Dec 9, 2009

Dec 3, 2009

Lawmakers To Consider Sunrail In Special Session

Click title for full story link. A special session will start on Thursday with lawmakers meeting to tackle issues, including the proposed Sunrail commuter train project. The train, if approved, would travel on existing rail right-of-way currently used by Amtrak passenger trains and CSX freight trains. It would connect central Volusia county to Poinciana in Osceola County, running straight through Sanford, Winter park and Orlando.

McCollum v. Dockery on SunRail

Click title for full story link. Yes, they would tell you they're both talking about policy, not politics. But we can't help pointing out that Attorney General Bill McCollum and state Sen. Paula Dockery, R-Lakeland, are also Republican gubernatorial rivals. So take their Wednesday press releases on the merits of the SunRail project -- sent out within an hour of each other -- for whatever they're worth.

Dec 1, 2009

Nov 14, 2009

McCalla rail hub officials hear issues at hearing

Click title for story link. Does this sound familar to anyone?

Nov 13, 2009

Legislators close to SunRail deal

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Nov 12, 2009

Anti-union rant clouds facts

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Nov 10, 2009

Opinion: Anti-union rant clouds SunRail facts

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Mass. Agreement May Pave Way For SunRail Liability Breakthrough

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Dockery: No Reason for Dec. Session

Click title for story's link. Why are Florida lawmakers wasting tax payer dollars with a special session?

Nov 9, 2009

A Desperate Ploy To Rescue SunRail

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Rail Yard Held Hidden Peril

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Nov 3, 2009

Incumbent Says His Work With the City Is Not Done Yet

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What Did MyRegion.org Do With All That State CSX Money?

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Hey Orlando, Get Your Act Together

Click title to story link. You may have seen that US Secretary of Transportation, Ray Lahood supposedly said recently that Florida won't get high speed rail money unless the state senate agrees to CSX's blackmail payment, eerrr, Sunrail deal.

Sep 16, 2009

High Speed Rail Public Information Meeting

On Wednesday, September 16th, the Florida Department of Transportation will hold a High Speed Rail Public Information Meeting at The Lakeland Center, Sikes Hall K, 701 West Lime Street in Lakeland. The “Open House” meeting format will begin at 4:00 p.m. and conclude at 7:00 p.m. For those of you who are interested in learning more about High Speed Rail and/or showing your support for this project, I encourage you to attend this meeting. Meeting Details: · Polk County Public Information Meeting: Wednesday, September 16, 2009, 4:00 – 7:00 p.m., The Lakeland Center, Sikes Hall K, 701 West Lime Street, Lakeland.

Senator Paula Dockery Nixes SunRail Again Today.

Visit With Dyer & Vested Special Interests Fails To Sway Dockery. Dockery Denounces Attempts To Bring Up Rail Boondoggle In Special Session. September 3, 2009 Letter from Senator Paula Dockery to the Florida Senate. – Today, as a courtesy to Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, I met with him and other SunRail proponents for a brief presentation and tour of the proposed commuter-rail project. While the meeting was friendly and informative, what I saw was largely their desire for extensive redevelopment along the rail corridor. What I didn’t see was any movement by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) toward renegotiating the terrible terms of this deal with CSX Transportation. After the Senate rejected SB 1212 last May, FDOT and CSX agreed to extend the contract deadline suggesting changes would be made. Since then, however, nothing has changed. CSX has not agreed to changes in the language of SB 1212, which would require that we, the taxpayers of Florida, “assume by contract to forever protect, defend, indemnify, and hold harmless a railroad company (or its successors) from whom the department has acquired a rail corridor, and its officers, agents, and employees, from and against any liability, cost, or expense contractually assumed by the department or contractually apportioned to it, regardless of whether the loss, damage, destruction, injury, or death giving rise to any such liability, cost, or expense is caused in whole or in part and to whatever nature or degree by the fault, failure, negligence, misconduct, nonfeasance, or misfeasance of such railroad company (or its successors) or its or their officers, agents, and employees, or any other person or persons whomsoever.” Nor has FDOT renegotiated with CSX to reduce the costs of this $2.66 billion dollar project, which actually amounts to a freight subsidy for one of the most profitable railroad operators in the country. Nothing was presented to me to demonstrate that the CSX/FDOT deal for commuter rail is anything more than a poorly negotiated contract that would impose a tremendously unjustified and unnecessary additional tax burden on already over-taxed Floridians. Sunrail supporters are already campaigning to bring up this unconscionable attempt to transfer the cost for CSX’s negligent acts to beleaguered Florida taxpayers in a possible special session. Given that the fundamentals have not changed since session ended, there is nothing new for the Senate to consider. Senator Paula Dockery Doug Guetzloe Host, The Guetzloe Report www.guetzloe.com Talk Radio Big AM 810 WEUS AM Radio show call-in number: (407) 774-1085 Weekdays 11:00-Noon EST Streaming audio at www.Guetzloe.com 'listen live' GUETZLOE MEDIA GROUP, Inc. P. O. Box 531101 Orlando, FL 32853 (407) 312-1781 - phone (407) 895-8331 - telefax dougguetzloe@guetzloe.com Nick EgoroffCause Creator

Sep 10, 2009

SunRail supporters look at Amtrak to get the train moving

Click title for story link ORLANDO – After twice watching the Florida Legislature reject funding for a local commuter rail system, supporters of the project are turning to the federal stimulus package in the hopes of reviving the SunRail line, only this time they’re taking a different approach. “We’re trying a new model,” said U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, D-Orlando. Since the state’s agreement with CSX to purchase the tracks died in June, Grayson said Central Florida’s congressional delegation has been pursuing a new idea. “The Florida legislature essentially vetoed SunRail,” Grayson said of the commuter rail line that would have run from Deland in Volusia County to downtown Orlando, and then ended in Poinciana. “The result of that is the people most involved in this, we are looking to see if we can get Amtrak to pick it up and run with it.”

May 26, 2009

Backroom deals

Click title for story link. Just when you thought the Florida Legislature couldn't look any more out of control, along comes Sen. J.D. Alexander. Alexander, R-Lake Wales, is chairman of the powerful Senate Ways and Means Committee. As such, he is the chief budget writer in the Senate and one of the most powerful people in Tallahassee. So when he offered a last-minute amendment to Senate Bill 2080 on April 29, no one objected or even questioned it.

