Last week, the FRA released its list of preferred routes for the Long Distance Service Study. This would double the Long-Distance Network to 30 routes, the list "spreads the wealth" as all regions are covered, and there a number of nonlinear routes.
The longest is the North Coast Hiawatha at 2,096 miles while the shortest is the Atlanta-Fort Worth service at 870 miles (50 hours vs 22 hours).
My only gripe is that neither one of these two routes should have been forced to use the Corridor ID Program just to secure funding. That's a large failing on Amtrak and the feds.
Direct Chicago-Florida service is long overdue as it hasn't had as much as connecting service in 32 years. This is a missing need since the late 1970s and the reroute via Atlanta would serve more people along better tracks.
Another need regarding Florida service is east-west service via the "suspended" Sunset East route. Reimplementing the Gulf Wind and extending it to Dallas/Fort Worth would provide riders with a brand new train running on a much more reliable schedule. Also, the Gulf Coast route would have more roundtrips with three long-distance routes between New Orleans and Mobile as opposed to the beleaguered corridor service.
The plan shows that Phoenix can be a hub with two overnight routes and planned corridor service without rerouting the Sunset Limited as the former depot and the airport would both draw a lot of passengers.
Going back to Chicago, it's nice to see the FRA paying attention to the city's congestion issues enough to move northern termini of three routes to Detroit (one) and the Twin Cities (two) and to use Indianapolis, St. Louis and Kansas City as hub cities for northeast-southwest routes instead funneling everything to a crowded Union Station.
Other interesting tidbits:
- The Northeast Region has the fewest routes at two
- The Central Region has the most routes at 11
- The Gulf Wind would be Amtrak's way of utilizing the FEC route
- The FRA flipping the script on the Desert Wind and Pioneer in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming
- The Atlanta & West Point route via Montgomery being used is a long overdue alternative between Atlanta and New Orleans
- South Dakota would finally get Amtrak service with two routes
Left out:
- Additional Silver Service routes
- Service via the S-Line in Florida
- Direct service from the Carolinas to Texas
- Other Midwest-Florida service
- Broadway Limited revival