News & Reviews News Wire Talgo retools in Milwaukee NEWSWIRE

Talgo retools in Milwaukee NEWSWIRE

By Kevin P. Keefe | July 17, 2017

| Last updated on November 3, 2020

Spanish railcar builder set to begin rehabilitating other makers' cars

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TalgoMKEJuly17
A Breda A650 heavy rail vehicle from Los Angeles is among the first of dozens of cars Talgo will rebuild in Milwaukee, Wis., shops.
Kevin Keefe
MILWAUKEE — Spanish train manufacturer Talgo has entered the U.S. passenger-car overhaul market with a contract to rebuild transit cars for Los Angeles, using a plant it formerly occupied to assemble its own passive-tilt trainsets for the stillborn Wisconsin high-speed service.

The first of 37 married pairs of Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority A650 heavy rail vehicle cars to be overhauled were unveiled July 14 at a news conference in a large city-owned factory on Milwaukee’s north side.

The cars are used on Los Angeles’ Metro Red Line and were built by Italy’s Breda Costruzioni Ferroviarie between 1992 and 2000. They now require extensive updates of propulsion equipment, braking, signaling, and other components. An option for the overhaul of additional car pairs could bring the value of the total contract to nearly $73 million.

Metro’s Red Line, opened in sections from 1993 to 2000, links Los Angeles Union Station with North Hollywood, Calif.

There was an air of vindication at Friday’s ceremony at the former A.O. Smith factory in Milwaukee, now a symbol of Wisconsin’s fractious politics.

Presiding at the news conference with Talgo CEO Antonio Perez was Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, the Democrat who was a key figure in the 2009 effort to expand Amtrak’s Chicago-to-Milwaukee service to Madison, the state’s capital.

Although Wisconsin had secured $810 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funding for two Talgo trainsets and assorted support infrastructure, Republican Gov. Scott Walker scuttled the project after his election in 2010, fulfilling a campaign pledge. The governor objected to the state’s obligation to cover ongoing maintenance and operating costs.

The decision amounted to Wisconsin reneging on its contract with Talgo, and a subsequent lawsuit filed by the manufacturer resulted in a nearly $10-million settlement, with Talgo getting to keep and sell the two completed trainsets.

The manufacturing operation in Milwaukee was shuttered after four Talgo trainsets were completed. Two for Oregon were later delivered for Amtrak’s Cascades service. The two Wisconsin Series 8 trainsets are stored at Amtrak’s Beech Grove (Ind.) maintenance base, awaiting disposition, most likely to California for Los Angeles-San Diego service if a plan by the LOSSAN Rail Corridor Agency comes to fruition.

Now, despite any bitterness over the demise of the Wisconsin high-speed project, Talgo is back in Milwaukee, the result, Perez said, of efforts by the city to nurture a relationship of trust.

“This is a huge milestone for Talgo,” said Perez, “the first time we will maintain non-Talgo equipment.”

Talgo has leased the Milwaukee plant for five years, with an option to extend it if more overhaul business comes Talgo’s way. Rebuilding the Metro car pairs will create 18 to 20 new jobs, officials said.

In celebrating the moment, Barrett cited the project’s ability to create jobs in a corner of Milwaukee’s sprawling Century City industrial corridor, once the home of A.O. Smith’s huge automobile frame manufacturing plant.

“We never let hope die, we never let the relationship die,” Barrett said. “From Los Angeles and Hollywood all the way to Milwaukee — we’re very proud of that.”

4 thoughts on “Talgo retools in Milwaukee NEWSWIRE

  1. Gov. Rick Scott did the same thing in Florida, when preliminary engineering work had already started on high speed rail from Tampa to Orlando. I am not certain why the conservative wings of GOP had decided to be anti-rail but they certainly are and work to block passenger rail projects all over the country ranging from high speed rail, the Brightline project and through local light rail in Tampa and elsewhere. I wish they would realize how much rail contributes to the economy.

    Look up Citizens Against Rail Expansion sometime. It is ideological and extends well beyond NIMBY attitudes/

  2. The people at Talgo, both nationally and locally, were very good and very generous friends of the Wisconsin Chapter – NRHS during their first tour of duty here in Milwaukee. We could see during our tours that they had put together a highly skilled and well managed workforce, and it was sad to see all that effort be, in effect, dismantled when the last Talgo trainsets left town. It is good to see them back.

  3. HaHa for Walker…he who laughs last laughs best. Should Walker have taken econ 101, he might have understood the multiplier effect of money…and not only would have Wisc. had train service by now, but also jobs and tax revenue more than equal to operating subsidies. Let us not be confused by facts.

  4. I could not agree more with David Nelson. We also need to do everything we can to get rid of the Scottie Walker and his stupid boondoggle ideas. Lets hope that this is a great new beginning for Talgo in Wisconsin.

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