The report by the U. S. Department of Transportations inspector general, Kenneth Mead, says the train service should drop
Amtrak leases access to other rail tracks around the country, including Union Pacific in Longview, Marshall and other East Texas cities. The Texas Eagle runs from San Antonio to Chicago. Mead said the current system can no longer be maintained. „The total funding Amtrak receives from all sources is not sufficient to maintain the current system in a state of good repair,“ he said. Congress has consistently given Amtrak less than the railroad has said it needs for maintenance and capital investment. This year, Amtrak sought $1.5 billion, but the Bush administration proposed $900 million, which the House approved. Over the weekend, though, House and Senate negotiators agreed to a $1.2 billion subsidy. At that level, Amtrak will not be able to undertake the capital investments it had planned. The railroad delayed capital investments last year, too. For that year, it asked for $1.8 billion but got about $1.2 billion. Amtrak has posted losses of at least $500 million each year for the past 10 years, but Meads report noted that ridership was up last year. At least one supporter doubts the Texas Eagle or other «This sort of statement is not anything new … (Kenneth Mead) is really saying that Amtrak needs a stable source of funding. Its never had its own source of funding. Its been starved,» said former Marshall Mayor Audrey Kariel, who heads the transportation committee for that citys chamber of commerce. «I think that the Northeast corridor alone would cost the same without the Kariel believes the Texas Eagle and other routes still exist because of support from people such as U. S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, who has adopted a «national or nothing» approach to Amtrak. That support would disintegrate if Texas lines shut down, because senators like Hutchison would have no interest in funding a system located mainly in the Northeast. «I think it would be a very big mistake to cut the The Texas Eagle route also passes through Arkansas, where Bill Pollard is fighting to maintain it. He said Mead is holding Amtrak to a higher standard compared to all public transportation systems. He said the «(Closing down the »The vast majority of Amtraks funding goes into the railroad they own in the Northeast corridor," said Pollard. He also doubts any major changes will take place, calling Meads report a «same song, different verse» that has been issued annually. In a statement, the National Association of Railroad Passengers said if the national network is destroyed, Congress will no longer want to support Amtrak. «Eliminating that network, while preserving every existing The New York Times News Service contributed to this report.