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CITOOF SAN BERNARDIIO - REQUEQr FOR COUNCIL AC",:))N
From: Councilman Jack Strickler
Subject:
Proposea Hub System for Amtrak
Dept: Council Office
Date: December 9, 1985
Synopsis of Previous Council action:
None
Recommen-:led motion:
That the Mayor and Common Council adopt a resolution in support
of an additional train route through San Bernardino making the
City a regional hub for Amtrak.
,-
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Ignature
Contacc person:
Phil Ar,,;'7.()
Phone:
383-5168
SuppJrting data attached:
Yes
Ward:
FUNDING REQUIREMENTS:
Amount:
Source:
Finance:
Council Notes: Mr. Walter Gilbert, Oceanside City Councilman, and Mr. Byron
Nordberg, transportation consultant, requested that the Mayor and
Council support be forwarded before the end of
that the proposal can be brought before Amtrak
the calendar year so
in early 1986. / ...:s
Agenda Item No. ~ ~ '
75-0262
c
San
Francisco
Martinez
Proposed hub 8ystemfOt,Amtrak
" _,' '."_'.,, ..."_",_,,,,^:,,,o'- ;_
Amtrak presently has four tr"ins travelling through San
Bernardino each day, one going10 and from Flagstaff
and Chicago, the other going to and from Las Vegas
and Salt Lake City. Under the proposed system,
12 trains would be rouled through San Bernardino
each day: One to and from Chicago. one to and
1-. from Phoenix and New Orleans and one to and
(' ~t- from Las Vegas and Sa~ Lake City. Three
'1(/.: "'10 trains would travel through San Bernardino
;('0 '1 tl and from Oakland and San Diego.
~1-. Las
~ Vegas
. . Present routes
. . .. Proposed routes
Staff map by Jean Maxam
Kingman
Bakersfield
Flagstaff
ARIZONA
.
.
Santa Ana
Oceanside
DelMar
San
Diego
Phoenix
Railroad group wants
San Bernardino to be
regi2~~~'1~mtrak hub
B~ CARL YETZER
s....~ 5',,!! Writf!'
The Railroad Passenger Association of
California would like the San Bernardino
City Council to support a plan to make the
city a regional hub for Amtrak, with anoth-
er passenger line into the city and more
trains stopping here.
RailP AC would like to see the twice-dai-
Iy "San Joaquin" trains. which travel from
Oakland to Bakersfield, extended south
through San Bernardino, Riverside and
Orange County to San Diego. said Bryon
Nordberg. an association adviser and sur.
faee transportation consultant.
In addition. the group hopes to convince
Amtrak to reroute the Los Angeles-to,New
Orleans "Sunset Limited" through San Ber'
nardino on Santa Fe tracks. The train now
passes through Colton on Southern Paeific
tracks but does not stop.
Two Amtrak trains a day now stop in
San Bernardino. the Los Angeles-to-Chicago
"Southwest Chief"' anll the Los Angeles-to-
Salt Lake City "Desert Wind."
With major nortb-south and east-west
lines crossing in the' city, San Bernardino
would become a regional hub and a major
transfer point for pIlssengers from the San
Joaquin Valley planning train trips east.
Since the San Joaquin line now ends in
Barstow. rail paMSengers from that area
must take a bus to get to the main east-west
Amtrak lines out of Los Angeles - or make
a lengthy detour north to Oakland and then
south to Los Angeles,
Nordberg said tbe proposed route
ehanges would open up potentially luera.
tive new markets for Amtrak without the
need to add station personnel at San Ber-
nardino. It would also give San Bernardino
Wlease see Amtrak, B-IO/
,
-
c
Amtrak
:>
(Continued from B-II
residents a wiMr choice of desti-
nations if they travel by train.
Support for the proposal would
have to come both from Amtrak
and from Caltrans, which partial-
ly subsidizes the cost of operating
the San Joaquin trains and thl'
Los AnReles,to,San Diego "San
DieRans." Nordberg says RailPAC
hopes to gather enough support
from cities along the proposed
routes to convince Caltrans to pre-
sent the proposal to Amtrak.
Cliff Black, an Amtrak public
relations spokesman in Washing-
ton, D.C.. said Amtrak hasn't been
formally approached about the
plan and therefore would have no
comment.
"The normal procedure for our
inititating a new route is to wait
until we are approacbed by the
state department of transporta-
lIOn involved, which. in this case.
would be Caltrans." he said. '"Once
that happens. then we initiate a
marketing and feasibility study.'"