May 24, 2009

Storms Recounts CSX Battle for Panel

Click title for story link. By Bill RuftyLedger POLITICAL EDITOR LAKELAND Sen. Ronda Storms held members of the Lakeland Chamber of Commerce almost spellbound Thursday with a passionate description of the battle over CSX in this year's state Legislature. Complete with sound effects, the Valrico Republican told how she and Sen. Paula Dockery, R-Lakeland, worked to defeat a bill that would have held the railroad company blameless for certain accidents if the state bought tracks from CSX for use in a commuter rail system.

May 19, 2009

Power Player of The Week

Click the title and watch the video. Senator Paula Dockery was named Power Player of The Week. http://www.sayfiereview.com/index.php?doDate=20090505

CSX Haven Project to Be Delayed

Click title for story link. (Didn't CSX and the City of Winter Haven say these two projects weren't connected?) By Tom PalmerTHE LEDGER Published: Friday, May 8, 2009 at 9:12 p.m. Last Modified: Friday, May 8, 2009 at 9:12 p.m. WINTER HAVEN The combination of the economic downturn and the failure of commuter rail legislation in the Florida Legislature will delay construction of the CSX freight rail terminal in Winter Haven, CSX spokesman Gary Sease said this week.

Apr 15, 2009

Internet Site Gives Lakeland Plenty

Click title for story link. By ROSEMARY GOUDREAU Published: Friday, April 10, 2009 at 1:32 a.m. Last Modified: Friday, April 10, 2009 at 1:32 a.m. Readers of The Ledger's two articles about my contract with the Lakeland Downtown Development Authority might think that downtown landowners got next to nothing for their money ["City Board Shells Out $40K for Very Little," March 14, page B1, and "City Bypassed Bidding Rule for Internet Site," March 29, front page]. Please allow me to set the record straight about the work I've done on behalf of downtown Lakeland, which faces life-altering changes should the state close the pending deal with CSX railroad.AC = --> First, some background. Until November, I was the editorial page editor of The Tampa Tribune, where I wrote and edited a series of editorials about the terrible terms of the CSX deal, the most expensive rail sale in U.S. history.

Winner and loser of the week

Click title for story link. Winner of the week: State Sen. Paula Dockery. It’s mainly through the sheer doggedness and determination of the Lakeland Republican that approval for the 61.5-mile SunRail commuter rail project near Orlando looks anything but certain more than halfway through the legislative session. Up against legions of SunRail supporters, Dockery has been relentless in raising questions about the deal.

SunRail foe kicking our butts

Click title for story link. I'm a choo-choo guy. But still I can admire the way Sen. Paula Dockery of Lakeland is kicking our butts on SunRail. She led the charge to kill it last year. She has even odds of doing so again this year.Watching her take on our local legislators is watching a woman among boys. "My objective is not to derail it but renegotiate it," she says of the deal. "But nobody is interested in renegotiating it."

SunRail friends, foes turn up the volume

Click title for story link. State legislators got two very different samples of public opinion on the $1.2 billion SunRail commuter rail proposal that awaits a key Senate vote Wednesday. First thing Monday morning, the project's leading opponent in the Capitol, Sen. Paula Dockery, R-Lakeland, e-mailed her Senate colleagues a summary of critical editorials in 10 different newspapers all over the state (the pro-SunRail Orlando Sentinel did not make Dockery's cut-and-paste piece, which she headlined "Florida Newspapers Say No to SunRail deal.") See Dockery's full e-mail here.

Mar 31, 2009

City Bypassed Bidding Rule for Internet Site

Didn't the City of Lakeland beg for help in the beginning? Click title for story link. LAKELAND The Lakeland Downtown Development Authority ignored city purchasing policy when it awarded a $42,500 contract to a Tampa woman to produce a Web site opposing a state rail plan. Anne Furr, executive director of Lakeland Downtown Development Authority Click to enlarge Jim Verplanck "It should have been bid," city Purchasing Manager Mark Raiford recently told The Ledger about the contract, awarded late last year. The city's purchasing rules call for competitive bidding on goods or services costing more than $1,500. That didn't happen in the case of the deal made with Rosemary Goudreau. And the LDDA board paid Goudreau $40,000 even though the Web site was never completed. The site was to oppose a state plan to buy railway from CSX for use as a commuter rail line. The LDDA is concerned that would send more trains through downtown Lakeland.

SunRail Lobbying Continues

Click title for story link. Backers of the planned SunRail commuter train that would run through Central Florida sent a letter to state Senate President Jeff Atwater Monday extolling the virtues of the $1.2 billion project. Signed by Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and Orange County Mayor Rich Crotty -- among others -- the two-page letter touts the anticipated economic benefits of the train, which would run along 61.5 miles of track from DeLand in Volusia County through downtown Orlando to Poinciana in Osceola County.

Breaking Through The CSX No-fault Impasse

By James McGovern and Timothy Murray The Herald News Posted Mar 27, 2009 @ 05:35 PM Fall River — A historic agreement that would improve and extend the commonwealth’s rail system for both passenger and freight service, and boost the economy of the region, has been stalled for months because of an unreasonable demand for no-fault liability from CSX, the national railroad serving Massachusetts. A new federal report examining the issue, however, exposes the weakness of CSX’s position and should help break through this impasse.The deal at stake holds the future for commuter rail service west of Boston and to the SouthCoast region around. The agreement involves the rail line from Allston to the MassPort terminals in South Boston, and the Grand Junction, the line that crosses the Charles River near Boston University which is the only north-to-south freight rail connection through the city. This agreement, announced in principle last fall, also calls for raising the bridge clearance at railroad crossings west of Boston so freight trains can roll through the state with two containers stacked on each flatbed. Double-stacking will significantly expand the capacity of the system and make it more cost-effective. That’s good for CSX and for companies that ship goods by rail. It’s good for motorists and the environment because fewer trucks on the road eases congestion and improves air quality. And it helps the regional economy because Massachusetts is the rail gateway for New England. About 40-precent of all rail traffic in the six-state region flows through Massachusetts.We have come to agreement on all major elements of this plan, except the question of liability after the state buys the rail lines in question from CSX. The issue is who should be responsible for damages if there is an accident involving freight and passenger trains. CSX demands that it have no liability for an accident, even if it is the sole cause of that accident. Throughout our negotiations with CSX, the company has asserted that this no-fault provision is the industry standard, but that turns out to be incorrect.Because other states are also grappling with this same no-fault issue, Congress asked the U.S. Government Accountability Office to examine the question. The GAO report, released March 26, dispels the notion that no-fault liability, even in cases of gross negligence or willful misconduct, is the industry standard. In fact, there is no industry standard.The GAO report describes a hodgepodge of agreements across the country, with varying combinations of liability provisions. Furthermore, the GAO report cites a recent decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals that found “it was against public policy to indemnify for gross negligence and willful misconduct because this could undermine rail safety.” That’s just commonsense, and our efforts in Massachusetts should be guided by the simple notion that people and companies are responsible for their own actions.Think of it this way: a tractor trailer truck speeding out of control on Route 128, its driver drunk and barely conscious after logging 36 straight hours on the road, slams into a school bus. Who is at fault? Who pays for the damages? Under CSX’s view of the world, the truck driver (assuming he lives) and the trucking company would walk away scot-free, with all the damages paid by the state highway department.Clearly this is an absurd scenario, but it is what CSX is asking for with no-fault liability, even in cases of gross negligence or willful misconduct. No-fault is bad public policy. It undermines the basis of our justice system and it creates an environment where the freight railroads would have no incentive to maintain safe equipment and operating procedures.Today, the passenger-freight liability arrangement between the state and CSX is mixed. On the lines CSX still owns, they demand no-fault. But every day CSX runs its trains over tracks already owned by the state (MBTA) and on those tracks there is a fault-based liability arrangement, with each party taking on the responsibility to pay for damages if it is at fault.That policy should stay in place if and when the state takes ownership of the tracks. At the end of the day, we all want the same things. We want to see our freight and passenger rail systems thrive and grow. To do so, however, will require the parties to come together and work in a spirit of true partnership. It will require the federal government to act and set a true national standard for these liability arrangements. And it will take the state’s resolve to use all the legal tools at its disposal to break this impasse and complete the rail plan which holds so much promise for the economic and community development of our state and New England.Timothy Murray is Massachusetts’ lieutenant governor. James McGovern is a U.S. Congressman representing the Third Congressional District.

