The following articlewas originally published in the Ohio Capital Journal and published on News5Cleveland.com under a content-sharing agreement.
Biden administration, Amtrak proposing new passenger rail connecting Ohio’s “Three-C” cities. The possibility of expanded passenger rail service in Ohio has some residents brainstorming how it might impact their lives.
A Columbus resident imagines being able to take a train to Chicago, a place they haven’t been “in ages.” A baseball fan from Dayton thinks he’d be able to attend games at Cleveland’s Progressive Field more often. A bicyclist considers the possibility of riding cross-state to another city then taking the train back.
These opportunities would still be years away from taking shape. The Biden administration wants to get the ball rolling on this idea as part of a $2 trillion infrastructure and jobs proposal made public on Wednesday.
The sweeping plancalls for making a variety of improvements to America’s transportation grid. The administration also wants improvements made to drinking water systems; high-speed broadband for all Americans; and rehabbing projects for millions of homes, commercial buildings, schools, hospitals, child care facilities and federal buildings.
President Biden, a longtime Amtrak rider and supporter, wants to invest tens of billions of dollars to build new train routes throughout the country. His plan separately calls for more than $100 billion in spending toward repairing and modernizing other public transit systems.
In order to pay for this infrastructure package, Biden wants to raise the corporate tax rate and prevent companies from writing off expenses accrued from offshoring jobs.
Amtrak has publicized its own “Vision to Grow Rail Service Across America” map with a goal of building new routes to unserved cities within the next 15 years.
Most notably for Ohioans is a proposal to build new Amtrak routes connecting Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland. The initial concept is to have three round trips per day, with stations in other communities placed along the route (such as Dayton).
Amtrak currently operates several routes which travel along the north and south edges of the state and its growth plan calls for increasing service along these routes. Additional routes connecting the Ohio’s largest cities would be a significant development, transit advocates and local officials believe.
“This is bold,” said Stu Nicholson, executive director of the transportation advocacy group All Aboard Ohio. “This is a huge, bold move in terms of both infrastructure overall and transportation in particular.”
It has been 40 years since Ohio last saw passenger trains on the “Three-C Corridor.” Bringing it back, Nicholson said, will have major tourism and economic ramifications for the state.
“Three trains a day doesn’t seem like a lot, but it’s three trains more than we have now,” Nicholson added.
City councils in Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland, Dayton and elsewhere have all passed resolutions in recent months supporting Amtrak rail expansion.
Cincinnati, said it would help with seeing family members during the holiday season.
“It would definitely make travel less stressful seeing in-laws in Cleveland, especially during the winter,” Gutierrez responded. “Maybe not quicker, but it’s at least an option.”
Leslie Hughes also said she would utilize passenger rail to travel from Franklin County to other states to see relatives.
“As a newly retired person, visiting family by train in nearby states would give me great hope for enjoying my later years,” she said.
Here is a selection of other responses:
I'd like to hear from my Ohio followers -- what do you think of expanded rail service throughout OH?
— Tyler Buchanan (@Tylerjoelb) April 1, 2021
What might you be able to do if the below rail map comes to fruition? https://t.co/SCSOSgz0qf
I like the idea.
— Chris Tonn (@tonn_chris) April 1, 2021
It comes down to the execution - can intercity rail service be a reasonable, affordable, rapid alternative to personal cars or planes.
Columbus-Cleveland would be a game changer for football season. Columbus folks going to more Browns games, Cleveland folks going to more Buckeyes games. I’d love to not worry about getting behind the wheel after a game at First Energy 🍻
— J.Warren (@jwarmab) April 1, 2021
I’m in the Cleveland are and would love it if there could also be a feeder train to/from Athens and Columbus so that my OU student daughter could come home more.
— 🌷Springtime LC (@lchobody) April 1, 2021
Ohio transit funding
These infrastructure proposals come as Gov. Mike DeWine signed the two-year, $8.3 billion Ohio transportation budget into law on Wednesday. The governor had originally suggested massive cuts to state funding for public transportation, but lawmakers restored the funding to pre-pandemic levels.
DeWine acknowledged Thursday that “we certainly have infrastructure needs” in Ohio, but said he hadn’t given a full look to Biden’s proposals.
Unlike highways, public transportation has no dedicated revenue stream within the state budget, meaning this investment is dependent on lawmakers’ decision-making every two years when a new transportation budget is approved.
As reported, the funding approved in this budget helps benefit the many urban and rural transit systems throughout Ohio. They will also receive federal relief funding approved by Congress that is meant to recoup losses sustained during the pandemic.
The Ohio Department of Transportation’s 2015 Transit Needs Study outlined that a vastly larger investment into public transit is necessary to fully improve and maintain the state’s transit offerings.
A recent state infrastructure report card from the American Society of Civil Engineers graded Ohio’s infrastructure as being a C-, with the “ Transit” category receiving a D grade.