Passenger line would boost areaTimes News
Lehighton, PA ,
August 21, 2021
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Local Issues
Northeast Pennsylvania residents have been waiting for a train to New York for more than 30 years. Now, Amtrak has signaled that it wants the route, including three stops in Monroe County, to be part of an unprecedented plan to expand rail nationwide. “It’s something we possibly envisioned, but not something we would bet the farm on. Now it looks like it’s actually going to happen,” said Chuck Walsh, president of the North Jersey Rail Commuters Organization, who has publicly advocated for service along the corridor for more than 30 years. A route from New York to Scranton, with stops including Tobyhanna, Mount Pocono and East Stroudsburg, is one of 39 included in Amtrak’s “corridor vision” plan released earlier this year. That plan, which also includes a route from New York to Allentown depends largely on a proposed infrastructure bill with $66 billion in rail funding, which is currently being considered by Congress. If that bill passes, the authority which owns the Pennsylvania section of the Scranton-New York route wants to be ready. The Pennsylvania Northeast Regional Railroad Authority, which owns the 60-mile section from Scranton to the Delaware River, has partnered with Amtrak for a joint planning study on the corridor, agreeing to supply the $400,000 budget for study plan. “This is the type of detailed analysis they will have to do on all 39 of the corridors, and we wanted ours to be one of the first out of the box,” said Larry Malski, PNRRA President. The study will look at what is needed to run Amtrak trains on PNRRA’s rails. The route will likely need improvements to run at Amtrak’s 80 mph standard. But one advantage the project has over most of the other 39 corridors is that it is owned entirely by public entities with an interest in passenger rail - PNRRA, New Jersey Department of Transportation, New Jersey Transit, and Amtrak itself. The study will project potential ridership, fare revenue and the need for other financing. PNRRA is confident that there will be demand for the line between commuters and tourists. “We believe the numbers are going to be there for this type of service,” Malski said. U.S. Rep. Matt Cartwright, whose district includes Monroe County, said, “Those of us who have been working for years on bringing passenger rail back to Northeastern Pennsylvania are gratified that Amtrak understands the kind of economic boon this train service can be for our whole region.” |