The Kansas State Rail Service Improvement Fund was modified several years ago to facilitate upgrading railroad cars and locomotives in addition to rehabilitating railroad tracks and its components (bridges, yards, shops, buildings, and sidings) on short lines in Kansas. The railroad’s application was the first to be received by KDOT for rolling stock. The program is one component of the state’s Comprehensive Transportation Program which was originally signed into law on May 10, 1999. The total project was $1.5 million, funded with a 30% KDOT grant, a 40% KDOT low interest loan, and a 30% CVR match.
Cimarron Valley has forgone its previous blue paint scheme for the new power and is painting the units in a colors that reflects the Santa Fe heritage of the lines it operates. Two of the locomotives have been repainted and now wear Santa Fe’s solid blue scheme with a yellow stripe along the side that was applied to freight locomotives between 1960 and 1972. No. 4052 was repainted by railroad in Satanta while No. 4053 was repainted by Metro East.
When the newly acquired power is in service, the railroad is expected to purge most of its existing fleet of locomotives, with only the pair of GP26s and the B39-8 expected to remain.
The railroad operates in three directions from its base of operations in Satanta: east to Dodge City; southwest to Boise City, Okla.; and west to Springfield, Colo.