Will state's deal with CSX be a train wreck?

Click title for story link. By Bill ThompsonStaff writer Published: Monday, March 30, 2009 at 6:30 a.m. Last Modified: Sunday, March 29, 2009 at 10:32 p.m. Seven years ago, a speeding northbound Amtrak passenger train derailed in Putnam County, killing four people and injuring more than 140 of the nearly 500 riders on board.AC = --> .art_main_pic { width:250px; float:left; clear:left; } Investigators determined the April 2002 accident was caused by shoddy maintenance and improper stabilization of a section of the tracks, owned by CSX Transportation. As a result, Amtrak paid $12 million in damages related to that crash near Crescent City, according to an October 2004 article by The New York Times. The article noted that some claims were still outstanding two and a half years later. The Times also reported that CSX did not pay one dime, even though the multibillion-dollar company was responsible.

Commuter Rail Proposal Stagnates

Click title for story link. By LINDSAY PETERSON lpeterson@tampatrib.com Published: March 31, 2009 TALLAHASSEE - With only a month left in the state legislative session, the going has gotten slow for Central Florida's commuter rail project. A bill with a key liability agreement won't come up for at least two weeks in the next Senate committee scheduled to hear it. At the same time, the head of the U.S. House Transportation Committee has called signing such agreements an "unacceptable practice." The comments from U.S. Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., came in response to a U.S. Government Accountability Office report about the arrangements that governments make when they buy freight railroads for public use. In Florida's case, the state plans to give CSX Transportation $432 million for 61 miles of the track that runs through downtown Orlando. The track would be used for a commuter system, called SunRail.

Train Activity Will Increase

Click title for story link. By LAURA KINSLER lkinsler@tampatrib.com Published: March 26, 2009 DADE CITY - Dade City will see a 50 percent increase in freight train traffic even if the state's commuter rail deal with CSX falls apart, a rail executive told city commissioners. Commissioners called a special workshop this week with officials from the Florida Department of Transportation and rail giant CSX to discuss how the proposed SunRail project would affect Dade City. The Florida Legislature is considering a proposal to buy 61 miles of CSX tracks for the state's first commuter rail line in Orlando. The project would require CSX to reroute more than a dozen freight trains from the A-line to the S-line, which travels through town, on their way to a massive new rail hub in Winter Haven.

Mar 25, 2009

Winter Haven

Click title for story link. Winter Haven touts itself as the distinctively different community to live, work and play in, and now that city officials have secured a deal with CSX, the goals that have been set for the future landscape will be attainable, those officials said.AC = --> Construction of the proposed Evansville Western Intermodal Terminal Facility in southeastern Winter Haven is closer to becoming a reality. Construction is expected to begin this year and will take 18 months to complete. City officials have said the project will stimulate economic development and provide an alternative of transporting goods and services.

Mar 10, 2009

Bills in Legislature Would Give CSX Free Ride on Liability

Click title for story link. Published: Sunday, March 8, 2009 at 12:01 a.m. Last Modified: Saturday, March 7, 2009 at 11:05 p.m. Joe Follick, in a Ledger article Feb. 19, was a bit misleading about the transfer of liability for accidents in the proposed Central Florida Commuter Rail Corridor to state taxpayers.AC = --> Mr. Follick wrote that "The only thing lawmakers need to approve to complete the deal is a proposal that would make the company and the state responsible for their own equipment, employees and passengers in a crash, regardless of who might be at fault." Actually the Proposed Committee Bill 901 before the House and Senate Bill 1212 require to "forever protect, defend and indemnify and hold harmless" CSX, even for CSX's negligent, willful and wanton conduct. The no-fault principal really means that Florida taxpayers will be responsible for paying the bill in several scenarios even if CSX "or any other person or persons whomsoever" is completely at fault and even if CSX's conduct is so reckless that it results in punitive damages.

Mar 9, 2009

Outrage.. Florida's economy crashes, state holds $795 million in cool cash for CSX.

Click title for story link. Posted by madfloridian in General Discussion Thu Jan 22nd 2009, 03:29 PM The CSX deal is one of Jeb Bush's legacies to this state. It was rammed through in 2004 and 2005 so secretly that some moderate Republicans never knew about it. This is an outrageous situation. It really is. It is going to hurt most of Central Florida by cutting cities in half with long freight trains and destroying rural subdivisions and environment. CSX appears to be completely in charge, able to make all the rules.This editorial is an angry one. It goes so far as to ask the question about Florida:

Mar 5, 2009

Why Isn't Winter Haven Worried?

