NY Penn
OBS Chief
Having read End of the Line, I have to say that Vranich, although extremely biased, makes a considerable case for privatizing Amtrak. My question is, why not?
In cases where railroads have been privatized, efficiency has increased. (Rocky Mountaineer, Alaska Railroad, British network).Privatizing Amtrak won't happen any time soon unless private investors come forward with a plan to buy it. The freight railroads have no interest in passenger rail. Even during the Golden Years of railroading when almost everyone took the train, passenger rail travel was only minimally profitable. You can bet that if passenger rail was highly profitable, private industry would be making a play for it.
See my other answers...What are Vranich's arguments? It's hard to argue against them without knowing what they are.
Along with dlagrua's argument, I'd add that hiring a private contractor to run a government operation is not always cheaper than having a government agency run it.
Supposedly, private contractors are more efficient.I think if Amtrak were to be privatized, our Government would insist that some form of Government
oversight would be retained. This action would be most discouraging to a private company, but
depending on the agreement, I would think that the company would begin to dismantle the unprofitable
parts of the system. Ticket prices would rise, many of the long distance trains would disappear
and much of the rolling stock would likely be sold. There would be labor strife and we taxpayers
would be responsible for the pension benefits promised to existing employees. There would be NO
savings to the Government for many years (if not forever) and we train customers would be terribly
frustrated with the extend and level of service available.
Any sale would most likely be Government financed, that being the private company would have a long
term installment contract to repay with some Government guarantees in terms of revenues into the future.
This would produce no short term financial relief to the taxpayers and the taxpayers would carry all
of the risk. In short, any private company who would accept this type of deal would probably fail
and we would end up with a very badly broken Amtrak that would either disappear or require far more
Government subsidies than currently provided.
Air travel is subsidized using user fees and taxes (paid only by air passengers). Highways are subsidized using the gas tax and licensing fees (paid only by car/bus/truck users)(and remember that highway funding helps intercity buses, car travel, AND truck freight).The main reason that privatizing Amtrak won't work is that virtually all other forms of transportation are heavily subsidized. Think about it. Roads are heavily subsidized. Thus personal automobiles and buses are. (On that level it is amazing that freight railroads can compete with trucking. One of the main reasons for this is because labor and fuel costs are so much less for freight when shipped by rail.) Air travel is heavily subsidized. Public transportation, in all its many forms, is heavily subsidized. Even water traffic is heavily subsidized. Look at the amounts spent by the Army Corps of Engineers and the Coast Guard to facilitate travel on fresh and salt water.
So, while the reasoning sounds good, it is incomplete reasoning. So the question I ask you is: If rail travel should not get government money, why should any other forms?
IMHO the far right has decided that Amtrak is an easy political target and the industries that rely heavily on our current transportation system are afraid the 'masses' will come to the realization that a good rail transportion network would be better than our current system. And I have not even mentioned the environmental, fiscal, social and military costs that go with our current way of getting from "point A" to "point B." That is why there has been so much focus on killing Amtrak.
But the new company would not maintain the (non-NEC and Keystone line) tracks either, it would still be the freight RRs. Vranich actually sites Britain (and Japan) extensively as 'proof' that privatization can work.The main reason privitazation won't work in the United States is because the federal gov't doesn't maintain the rails. The gov't does maintain the roads and airports. Or to look at it another way, how profitable would the trucking companies be if they had to fix the roads themselves. Privitazation COULD work here, but it would have to be a combination of public and private companies. AMTRAK would still get public funding to maintain the tracks (just like highway funding), and then the train operating companies (airlines) would only have to maintain equipment. The same analogy works in the air. The FAA maintains the airports (federal), the airlines only pay for the planes. Therefore, they can be profitable.
I am all for privatization if it is done properly. The United Kingdom has a fantastic private rail system, but Network Rail still maintains the tracks with taxpayer money.
One reason I could TOLERATE a UK style privatization..... The Federal Govt would be 100% responsible for giving AMTRAK ( now just the track infrastructure company) enough money to get the entire country up to "at least" NEC speeds, which would also be a win win for freight companies. In the UK, you do have many TOC (train operating companies) choices which makes things interesting. Virgin and East Coast are my favorite TOCs (airlines of choice). I would just hope that services EXPAND and not contract.
What I don't like about UK privatization is somehow the Lounge Cars and Dining Cars disappeared. This has been replaced with meals at your seat service, like in the VIA corridor. It now has made Amtrak more desirable than these TOCs.
But a couple of TOCs still run overnight trains with sleeping cars! Pretty neat!
