Passenger Amtrak board full with Gleason confirmation: Analysis

Amtrak board full with Gleason confirmation: Analysis

By Bob Johnston | September 23, 2025

David Fink nomination to become FRA Administrator remains in limbo

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Diesel-powered passenger train with Superliner cars. Amtrak board full with Gleason confirmation: Analysis.
The westbound Borealis leans into the curve at Reeseville, Wis., on April 11, 2025, with reassigned Superliners a month after corroded Horizon equipment was withdrawn for safety reasons. A strength of a national operator is access to equipment, which Amtrak is obligated to provide, but cars and locomotives have been in short supply across the country since the departure of Horizons. All photos, Bob Johnston

Two men sitting in a passenger train car.
Amtrak board of directors chairman Anthony Coscia (left) and vice chairman Joel Szabat are seated in the Next Gen Acela’s first class car as the inaugural press run prepares to depart New York’s Penn Station on Aug 27, 2025. Coscia, a Democrat, is a re-confirmed holdover from his original Obama administration appointment, and Republican Szabat was appointed by President Joe Biden. Note that the single seat behind the men at the end of the car, 1D, has no window.

WASHINGTON — The federal government may be headed for a shutdown if 60 U.S. Senators can’t agree on a path forward by the end of the month, but late last week the upper chamber’s lawmakers did vote to confirm Pennsylvania Republican Robert Gleason to a 5-year term on Amtrak’s board of directors [“Senate confirms Robert Gleason … ” Sept. 22, 2025 ].

Gleason, who hails from the Johnstown, Pa., area, fills the last vacancy and a state-supported route slot, though at his Senate Commerce Committee confirmation hearing last May he stressed Amtrak’s importance to “bringing better passenger rail service to small towns across America” [“Amtrak board nominee Gleason voices strong support … ” May 13, 2025].

Following appointments by Presidents Biden and Trump after nearly a decade when existing members continued to serve years after their terms expired, Amtrak’s board of directors now reflects diverse geographic and political representation of the three business segments, as legally mandated in the company’s latest reauthorization.

Its current members (with the state they currently reside in) are:

  • Anthony Coscia (New Jersey) Chairman — Northeast Corridor (D)
  • Joel Szabat (Maryland) Vice chairman — Northeast Corridor (R)
  • David Capozzi (Delaware) — Northeast Corridor* (D)
  • Ron Batory (New Mexico) — Long-distance (R)
  • Elaine Clegg (Idaho) — Long-distance (D)
  • Lanhee Chin (California) — State-supported (R)
  • Chris Koos (Illinois) — State-supported+Long distance (D)
  • Robert Gleason (Pennsylvania) — State-supported (R)
  • U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy or his designee (R)
    * — Capozzi also was nominated to represent interests of the disabled community
Obstacles ahead

Amtrak’s leadership and governance currently faces many challenges. These include:

  • Continuing equipment shortages exacerbated by maintenance failures.
  • A stalled long-distance passenger car procurement that threatens national network viability as 45 year-old Superliners soldier on.
  • Highway-friendly Republican lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives who insist on passenger rail “profitability” when Amtrak annual appropriations are debated, while roads and air traffic control systems receive billions in guaranteed funding from the federal government.
  • A looming surface transportation reauthorization in which there are efforts to reconstitute Amtrak’s host railroad access and liability insurance cap advantages over other potential operators.

The existing financial arrangement allows the company to determine, allocate, and pass along administrative, maintenance, and operating costs for regional services to the states or operating authorities that support them. Similar criteria are used in measuring the financial performance of inter-regional trains, also funded through Congress’ annual appropriation.

This has been an increasing source of friction between the sponsoring entities and Amtrak, which lawmakers are being pressed to address. The public’s recent acceptance of the Chicago-St. Paul, Minn., Borealis and New Orleans-Mobile, Ala., Mardi Gras stand out as successes, and the national operator has devoted substantial resources to support their launch. However, it is possible that provisions of the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act’s Section 209, which essentially protects Amtrak from the risks of starting and maintaining state-supported services, may be revisited.

Fink confirmation delayed

Meanwhile, the Senate has still not voted to confirm David Fink as Federal Railroad Administrator. The former president of PanAm Railways was grilled at the same May 13, 2025, confirmation hearing as Gleason.

Since Biden appointee Amit Bose resigned in January, the FRA has been without a confirmed administrator. During that time, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy eliminated the Railroad Safety Advisory Committee (RSAC) with the justification, among other reasons, to “refocus advisory committees on what matters” [see “FRA disbands Railroad Safety Advisory Committee,” Trains.com Aug 13, 2025]. FRA disbands Railroad Safety Advisory Committee – Trains

Duffy lumped RSAC among advisory groups that “had been overrun with individuals whose sole focus is their radical DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) and climate agenda.” It isn’t clear why Fink has yet to be confirmed.

One thought on “Amtrak board full with Gleason confirmation: Analysis

  1. My wife and I along with two of our grandchildren made a round trip on the Mardi Gras train this past Sunday. The train was sold out and this was on an away game weekend for the Saints. The train, including the windows was clean. They must be running it through the wash rack in New Orleans when needed.
    The onboard staff were friendly and professional and kept us well informed of stops and meets along the way. We ate breakfast on the way to New Orleans and although it’s prepackaged and heated in a microwave it was better than I expected and reasonably priced as was the dinner we had on the way back.
    Hopefully the trains will continue to be popular and hopefully City of Mobile will continue to help support the service. We’ve already bought tickets for another trip in October for a wedding in New Orleans.
    I can tell you this. Even though the train takes a little over an hour longer to get to New Orleans from Mobile, it’s way better than driving I-10 along the coast. Especially as N.O. has lots of options for public transportation around the city.

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