Click title for story link. By Laura Kinsler Tampa Bay Online DADE CITY - City Commissioners are keeping an eye on Tallahassee as state legislators debate the $1.2 billion commuter rail deal with railroad giant CSX. The 61-mile commuter rail line around Orlando would have a direct effect on Dade City because dozens of additional freight trains could be rerouted directly through the town on their way to a massive new rail hub in Winter Haven. City Commissioner Curtis Beebe worries that Dade City has been too slow to anticipate the problems additional rail traffic on the "S-line" could bring. The plan includes about $300 million for CSX to make improvements on the S-line to accommodate as many as 54 trains a day.

Mar 4, 2009

Stop Winter Haven Rail Yard

Click title for story link. It is not too late to stop the proposed CSX rail yard in Winter Haven. None of the construction has started. This bad idea was first proposed quietly three years ago while Jeb Bush was governor. He favored the proposal.AC = --> This rail yard will cause pollution in Winter Haven to adjacent residential areas. The rail yard will bring endless freight trains through downtown Lakeland, which recently spent millions of dollars renovating the downtown, including the area next to the Amtrak station. We should not give up. We can contact our county commissioners and other elected officials and tell them that we do not want the city of Lakelanddestroyed by endless freight trains, long freight trains, going through Lakeland. DANIEL BARKER Lakeland

Feb 27, 2009

Chicago CSX Intermodal Site Devastates Lives

Is this the fate of SE WinterHaven? COPYRIGHT 2006 Chicago Tribune Byline: Antonio Olivo Apr. 10--At night, while most of Chicago sleeps, families near the CSX Intermodal rail yard in West Englewood lie awake, their homes shuddering from something that sounds like trucks falling from the sky. In daylight, they watch cracks spreading across ceilings or walls and wipe clean the black diesel dust that settles on floors and dishes--byproducts of a 24-hour operation that handles as many as 700 truckloads per day. When CSX opened the rail yard in 1998--an economic boon to the struggling South Side neighborhood--everybody knew there would be noise and traffic. The city, initially wary of the yard, negotiated an agreement with the freight hauler to pay $300,000 a year into a neighborhood investment fund as a way to turn a potential nuisance into a plus for the blighted area. But neighbors say the fallout from rail yard activities is worse than they imagined. And the money, nearly half of it set aside for homes with bad roofs, porches or windows, seems to have gone everywhere but to those in the worst spots. Portions of the $2.8 million paid by CSX so far have gone to a picture-frame shop, a suburban roofing contractor, a street-cleaning program employing ex-convicts and a project to build a neighborhood strip mall, documents show. But plans for a sound barrier have fizzled. Chicago was built around one of the nation's great railroad hubs, and from its early years, there have been conflicts between residential life and the demands of the industry. A century and a half later, the South and Southwest Sides remain crucial junctions in the nation's freight system, now dependent on steel containers weighing up to 40 tons each that can be switched from trucks to railcars to ships. CSX does not dispute Englewood residents' complaints that the West Englewood yard has caused sleep deprivation, illness due to diesel pollution and property damage. In response to a class-action lawsuit last year, in which some nearby homeowners sought to limit the yard's operations to daytime and early-evening hours, the company did not take issue with those allegations. CSX lawyers instead noted that the company is immune to such court action under a 1995 federal law that leaves regulation of rail operations to the Surface Transportation Board. That federal agency said it hasn't received any complaints about the yard. A federal judge dismissed the suit, noting CSX's contention that cutting operations would cost $500,000 a day in lost revenues. "We're working with the alderman and the faith-based organizations to try and be good neighbors," CSX spokeswoman Kim Freely said. Critics complain, however, that any benefits from the rail yard have been arbitrary. Of the 35 or so households that have benefited from CSX's West Englewood fund, mainly through a hand-drawn lottery held in 2003, most are at least half a mile from the yard, where its concert of slamming containers, horns and revving diesel engines can scarcely be heard. "Those people don't even know there is a train yard over here," said Quincy Johnson, who blames a crumbling porch and ceiling cracks in his Hamilton Avenue home on a towering overhead crane nearby that stacks room-size metal containers onto metal train beds. City officials say it is not their problem. "If there are complaints about damage and people believe it is a result of CSX, they need to deal with CSX directly," said Connie Buscemi, spokeswoman for the city's Planning and Development Department. Before the rail yard opened, city officials had sought to open an industrial park in 10 vacant acres owned by the former Conrail company. Upon learning that CSX had acquired that land and intended to use it, the city persuaded the freight company to contribute the equivalent of the tax revenues projected for the industrial park. Officials targeted a 2-square-mile area surrounding the site as the stage for local improvements delivered by the CSX fund. The money has fostered community development in a blue-collar neighborhood long starving for local investment, Buscemi said, adding that the city has not received any proposals specifically seeking to repair homes closest to the yard. Besides agreeing to pay the city at least $300,000 a year until 2018 for its operations in West Englewood, the Florida-based company has sponsored local parades and turkey drives and contributed $2,000 toward a new neighborhood community center, Freely said. The intensity of need in the neighborhood showed when the city sponsored a 2003 lottery to determine whose homes would be fixed with $300,000 set aside for emergency repairs. In an elementary school auditorium, members of a standing-room-only crowd strained to hear whether their names had been pulled from a box up on stage. Several who won had never seen the rail yard, those who attended recalled. "The people closest to the yard got a raw deal on that one," said John Paul Jones, chairman of the non-profit Greater Englewood Community and Family Task Force. Carolyn Brown won new windows, doors and some tuck-pointing on her Throop Street graystone, which sits a mile from the yard. "I didn't have the money to do any of that," Brown said of the $10,000 job. "I was lucky." Some small-business owners also have benefited. Herbert Goode, president of Silver Cloud Galleries, a picture-frame manufacturer in West Englewood, applied for aid and used the $25,000 he received to pay for glass-block windows and other renovations to the brick industrial building his company bought in 2000. "I was going to do the repairs anyway," Goode said. "I didn't get as much as I expected. Still, I was reimbursed for something, which is better than a kick in the head." James Capraro, a veteran community activist who helped city officials negotiate the terms of the fund, said local community leaders did not anticipate the rail yard's impacts. His group, the Greater Southwest Development Corp., has used $250,000 from the fund toward efforts to rehab four abandoned houses in nearby Chicago Lawn, he said. Another group, Neighborhood Housing Services, has used about $400,000 from the fund to help homeowners--none closest to the rail yard--with facade improvements. "The fund wasn't created to correct the ills of the railroad because the railroad wasn't supposed to create any ills," Capraro said. The fortunes of those helped by the fund have heightened resentment near the CSX yard, where the noise continues. "My granddaughter [is] scared, waking up screaming sometimes," said Annetta Allen, gesturing toward Janai, 6. The pigtailed girl watched hip-hop videos in their Hamilton Avenue living room, where a web of cracks zigzagged from a wall onto the ceiling. Outside, a recently paved sidewalk also had cracks. Local concerns fall most heavily at Goodlow Magnet School, which sits a block from the yard on 62nd Street, near a CSX retention pond that neighbors say is a mosquito problem. Goodlow Principal Patricia Lewis said teachers complain about groggy pupils sleeping at their desks. A concentration of asthma cases at the school also has officials wondering whether it's related to diesel fumes and dust wafting from the rail yard, though there is no evidence to support that, she said. Ald. Theodore Thomas (15th), whose ward wraps around the rail yard, agreed that residents are suffering. But he said his hands are tied by the agreement that spreads the neighborhood fund over 2 square miles. "I don't like the service area of CSX," Thomas said. "I think we're stuck with it." Ollie Mae Ervin has for years kept her grandchildren's old socks as proof of her misery. Wrapped inside plastic freezer bags, the lace-fringed toddler socks were covered with the black diesel dust Ervin says she mops from her linoleum floors most mornings. Splayed across a table like crime scene evidence, the packages carried handwritten labels that documented years of frustration: "2002, 2003, 2004, 2005." "I just mop so much all the time," Ervin said, while a diesel engine rumbled outside. "Some days, there's so much dust you feel you can hardly breathe." aolivo@tribune.com Copyright (c) 2006, Chicago Tribune Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-6515, or e-mail reprints@krtinfo.com. TICKER SYMBOL(S): NYSE:CSX COPYRIGHT 2006 Chicago Tribun