"However:' he said. '"it is high-
ly unlikely that we would be in a
position to add any DeW routes in
the near future, e\'{~>n with state
suppor\. The hudget for Amtrak
for the 1986 fiscal vear still has not
been determined. wbut we do aoht-
Ipate that there will be some cut-
back.'. probably in the range of
about 10 percen\.'"
Matt Paul. chief of thf' Caltrans
rail sl'r\'j('p~ branch. said Caltran~
ha_" askf'd Amtrak to inv('stigah'
till' fea~ihility of f'xtC'udin,(! thE'
~an Joaquins south into Los An.
,celt-s. So far. he said. Amtrak has
nlll re~p(}nd('d to thr' requf~st
Thf' rdationship Iwtwepn Am-
lr.:J.k and CaJtran~ ha:'C not bi.'{'n al.
to,Cl'thrr harmoniou~ III f('('ent
y.,><.trs Many California pass('ngt'r
o
-
-
o
rail projects started during the ad-
ministration of former Gov. Jerry
Brown have been axed or cut
back by Go\'. George Deukmeji-
an's administration.
But Nordberg said he senses
the r,'lationship IS starting 10
change.
The Los Angeles.to,Oakland
segment of the "Coast Starlight,'"
Amlrak's most popular long-dis.
tance passenger train. is frequent-
ly sold out, particularly on week-
ends and during holidays.
The Los Angeles,to,San Diego
trains carry more passengers than
any other Amtrak route. except
for tbe Boston-New York-Wash,
ington Northeastern corridor.
Ridership on Ihe two San Joa-
quin trains has far surpassed ex-
pectations, Nordberg said, and
there are plans to add a third dai-
ly train.
"\\'e raised the farebox recov-
ery ratio of the San Diegans to
1O.t? percent in August of 1985 -
an unheard-of result," he said.
That means the traills met all of
their operating expenses from fa-
rebox revenues, and made a 4.7
percent profit. American passen.
ger trains have not been profita-
ble since the end of World War II.
Irs clear that Californians 100'e
their passenger trains and are rid-
ing them in ever-increasing num-
bers, he said.
1'\ordherg said Oceanside
Councilman Walter Gilbert and
SOIllf' otht'f peopl(' from cities be-
t WPPTl San Diego and Santa Barba-
ra h.n'€' lohbied for more rail sen-
ice.
ThaI result"d in getting Cal-
tram; and Amtrak to sf'riousJy stu-
dy addmc all cighth San lJi"gan to
thf' pre-sent. seH'n-train dailj
scht.'dule and extendmg the serv-
ice north to Santa Barbara. he
said.
"Now (Gilbert is) attempting to
do the same thing from San Diego
to San Bernardino and on into
Bakersfield:' he said. 'If we can
put the local political maChinery
squarely behind doing this kind of
thing. then we can go to the state
agencies and get their cooper-
ation.
A preliminary meeting was
held during tbe League of Cities
Convention in San Francisco.
Nordberg said, and most of the
cities responded favorably.
One of the trains probably
would be an overnight. arriving in
San Bernardino early in the mOrn-
ing, he said. The converse would
be that one train would leave San
Diego fairly early in the morning
and stop in San Bernardino about
midday and arrive in the Bay
Area that night. It would be about
a 14-hour run,
Nordberg was asked whether
Amtrak -which is facing a chron-
ic equipment shortage - would
have enough coaches and sleepers
to extend the San Joaquins to San
Diego.
'"It depends on bow you (use)
the amount of equipment that sits
idle in railyarels at any given time
on the West Coast and elsewhere
in the country ,'" he said.
Southbound San Joaquin
trains sit idle in Bakersfield for
about five or six hours before
gomg northward again.
""Clearly. you're going to need
another set of equipment to get
into thE' cydf'," he said. "But our
position is that that we should in-
sist to Amtrak that equipment is
a,'allable and th"t it should be
llSfd
'"Sleepmg cars are a problem.
but only in thE' s{'ns(' that thpy
lAmtrakl have to rethink how
tbey allocate tbeir system region,
wide."
Amtrak has a large fleet of
1940s- and 1950s-era "Heritage
Fleet" sleeping cars in use on East
Coast trains.
Amtrak is building a new fleet
of sleeping cars and some of the
Heritage Fleet equipment could
be moved to the West Coast as
those cars come on line, Nordberg
said.