And the status quo of Amtrak is the problem. The goal of privatization is to make the network as efficient as possible.'Privatization' has different meanings to different people. There are multiple companies out there that can and do run passenger train and freight services on a contract basis. We have seen this with the VRE and out west in Calif. Anyone can bid on running the services. No one with any common sense thinks that such services can actually make money under the current circumstances so the contractor is paid to do this. If something like this is to evolve then I would assume that the DOT would assume ownership of the NEC and maintain the infrastructure. The 'operator' would pay a fee to use the tracks based on how many trains it ran. Most of the rest of the network is privately owned by the freight railroads or by local commuter agencies. In other words, privatization does not mean the thing has to make money, it just means that the services go to the contractor that handles it in the most efficient manner. Amtrak could certainly become one of those contractors, but only if it becomes a for profit company. Or it could be the government agency that handles the contracts and pays the contractors.
This discussion can of course go on forever because there are so many variants. But as it is run right now, Amtrak is not doing much to grow the business. It is relying on the states to initiate anything and then running the trains.
While the book is not totally up-to-date (2004), it says that subsidies dropped from 1.425 billion pounds to 908 million pounds in the five years after franchising began.The interesting thing about the "privatization" of UK trains is that the government spends more money on rail operations now than it ever did under British Rail and rail fares in the UK are much higher than in the rest of Europe. So somebody has benefited, but certainly not the public._
We have some private operations of passenger trains in the U.S. with firms running commuter trains under contract with the local government agencies. Are these operations any better or cheaper than the publicly operated commuter trains? I don't think so.
The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.Supposedly, private contractors are more efficient.I think if Amtrak were to be privatized, our Government would insist that some form of Governmentoversight would be retained. This action would be most discouraging to a private company, but
depending on the agreement, I would think that the company would begin to dismantle the unprofitable
parts of the system. Ticket prices would rise, many of the long distance trains would disappear
and much of the rolling stock would likely be sold. There would be labor strife and we taxpayers
would be responsible for the pension benefits promised to existing employees. There would be NO
savings to the Government for many years (if not forever) and we train customers would be terribly
frustrated with the extend and level of service available.
Any sale would most likely be Government financed, that being the private company would have a long
term installment contract to repay with some Government guarantees in terms of revenues into the future.
This would produce no short term financial relief to the taxpayers and the taxpayers would carry all
of the risk. In short, any private company who would accept this type of deal would probably fail
and we would end up with a very badly broken Amtrak that would either disappear or require far more
Government subsidies than currently provided.
And yet the Fed still tossed in something like $2.5 Billion last year to the FAA because those fees didn't cover everything. Plus there are the hidden indirect subsidies, things like pilots that got their flight training in the military thanks to the taxpayers.Air travel is subsidized using user fees and taxes (paid only by air passengers). Highways are subsidized using the gas tax and licensing fees (paid only by car/bus/truck users)(and remember that highway funding helps intercity buses, car travel, AND truck freight).The main reason that privatizing Amtrak won't work is that virtually all other forms of transportation are heavily subsidized. Think about it. Roads are heavily subsidized. Thus personal automobiles and buses are. (On that level it is amazing that freight railroads can compete with trucking. One of the main reasons for this is because labor and fuel costs are so much less for freight when shipped by rail.) Air travel is heavily subsidized. Public transportation, in all its many forms, is heavily subsidized. Even water traffic is heavily subsidized. Look at the amounts spent by the Army Corps of Engineers and the Coast Guard to facilitate travel on fresh and salt water.
So, while the reasoning sounds good, it is incomplete reasoning. So the question I ask you is: If rail travel should not get government money, why should any other forms?
IMHO the far right has decided that Amtrak is an easy political target and the industries that rely heavily on our current transportation system are afraid the 'masses' will come to the realization that a good rail transportion network would be better than our current system. And I have not even mentioned the environmental, fiscal, social and military costs that go with our current way of getting from "point A" to "point B." That is why there has been so much focus on killing Amtrak.
However, there is no Amtrak-travel tax.
The Freight Railroads that own the track ran passenger service for years. In the first half of the 20th Century when trains were well utilized, Railroads used good passenger train service to attract Corporate Executives whose companies would ship their goods via a particular railroad. If the shippers were impressed with timely efficient passenger trains, good food in the dining cars and other amenities, they felt that the railroad would do well with freight too.
Lots of reasons for "Why Not"! Privatization of Government Services has been a disaster in most States that tried it, none more so than here in anti-government Texas where they made a mess out of the Prison and Jail Systemms, the Medicad and Food Stamp Program and the Education System! Even mighty IBM wasnt able to get the States Computer systems working and lost their contract due to the mess "consultants" (ie Politicians buddies and brother in laws)had made out of it!Having read End of the Line, I have to say that Vranich, although extremely biased, makes a considerable case for privatizing Amtrak. My question is, why not?