Feb 14, 2009

CSX, Commuter Rail: Let Us See Clearly

Click title for story link. By Glenn Marston Published: Monday, February 9, 2009 at 12:01 a.m. Last Modified: Monday, February 9, 2009 at 7:48 a.m. This would seem to be CSX day on the opinion pages. We have an editorial about Gov. Charlie Crist promoting Orlando's proposed commuter-rail project. We have an op-ed column by Noranne Downs, P.E., District 5 secretary for the Florida Department of Transportation. She says a previous editorial, "Florida Holds Gold Mine for CSX," Jan. 22, misstated the commuter-rail project's cost. Then there's this column. My purpose is to speak for The Ledger in greater detail about the project cost, and to lay out the rationale and motivation for our editorials about CSX. The two editorials peg the price of the overall project, what we call the CSX deal, at $795 million. Downs says the payout to CSX would be $432 million, because certain costs, such as those for five overpasses being built to accommodate increased freight traffic along the S Line, should not be included. CSX's S Line runs down from Jacksonville through Ocala and Lakeland, and would gain much traffic that has been routed along CSX's A Line. The A Line long has been the main route. It runs from Jacksonville through Orlando.

Feb 5, 2009

Crist On Board For Orlando Commuter Rail

CRIST ALL BOARD FOR ORLANDO COMMUTER RAILBy KEITH LAINGTHE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDAEnhanced resources for this story:are available at www.newsserviceflorida.comTHE CAPITAL, TALLAHASSEE, Feb. 4, 2009.............Gov. Charlie Crist lent his support Wednesday to commuter rail in the Orlando area, something that was missing from the failed effort to get the project on track last year. Crist mostly stayed above the fray during what was one of the Legislature's most high profile fights last year, as opponents of re-routing freight trains and trial lawyers opposed to lawsuit protections for CSX Corp. killed the plan. But Crist said this year, he'll help make the $1.2 billion project go, supporting legislation (SB 1212) filed Tuesday that would build the train and resolve the liability issue. Last year, the plan would have freed CSX from liability for problems on the rails in some cases in exchange for use of the company's existing tracks. The new plan now backed by Crist addresses the liability issue by splitting responsibility for accidents between the state and CSX instead of completely absolving the company in the event of a mishap. The bill is sponsored in the Senate by Sens. Lee Constantine, R-Altamonte Springs, and Andy Gardiner, R-Orlando, and will be carried in the House by Reps. Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park, Doug Holder, R-Sarasota, Mike Horner, R-Kissimmee, Geraldine Thompson, D-Orlando, and Eric Eisnaugle, R-Orlando. Advocates said the proposed commuter train, now known as SunRail after an online poll of Orlando residents, would create 13,000 jobs and generate $4.6 billion for the construction sector over 20 years. Supporters also said the train would spur 113,000 construction projects within a half-mile range of 17 stations that will be built between DeLand and Poinciana and would remove the number of cars that fill one lane of Interstate 4 during weekday rush hours.Joined by Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer at a Capitol news conference, Crist asked who could be against that kind of project. “It's a wonderful thing to do,” the governor said. "It helps the economy, it helps transportation, it helps people have the opportunity to move around in a way that is more clean..... And that's awfully important, especially in a state like ours that is so beautiful and continues to get cleaner every single day, so the important engine of tourism continues to have opportunity to flourish."Crist added that he was particularly impressed with the cooperation between the local governments involved in the project - the city of Orlando and Volusia, Seminole, Orange, and Osceola counties."This is an incredibly cooperative effort to do what's right, not only for central Florida, but really for all of Florida," Crist said during the news conference. "Having the opportunity to have more rail...to uncongest our interstates and our roadways is one of the most important things that we can do."Crist flashed his trademark optimism over the train's prospects in the Legislature this year, even while acknowledging last year's defeat. Several Orlando area interest groups pushed hard for the train in 2008, as they are again this year, but it was derailed by the CSX liability indemnity provisions as well a plan to reroute freight trains through a Lakeland Senate district represented by a staunch opponent in Republican Sen. Paula Dockery. The senator and the trial bar fought hard against the proposal, ultimately dooming the legislation. Advocates said last fall that it would take support from Crist to overcome the opposition and in giving it to them Wednesday, Crist said that this year will be different. "(We) tried to do it last year and this time we're going to make it go," he told supporters who filled the Cabinet room with handmade signs in favor of the train. Crist added that one reason he is optimistic is because of the new administration in Washington, D.C., which is eager to fund projects like rail. "It's about turning dirt," Crist said. "As I understand it, there are funds there to do it now. By going ahead and getting the bill approved as early as possible, we get matching...federal funds to put more coal in the engine as relates to this project." Dyer, who also chairs the Central Florida Commuter Rail Commission Governing Board, also said the SunRail project is a perfect example of the kind of initiative that President Barack Obama has said will be necessary to stimulate the nation's economy. "Central Florida and the entire state are feeling the effects of the nationwide recession," Dyer said, "Everyday we hear more and more about communities that are in desperate need of projects that create jobs and jump start spending. We hear about needing shovel-ready projects. Today, we unite to tell the residents of Florida and our state legislators, who have a very important vote coming up on this in a few weeks, that SunRail is an economic stimulus and we are ready to roll." Like Crist, Sen. Constantine said the legislative fight over the train would be different than it was in 2008. "Last year there was a great deal of confusion about this issue," Constantine said. "The local folks back home and the DOT have worked tirelessly to work with all of the various local areas, whether it be Tampa Bay or Polk County, to make them understand the importance of this issue. We in the Legislature...are trying to do everything we can to alleviate the concerns of our fellow members."Specifically, Constantine said the new bill would tackle the concerns of lawyers and residents of Lakeland and Polk County. "We have worked very hard with the trial lawyers to eliminate the sovereign immunity issue and get them to feel comfortable with this issue," he said. "We have been working very closely with the city of Lakeland to let them understand that we're there to help them. In the bill filed yesterday, we actually have put language in bill to alleviate a lot of the concerns of Lakeland and we pledge to continue to work with them on the concerns they, and any other area of this state, have." That's why Constantine said he shared Crist's optimism that lawmakers would be ready to get on board with the train proposal this year. "We're going to continue, we're going to work through this and we're going to make it happen in Senate," Constantine said.However, in a letter to Crist after it became known that he would endorse the train proposal - and in an interview with the News Service after Crist's announcement - Dockery again girded for a fight over the train in the upper chamber. "It's not that I'm not in favor of the commuter rail," Dockery told the News Service. "I am not in favor of the deal as negotiated. What I was asking in my letter is 'let's sit down and open up this agreement.'" In particular, Dockery said, she is not in favor of the amount of money the state will end up paying CSX for the use of its 61 miles of track in addition to the $615 million it will cost to build stations, purchase train cars and acquire land for parking lots. The plan currently calls for another $432 million for expenses related to freight track, which Dockery said should be dealt with separately. "I don't think the governor understands the entire project," Dockery said. "I think he is only focusing on the commuter rail aspect of it. But as we all know, when it comes to things like this, the devil is in the details." The details, Dockery said, are what bother her the most about the bill championed by Crist and several lawmakers Wednesday. "This is one of the poorest negotiated deals I have ever seen," she said. "I can't imagine why the Florida DOT would behave so poorly on behalf of taxpayers." Dockery said Massachusetts was negotiating a similar deal with CSX for roughly the same length of track, but that state is paying much less. "We are talking about spending $641 million to buy 61 miles," Dockery said. "That's $10 million per mile. This is the most costly rail sale in the United States. The state of Massachusetts....has the same hang ups with liability as Florida, but they are paying $1.5 million per mile." As she said in her letter to Crist, Dockery said she hopes to be able to talk with the governor soon about her problems with the bill. "If we were to open up that agreement, we could have commuter rail go forward and we could have a win-win-win for everybody, including the communities negatively affected by the freight rail. I haven't heard back from the governor, but I'm looking forward to having the opportunity to sit down and explain to him how commuter rail can be a win-win for everybody."Whether or not that conversation happens remains to be seen, but Dockery said Crist's support of the rail plan would likely not change its legislative outcome. Dockery said she is already meeting with fellow senators to rally opposition to the plan. "I think the battle will again be in the Senate," Dockery said. "I really don't anticipate there will be enough votes. I don't think senators want to go home to explain transferring liability from a private company to the taxpayers. The governor is a likable guy, and he's very charismatic, so his support will be important, but I think the outcome is going to be the same as last year." --END--2/4/2009Illuminating the Sunshine Statehttp://www.newsserviceflorida.com

