News & Reviews News Wire Digest: Alabama port agency asks regulators to deny Amtrak bid for Gulf Coast service

Digest: Alabama port agency asks regulators to deny Amtrak bid for Gulf Coast service

By David Lassen | April 6, 2021

News Wire Digest for April 6: BNSF to pay $140,000 over Wyoming derailment; Saskatoon line relocation effort hits dead end

Email Newsletter

Get the newest photos, videos, stories, and more from Trains.com brands. Sign-up for email today!

Alabama port agency asks STB to deny Amtrak effort to start Gulf Coast service

Alabama State Port Authority logoThe Alabama State Port Authority has asked the Surface Transportation Board to turn down Amtrak’s request for an order allowing it to start passenger service between New Orleans and Mobile, Ala., instead requesting the board compel Amtrak to complete the traffic study of the route. Citing the length of time that had passed without completion of the study, Amtrak withdrew its participation prior to making its request to the STB [see “Amtrak asks STB to require …,” Trains News Wire, March 16, 2021]. The Port Authority’s letter says the agency is “fundamentally does not oppose passenger rail into the City of Mobile, but we do have deep concerns regarding Amtrak’s impact” on present and future freight traffic, and that “Amtrak’s petition deprives our seaport, our shippers and our freight railroads of appropriate assessments to preserve the safety and reliability of freight rail service at one of the nation’s largest seaports.” The Business Council of Alabama also filed a comment asking the STB to deny Amtrak’s request, citing concerns over possible impact on freight service.

BNSF to pay $140,000 over environmental violation resulting from derailment

Derailed locomotives and cars in river
BNSF Railway has agreed to pay $140,000 over environmental damage resulting from this 2019 derailment in Wyoming. (Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality)

BNSF Railway has agreed to a $140,000 settlement with the Environmental Protection Agency over damage resulting from a 2019 coal train derailment near Guernsey, Wyo., KPVI-TV reports. The Feb. 4, 2019, accident in Wendover Canyon sent three locomotives and five cars into the North Platte River, injuring two crew members and resulting in a spill of 5,900 gallons of diesel fuel and 800 gallons of lubricating oil into the river. BNSF notified the EPA of the spill and has coordinated cleanup and remediation, but the EPA said BNSF violated the Clean Water Act. A 30-day comment on the proposed settlement began Monday, after which a regional judicial officer will need to approve the agreement.

Report may mean end of Saskatoon effort to make CP, CN share route

The effort by the city of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, to relocate Canadian Pacific’s main line out of downtown onto Canadian National’s existing route may have suffered its final blow with a report concluding that federal regulatory powers do not extend to forcing the two railroads to share a line. The Saskatoon Star Phoenix reports that city administrators, acting on a prior motion from a city council member, determined the interswitching powers of the Canadian Transportation Agency allow the agency to order joint trackage usage only if it leads to more efficient operation “without imparing either company’s commercial interests.” Both CN and CP have said the shared line would have a negative impact on operations [see “Digest: CP, CN shoot down Saskatoon’s concept …,” Trains News Wire, Sept. 4, 2020 ], so the report by the administrations concludes no further action is possible unless one or both of the railroads wants to pursue the concept. The city has already begun study of building three overpasses at a cost of $93 million to decrease roadway disruptions resulting from rail traffic [see “Digest: MBTA details increase …,” News Wire, Jan. 12, 2021]

5 thoughts on “Digest: Alabama port agency asks regulators to deny Amtrak bid for Gulf Coast service

  1. It seems that every attempt to add or upgrade passenger rail service is attacked by some well-connected entity. And if past is prologue this latest service expansion effort will be stopped as well. Just ask the well-heeled, well-connected residents of East Lyme, CT and surrounding towns and those in Glenview, IL. They know full well how to terrify the spineless politicians and DOT officials into doing their bidding. And the big bad railroad is always seen as an entity that can be stopped. But when the highway builders and their political and DOT enablers come around to take your house and/or your business for a road widening project, it’s useless to fight it. Just ask some 12-15 homeowners in the eastern side of Hinsdale, IL.

  2. The silly thing about the Port of Mobile being involved is that the Amtrak trains wouldn’t even come near the port. It’s absurd. And even if they did, problems like that can be worked out. It’s not rocket science.

  3. I still don’t see what is wrong with the traffic study report for the Gulf Coast service that was completed 3 years ago(almost 4) in 2017. Those numbers should still be valid, if anything they’d actually be HIGHER than any current numbers generated by a newer report.

  4. Glad CN/CP aren’t bowing down to Saskatoon City Hall. Saskatoon exists BECAUSE of the railroads.

You must login to submit a comment