Of course they make money Jim. They always have. It's just that government has intervened and started to pick up part of the tab. It's good politically to fund free highways, cheap airfares and in Europe and asia, fast trains. In this country we decided to go with free interstate highways and cheap airfares at the expense of rail. Mainly because we had cheap fuel for so many years. All this is changing now and it will be interesting to see how it all plays out.NO Passenger Transportation System in the World makes money, never has, never will! Hows that for starters!
I thought we already had a thread discussing this guy's book and privatization. See no reason to rehash it.Having read End of the Line, I have to say that Vranich, although extremely biased, makes a considerable case for privatizing Amtrak. My question is, why not?
Let us not forget the Feds paid for 90% of the Interstate Highway System with a total cost in 2006 dollars of $426B.The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.Supposedly, private contractors are more efficient.I think if Amtrak were to be privatized, our Government would insist that some form of Governmentoversight would be retained. This action would be most discouraging to a private company, but
depending on the agreement, I would think that the company would begin to dismantle the unprofitable
parts of the system. Ticket prices would rise, many of the long distance trains would disappear
and much of the rolling stock would likely be sold. There would be labor strife and we taxpayers
would be responsible for the pension benefits promised to existing employees. There would be NO
savings to the Government for many years (if not forever) and we train customers would be terribly
frustrated with the extend and level of service available.
Any sale would most likely be Government financed, that being the private company would have a long
term installment contract to repay with some Government guarantees in terms of revenues into the future.
This would produce no short term financial relief to the taxpayers and the taxpayers would carry all
of the risk. In short, any private company who would accept this type of deal would probably fail
and we would end up with a very badly broken Amtrak that would either disappear or require far more
Government subsidies than currently provided.
And yet the Fed still tossed in something like $2.5 Billion last year to the FAA because those fees didn't cover everything. Plus there are the hidden indirect subsidies, things like pilots that got their flight training in the military thanks to the taxpayers.Air travel is subsidized using user fees and taxes (paid only by air passengers). Highways are subsidized using the gas tax and licensing fees (paid only by car/bus/truck users)(and remember that highway funding helps intercity buses, car travel, AND truck freight).The main reason that privatizing Amtrak won't work is that virtually all other forms of transportation are heavily subsidized. Think about it. Roads are heavily subsidized. Thus personal automobiles and buses are. (On that level it is amazing that freight railroads can compete with trucking. One of the main reasons for this is because labor and fuel costs are so much less for freight when shipped by rail.) Air travel is heavily subsidized. Public transportation, in all its many forms, is heavily subsidized. Even water traffic is heavily subsidized. Look at the amounts spent by the Army Corps of Engineers and the Coast Guard to facilitate travel on fresh and salt water.
So, while the reasoning sounds good, it is incomplete reasoning. So the question I ask you is: If rail travel should not get government money, why should any other forms?
IMHO the far right has decided that Amtrak is an easy political target and the industries that rely heavily on our current transportation system are afraid the 'masses' will come to the realization that a good rail transportion network would be better than our current system. And I have not even mentioned the environmental, fiscal, social and military costs that go with our current way of getting from "point A" to "point B." That is why there has been so much focus on killing Amtrak.
However, there is no Amtrak-travel tax.
As for those roads, Subsidyscope calculated that in 2009 we drivers actually covered about 51% of the outlays by the Fed for our highways. To say nothing of the subsidies at the state and local levels where most roads are actually paved with property taxes and not gas taxes.