Feb 4, 2009

Dear Cindy Hummel

Click title for story link. Cross-posted from Metro I-4 News. As you may have noticed, two of the possible freight realignment routes - seemingly the only available routes - for downtown Lakeland involved reactivating the track that became the Van Fleet Trail between Wildwood and Auburndale. At least one of them would then reactivate closed tracks that run through the very heart of downtown Winter Haven, which would make for wonderful poetic justice. And at least one would run into a new park in Auburndale. In a shocking development, government officials with Auburndale and Winter Haven are less than enthusiastic about those ideas.Auburndale Special Projects Director Cindy Hummel reacted with “total fury” to the route that would run through the park, according to the News Chief. What follows is the letter I imagine Winter Haven Chamber Pres. Bob Gernert and City Manager David Greene are crafting right now to set her straight. Dear Cindy: We read recently that you are angry about the possibility of rerouting freight traffic in ways that may affect the public spaces you’ve spent lots of money to enhance. That’s understandable. But you have to get over it. In the grand scheme of things, in this economy, public spaces must be sacrificed. We here in the Winter Haven government and business elite are honest and upstanding about our commitments, and we’ve stated publicly that we want to help Lakeland with the rerouting made necessary partly because of our ILC. As Bob wrote on Oct. 16, 2008: “Lakeland’s agenda includes rerouting freight traffic away from downtown. The Florida Department of Transportation is currently studying the feasibility for just such rerouting. We support Lakeland’s quest for the best solution possible.” A map and common sense will tell you that the Van Fleet Trail line is the most efficient way to reroute freight traffic from Lakeland’s core and avoid creating a longterm industrial corridor/freight superhighway leading into the ILC. And you know, none of us - including you and Bobby Green - had any concern about this deal when it was dumping the bad parts in the middle of Lakeland’s public projects. Jack Myers even talked about how much you guys like trains, if we remember correctly. It’s only fair and right that we, who have supported and fought for this plan, embrace its consequences. We must all sacrifice a little for the greater glory of CSX, economic development, and the regional unity embodied by the “One Polk” organization. And honestly, trains and parks and trails can coexist quite well together. We in Winter Haven have a much greater sacrifice to make. Bob’s already looking for new office space to replace the chamber office that will be demolished to make room for the revitalized line through downtown. But that’s a small price to pay to for 100 jobs or so at the ILC and the big financial boost for Phoenix Industries and Highland Cassidy. So get on board, Cindy. Yours Truly In Freight, Bob Gernert and David Greene

Feb 3, 2009

Why Is It So Hard For The Sentinel To Say "CSX"?

