives across the country. Likewise, the streetcar -- its lighter, more urban peer -- records mounting numbers on Los Angeles' greenline, charts construction advances on Minneapolis' Hiawatha line, and accomplishes city-building in Denver and Dallas. New transit-oriented developments in Sacramento, Portland, and other cities are centering around trolley lines that run through the heart of shopping, office, and residential districts to counteract the auto-centric, sprawl-inducing approach that decimated post-war urban America.
No city can thrive or even survive without these Great Connectors. Indeed, no true city has surfaced anywhere in America since the Auto Age began to dismantle the nation's streetcars and urban cores.
Rail could reverse that. Rail is the linchpin that allows for urban proximity. It is the environmental panacea that sustains our lives and landscapes and promotes walkability, stopping the spread that destroys l.2 million acres of farmland and 60,000 acres of wetland per year. Without civilized rail, we are stuck in traffic, circling in terminals, and breathing bad air.
Unfortunately, the brake is being applied to all this energy. A report this month by the pro-highway, pro-privatizing Amtrak Reform Council - - a federal study commission -- calls for dismantling the so-called "money-losing" system. That dispersal would deprive hundreds of cities and hundreds of thousands of passengers from being served by trains.
The council's biased rendering was anticipated. But it comes at a bad time. Despite the fact that Amtrak has affected a resurgence in rail, a five-year-old federal law dictates that it has only until next December to make itself solvent or disband -- a state of financial balance demanded of no other government or transportation agency.
That bottomline bromide is a misreading of both linguistics and politics. "Money-losing" is the prefix applied to rail, struggling to survive on the government's paltry $520 million annual appropriation. No such financial epithet applies to petrol-swilling, road-based forms of mobility -- planes, cars, and trucks -- which secure $46 billion dollars yearly from the federal trough and consume 60 percent of the nearly 20 million barrels of oil that Americans use every day.
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