Sorry, but this is very misleading. The Government spends more total money on rail now than it did under BR, but the total number of passengers is much higher now than it was under BR. The per-passenger subsidy is significantly less. It is also worth noting that at the end of BR, the rail system was being allowed to rot. The current level of subsidy more accurately reflects the cost of maintaining the rail system for the future. Ticket prices are roughly equivalent to the prices on the continent if purchased before the day of travel.The interesting thing about the "privatization" of UK trains is that the government spends more money on rail operations now than it ever did under British Rail and rail fares in the UK are much higher than in the rest of Europe. So somebody has benefited, but certainly not the public._
You are quite correct in what you say Butfli, however the problem here in the US that I see is that most people see & hear the word privatization and think that means zero subsidies. They don't realize that rail is still getting subsidies at all, the fact of whether the subsidy per passenger is lower or not isn't part of the equation.Sorry, but this is very misleading. The Government spends more total money on rail now than it did under BR, but the total number of passengers is much higher now than it was under BR. The per-passenger subsidy is significantly less. It is also worth noting that at the end of BR, the rail system was being allowed to rot. The current level of subsidy more accurately reflects the cost of maintaining the rail system for the future. Ticket prices are roughly equivalent to the prices on the continent if purchased before the day of travel.The interesting thing about the "privatization" of UK trains is that the government spends more money on rail operations now than it ever did under British Rail and rail fares in the UK are much higher than in the rest of Europe. So somebody has benefited, but certainly not the public._
Vranich does not advocate selling Amtrak to private investors and expecting it to be run at a profit without government subsidy. Vranich proposes a negative-bid system, where private rail companies bid to run designated services for the lowest subsidy. Amtrak would be free to bid in such a system and could continue to operate services if it could do it for a lower subsidy than the private companies. International experience shows that such a system results in more frequent trains, better customer service, and more passengers riding the rails. In some circumstances total government subsidy can increase, but because of increased ridership the per-passenger subsidy falls considerably.
At the point of privatization, to basically run the same system subsidy almost doubled, and still that could not keep Railtrack from crashing and burning. Even now not all TOCs are running in private hands. The ex-GNER TOC is in recievership and under government control. So it is a mixed bag, not as blazing a success as Vranich makes it out to be. To some extent actually Amtrak has achieved on the NEC exactly what the TOCs have achieved in the UK. subsidy per passenger and per passenger mile is now much lower than it was 10 years back. How exactly is setting up three separate bureaucracies to provide the same service going to cost less is hard to understand without some more details.Sorry, but this is very misleading. The Government spends more total money on rail now than it did under BR, but the total number of passengers is much higher now than it was under BR. The per-passenger subsidy is significantly less. It is also worth noting that at the end of BR, the rail system was being allowed to rot. The current level of subsidy more accurately reflects the cost of maintaining the rail system for the future. Ticket prices are roughly equivalent to the prices on the continent if purchased before the day of travel.The interesting thing about the "privatization" of UK trains is that the government spends more money on rail operations now than it ever did under British Rail and rail fares in the UK are much higher than in the rest of Europe. So somebody has benefited, but certainly not the public._
Vranich is very short on details of what regulatory mechanisms need to be set up to make it work. The Brits at least made an honest attempt to set up the necessary regulatory authorities and quite a bit of it actually works, and a horribly important part did not, causing the collapse of Railtrack after a few horrible self-inflicted accidents. That is what cost an arm and a leg initially, and until the Railtrack issue was settled.Vranich does not advocate selling Amtrak to private investors and expecting it to be run at a profit without government subsidy. Vranich proposes a negative-bid system, where private rail companies bid to run designated services for the lowest subsidy. Amtrak would be free to bid in such a system and could continue to operate services if it could do it for a lower subsidy than the private companies. International experience shows that such a system results in more frequent trains, better customer service, and more passengers riding the rails. In some circumstances total government subsidy can increase, but because of increased ridership the per-passenger subsidy falls considerably.
Another thing that the folks forget is that much to the chagrin of the privatization enthusiasts, one of the biggest opponents of that idea was none other than the AAR, which basically said they were very happy to deal with a single entity that sets passenger railroad standards, and were not interested in dealing with myriads of entities, which is what would result, if Amtrak were dismantled, as was the desire of the Bushies. There is a hint there of what needs to be in place, but people like Vranich are so obsessed with Amtrak that they could not find their way out of a wet brown paper bag if it had Amtrak written on it.You are quite correct in what you say Butfli, however the problem here in the US that I see is that most people see & hear the word privatization and think that means zero subsidies. They don't realize that rail is still getting subsidies at all, the fact of whether the subsidy per passenger is lower or not isn't part of the equation.
That sounds great, but at least in theory can't be true if the company is making any money.Supposedly, private contractors are more efficient.
Without subsidies passenger transportation doesn't make money. The government can pay the subsidies to a private concern and have some of it raked off the top as profit, or they can provide the service themselves and have all the money spent actually go towards providing that service. As a taxpayer, I'd rather my tax dollars go towards some private company making a profit.Of course they make money Jim. They always have. It's just that government has intervened and started to pick up part of the tab. It's good politically to fund free highways, cheap airfares and in Europe and asia, fast trains. In this country we decided to go with free interstate highways and cheap airfares at the expense of rail. Mainly because we had cheap fuel for so many years. All this is changing now and it will be interesting to see how it all plays out.NO Passenger Transportation System in the World makes money, never has, never will! Hows that for starters!
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