Click title for story link.
The Ocala Star-Banner took a hatchet recently to the state’s $1.2 billion CSX/Orlando freight expansion and dump deal, both in a straight news story and in an editorial. Versions of the editorial promptly appeared in The (Lakeland) Ledger and the Gainesville Sun. Two of several money paragraphs: “Why aren’t the fiscal conservatives, or just the fiscally responsible, in Tallahassee asking why the state of Florida is paying a national corporation that made a record $2.2 billion profit last year - up 26 percent from the year before, incidentally - so much for a project that some observers say could be done for one-third or less than the current projected price tag? When a recent study declared the Orlando commuter project the costliest railroad acquisition in U.S. history - $10.5 million per mile - where were our representatives in Tallahassee demanding a reassessment of the project’s scope and cost? DOT officials say that since the CSX money was appropriated by the Legislature in 2006 for the commuter line, hence, for CSX, it does not need the Legislature’s approval to move forward with the project. That, of course, begs the question: Who, exactly, is running state government, and what happened to checks and balances?”

Feb 2, 2009

Wrong Track For Florida

Please visit the website below for all the latest CSX and commuter rail information. http://www.wrongtrack4florida.com/

Jan 22, 2009

Recession Rides the Rails

Click title for story link. The state of FL paying CSX money seems like throwing good money after bad at this point.
John D. Boyd Associate Editor Across the rail freight industry, the only business piling up is debris from a worsening economic crunch. Shippers, watching demand evaporate from their own industrial and retail customers alike, are booking far fewer trains as they close plants and lay off workers, and the impact is reverberating across rail networks that had been carefully constructed over years.

Jan 17, 2009

Blog: Trial Lawyers drop rail opposition

Click title for story link. Aaron Deslatte at the Orlando Sentinel's Central Florida Political Pulse blog reports that the trial lawyers have dropped their opposition to the pending deal that will be surfacing in the upcoming session of the Florida Legislature to approve a deal to make commuter rail happen in the Orlando area. The lawyers' position comes at the price of dropping sovereign immunity protection to private companies involved in the commuter rail project. However, the item quoted one legislator as cautiously pointing out that it's not clear whether that means the votes are there to approve the deal.

Jan 13, 2009

More rail traffic through Ocala hinges on deal for commuter line

Click title for story link. By Bill ThompsonStaff Writer Published: Sunday, January 11, 2009 at 6:30 a.m. Last Modified: Sunday, January 11, 2009 at 9:30 p.m. Just before Christmas, vehicular traffic began rolling over westbound lanes of the new railroad overpass on Southwest 17th Street, about four months before the bridge is expected to be fully operational. So, when will the trains - or rather the extra trains - start rolling under it? The short answer is: It depends. Although the Florida Department of Transportation says the $25 million overpass was always in its plans, Marion County transportation officials say requests for such a bridge went unheeded - and unfunded - until FDOT and CSX Transportation started discussing a commuter rail line from DeLand through Orlando and on to Poinciana, just southwest of Kissimmee.

Jan 9, 2009

Lack Of Debate On CSX Rail Deal Riles Lawmakers

Click title for story link. By LINDSAY PETERSON, The Tampa Tribune Published: November 28, 2007 TAMPA - Several Florida lawmakers are fuming over a $491 million deal the state is on the verge of signing with railroad company CSX Transportation. They say it passed through the Legislature without most members knowing anything about it, and they want to find out why. The deal would give the rail company nearly half a billion dollars for a section of track in the Orlando area and upgrades on freight lines into a hub planned for Polk County. The Orlando area track would be for commuter rail. "I don't think this is a good deal, but the fact is, I don't really know because I don't have enough information. This never even came up in our committee," said state Sen. Paula Dockery, a Republican from Lakeland and member of the Transportation Committee. The $491 million package will come up for final review in next spring's legislative session, now that CSX Transportation and the Department of Transportation have worked out details of how it will be spent.

Jan 8, 2009

Winter Haven Chamber of Commerce Blog

Click title for story link. Sundance, Reed and Staging … Chamber Stands By Integrity of Visit Posted by Bob Gernert on January 7, 2009 at 4:15 pm Ledger reporter Tom Palmer in a blog post today (January 7) reports that the Polk County Commission heard residents from the Sundance Ranch Estates demand the CSX Transportation buy their property located adjacent to the planned inter modal rail terminal. Speaking for the residents, Sharon Kiser is quoted as having noted, “Our concerns are being ignored.” But looking back nearly two years ago the residents of Sundance did their own ignoring of offers from CSX that would have involved them in the planning process. You can read that post here. More troubling from this writer’s standpoint is the process that saw both Kiser and Commissioner Jean Reed wonder out loud if a fact-finding visit organized by the Winter Haven Chamber of Commerce was a “staged presentation.” Speculation included whether trains and trucks were kept out of the area to provide a calmer, quieter impression.

Jan 7, 2009

County Asks CSX to Buy Out Rail Yard Neighbors

Click title for story link. By Tom PalmerTHE LEDGER Published: Wednesday, January 7, 2009 at 11:51 a.m. Last Modified: Wednesday, January 7, 2009 at 12:02 p.m. BARTOW County commissioners voted unanimously Wednesday to send a letter to CSX asking them to buy the homes of residents in the Sundance subdivision. The rural subdivision is across the railroad tracks from the planned CSX freight terminal, which was approved in October for a 318-acre site on the south side of Winter Haven. The vote came after homeowner Sharon Kiser appealed to commissioners for help because of concerns the expected noise from the facility will disrupt the quiet rural atmosphere of their subdivision.

Intermodal Grows Up

Click title for story link. While fuel prices are now on the wane, the stings of exceedingly high gasoline costs, and now the global recession, are factors weighing heavily on shippers as they consider transportation options. Most contend lower fuel prices will be short lived, and no one can predict how long the economy will remain in the doldrums. But one fact is certain: Business is off, meaning shipment volumes are down, and all efforts must be made to hold onto a respectable profit margin. Add to this the growing trend to “think and act green”—a practice that, for many companies, can add expense because it means introducing new processes. Thankfully for many, where transportation is concerned there are economical options. So, as a way to combat all the above mentioned ‘negatives’ out there, many shippers are now considering intermodal.“Today, customers are increasingly more apt to fit into the intermodal mix,” comments Jeffrey R. Brashares, president of Logistics Services Group, Pacer Logistics Inc. But so far, he says it’s the large companies, particularly retailers and importers of electronics, which are using the mode. The Bon-Ton Stores, Inc., one of the country’s largest regional departments store chains, for example, is using intermodal as a logistics mode for the first time. “With the cost of fuel on the rise, we had to rethink our supply chain,” says Robert Hook, divisional vice president, transportation. “After a successful trial run, we implemented Schneider Intermodal into our day-to-day transportation plan and have shifted a significant amount of freight to rail.”

