Hartford Line

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Hartford Line
Hartford Line commuter rail logo.jpg
Overview
Service type Commuter rail
Status Planned
Locale Connecticut and Massachusetts
First service January 2018 (planned)[1]
Website http://www.nhhsrail.com/
Route
Start New Haven
Stops 12
End Springfield
Line used New Haven–Springfield Line
Technical
Track owner(s) Amtrak
Route map

The Hartford Line[2] is a planned commuter rail service between New Haven, Connecticut and Springfield, Massachusetts. It will use Amtrak's New Haven–Springfield Line and supplement existing intercity rail services between the two cities. The project is a joint venture between the states of Connecticut and Massachusetts with support from the federal government as well. No operator has been selected. The service is expected to begin in January 2018.[1]

History

Background

In 1994 the Connecticut Department of Transportation conducted a feasibility study for a New Haven–Hartford service which envisaged three trips in the morning and three in the afternoon. It estimated that capital costs would be $4.4 million and that it would require an annual subsidy of $2.5 million. Ridership was projected at 1,000 per day. A revised and expanded proposal in 2001 contemplated service to Springfield and hourly service, with half-hourly service during peak periods. This would require $249 million in capital costs, both for rolling stock and to restore double tracking to the line. The service would require a yearly subsidy of $13 million but would carry 1,800–2,000 passengers daily.[3]

Various delays have prevented the establishment of this service. One source of delay for re-establishment of this commuter rail line was lack of widespread support in the New Haven region. Although reestablishing this service was briefly mentioned in the South Central Regional Council of Government's January 2001 Long Range Mobility Plan[4] it was not until 2003 that this commuter service provision began to consistently listed among key transportation priorities in the annual Greater New Haven Chamber of Commerce Legislative Agenda.[5] A March 8–13, 2004 New Haven Register/Sacred Heart University transportation issues telephone study among a random sample of 801 Greater New Haven residents determined that 38.1% would be "very or somewhat likely" to patronize the line, indicating a renewed interest in the line.[6]

The New Haven–Hartford–Springfield Commuter Rail Implementation Study, released in 2005 by ConnDOT, recommended half-hour peak service, with new stations at North Haven/Hamden, Newington, and Enfield. No action was taken following the study, as proposed schedules did not link well with those of the New Haven Line and ridership projections were low (particularly for northbound morning and southbound evening trips).[7]

Current plan

The plan calls for new stations to be built, existing stations improved, and for much of line to be double-tracked again (double track was removed beginning in 1990, leaving only single track with passing sidings).[8] The Berlin/Kensington station was recently rebuilt with a new platform, providing room for an additional track.

A presentation given at various public information meetings in December 2008 identified service levels under both "Start Up" and "Full Build" options:[9]

Start Up
  • 16 trains daily, each direction (15 on weekends)
  • 30 minute headways during peak hours
  • 1-2 hour headways off-peak
  • service provided 15 hours daily
Full Build
  • 35 trains daily, each direction
  • 15 minute headways during peak hours
  • 1 hour headways off-peak
  • service provided 20 hours daily

The above service figures include continuation of existing Amtrak service on the line. In January 2010, $40 million of stimulus funds were approved to double-track 11 miles of the corridor.[10][11] In July 2010, Governor Jodi Rell asked the Connecticut State Bond Commission to authorize borrowing $260 million in an effort to attract additional federal matching funds, to double-track the remainder of the corridor, construct freight sidings, and improve signaling. These upgrades, together with new rolling stock, should allow for two-way service during peak hours at speeds from 20 to 80 miles per hour.[12] On August 17, 2010, Connecticut lawmakers authorized borrowing the $260 million.[13] In November 2010, Governor Rell announced that Connecticut received an additional $120.9 million in funds from the Federal government to fund the project.[14]

As of April 2011, Connecticut State officials have applied for $227 million from the federal government that would complete track improvements between Hartford and Springfield, Mass. ConnDOT applied for the money to the Federal Railroad Administration, part of $2.4 billion that the governor of Florida rejected because of the spending it would require from his budget.[15]

The Massachusetts portion of the Knowledge Corridor line has already been fully funded by a $70 million Federal grant, and an additional $70 million to renovate Springfield's Union Station, which closed down in 1973 following the completion of I-91.[16]

On August 15, 2012, the Federal Railroad Administration granted a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) on the line's environmental assessment - a major step towards the obligation of $121 million in federal funding for the line.[17]

The choice of who will operate the line - Amtrak, Metro-North Railroad, or another operator - is under consideration. CTDOT announced a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) in December 2014; this will be followed by a Request for Proposals (RFP) released in February 2015 and due in September 2015. The choice of operator will be made in December 2015.[18]

On August 3, 2015, Amtrak began busing weekday morning and evening Shuttle trains to allow double tracking work to begin.[19]

In December 2015, the state announced that the cost of construction had increased by $135 million to $570 million, and that service would not begin until January 2018.[1]

CTfastrak/Interstate 84

Through Hartford and West Hartford, the commuter line will share the Amtrak right of way with the CTfastrak busway from New Britain to Hartford. The right of way originally had space for four tracks, with the busway receiving a permanent easement to use the northern two tracks spaces. Amtrak and the commuter rail would share the southern two tracks, which would be newly rebuilt, as well as a maintenance road.[20]

One proposal to replace the aging Interstate 84 viaduct through Hartford as part of the I-84 Hartford Project is an at-grade roadbed, which would require relocating the rail tracks and busway north of the new road. The viaduct crosses the tracks and busway twice, a route dictated by the placement of abutting development back when the viaduct was constructed in the 1960s. Subsequent demolition has made the proposal to move the tracks a viable option to consider.[citation needed]

Rolling stock

The line currently operates with Amtrak GE Genesis locomotives and Amfleet coaches and cab cars. When the commuter rail service starts operation, the current Shore Line East EMD GP40-2 locomotives and the rebuilt VRE coaches and cab cars will be used on the New Haven-Springfield line.

See also

References

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  4. South Central Regional Council of Governments Mobility, A Transportation Plan for the Year 2020 page 8
  5. Greater New Haven Chamber of Commerce Legislative Agenda booklets 1997 p. 7, 1999 p.7, 2000 pp. 9,10, 2002 p. 14, 2003 p.6, 2004 p. 6, 2006 p. 2
  6. [1][dead link]
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  20. Tour with CTFastrak officials, circa April 2014

External links