Jan 4, 2009

Freight train derails in Santa Rosa County

Click title for story link. Six engines and 13 of 46 cars in a CSX freight train derailed this morning in Milton, causing no injuries but leaving a monumental mess. CSX crews and others planned to work through tonight to repair the tracks.Officials hoped that rail traffic could be moving as early as Sunday across the stretch of railroad near Avalon Boulevard.Late this afternoon, workers were still creating a temporary road to allow heavy equipment onto the scene. Others were using welders' torches to cut damaged sections of the railroad track, and seven trucks loaded with railroad ties were already waiting nearby to replace the broken pieces. The wreck caused thousands of gallons of petroleum to spill onto the area. “Our primary concern was making sure that the petroleum has been contained, and that has been done,” said Gary Sease, a spokesman for CSX in Jacksonville. “Now, it’s a matter of getting it cleaned up.”

Jan 3, 2009

Norfolk storage plan concerns residents

Click title for story link. This story sounds like the Sundance neighborhood. By DAN DEARTHDecember 17, 2008dan.dearth@herald-mail.com HAGERSTOWN — A handful of residents on Tuesday spoke against a proposal to annex into the city about 95 acres of land south of Hagerstown that the Norfolk Southern Railway Co. would use to store vehicles. The residents, who live on Oak Ridge Drive, spoke during a public hearing Tuesday at Hagerstown City Hall. Mary Vorreyer told the council that she knew the proposal would be approved, but she asked them to do whatever they could to mitigate the negative impact on the residents who live there. Vorreyer said she was concerned tractor-trailer traffic and lights from the storage facility would disrupt the neighborhood at night. “I know it’s going to go through. We’re just looking for assistance,” Vorreyer said.

Crucial 17th Street bridge debuts tonight

Ocala gets a bridge to handle traffic from the Winter Haven ILC but Polk County is told traffic won't increase. Why a new bridge then? By Joe CallahanStaff writer Published: Tuesday, December 23, 2008 at 6:30 a.m. Last Modified: Tuesday, December 23, 2008 at 5:49 a.m. OCALA - Westbound traffic will finally get a chance to cross over the 17th Street bridge tonight, the first time the public will drive over the busy CSX railroad line. Last-minute shoppers looking for those final gifts - and more importantly, emergency vehicles - will be able to head west without fear of being delayed by a passing train. Karen Kersey, a Florida Department of Transportation spokeswoman, said the project, which is scheduled to be completed by July 27, is ahead of schedule, though by how much will depend on weather. But if all goes well, it could be done as early as mid-April. That's because the contractor, Kiewit Corp. of Orlando, has a $750,000 incentive to get done quickly. It will get $7,500 per day - for up to 100 days - for each day it is ahead of schedule. To Ocala officials, residents and store owners in the area, the final product can't be done soon enough. The $25 million project is essential to allowing for smooth traffic flow in the area. The bridge spans a CSX railroad line, a line that connects port cities Jacksonville and Tampa that will likely see an "increase" in traffic in the coming years. Ocala Mayor Randy Ewers said 17th Street, which is also State Road 464, is essential in keeping traffic moving from one side of Ocala to the other. Without a bridge, train traffic creates absolute gridlock. The bridge was designed to keep traffic along 17th Street flowing. Right now when a train passes, traffic backs up in both directions, especially impacting the U.S. 441/17th Street intersection. And if even more trains begin impacting the area, the bridge will be the lifeline in keeping drivers safe and sane in the years to come, Ewers said Monday. "It's a must now that CSX is planning to increase traffic," said Ewers, adding that the bridge will also help keep Ocala residents safe during medical emergencies or other types of emergencies. The railroad crossing is about a mile from two hospitals and a bridge will allow ambulances and emergency vehicles a faster way to cross, even when trains are passing through the area. Wendell Rora, Ocala Fire Rescue spokesman, said because of the potential of train delays that fire trucks have been routed away from 17th Street for years to prevent delays caused by trains. But once the bridge opens, those routes could be important. "In our profession, a few seconds could mean life or death," Rora said. "It could be the difference in saving a life." Capt. Joel Matthias, an Emergency Medical Services supervisor for Marion County, said the bridge will give rescue personnel a much more reliable route to hospitals. He said trains have led them to reroute, causing extra minutes to pass before getting patients to the hospital. The bridge will definitely help in that regard. Ewers said that crossing is the main concern, though there are others. With the possibility of higher train volume, Ewers is also concerned about the increased train traffic in other areas of Ocala, especially at the Northeast 36th Avenue and Northeast 25th Avenue crossings. And right now there are no plans for bridges at those crossings. "If something happened at either one of those crossings, there would be quite a bit of travel to get around those [north/south streets]," Ewers said. Ewers said the city is negotiating with CSX in hopes of coming up with a plan that is a win-win situation for both area residents and CSX. Ewers hopes increased CSX traffic could mean attracting industry. "It would be great if we could get a spur line into some industrial areas," said Ewers, adding the trick will be balancing increased train traffic so that it doesn't cripple other traffic routes. CSX spokesman Gary Sease said Monday that increased train traffic is a possibility, but only if the state purchases tracks in the Orlando area for a commuter rail service. A decision on whether the state will purchase the tracks should be made in the first half of 2009. If approved, then Sease said freight that once was moved trough the Orlando area will end up on the "S" line, the route through Ocala from Winter Haven to Baldwin, hubs for the port cities. He said that if that happens, there will be side tracks added along the route, including some in the Ocala area, that will allow trains to safely pass. Those will be necessary if train traffic increases. "We're hoping to do this in a way that it doesn't impact the way of life for Marion County and Ocala," Sease said, adding the side tracks could mean train traffic may be less noticeable.

Jan 2, 2009

OUR READERS SAY By Amanda Ryan

Click title for story link. OUR READERS SAY CSX Bad for Neighborhood Published: Wednesday, December 31, 2008 6:08 AM EST AMANDA RYAN WINTER HAVEN — CSX states responsibility in the community as one of their concepts.They claim they want to be good neighbors, then why are they not considering Sundance Ranch Estates and the families who live there as they plan their new Intermodal facility.This new site is literally right in our backyards. We are families who are trying to enjoy the quality of life that Sundance has to offer, but with this new facility, our quality of life and our property values will drastically change.We have invested in our homes for our future and with CSX moving in, our future is in jeopardy.

Jan 1, 2009

Orlando Sentinel Editorial

Click title for story link. This comes from what seems to be a very biased Orlando Sentinel. Approve commuter railNo project can help the region more than commuter rail. Central Florida's lawmakers have one chance left to deliver. Last year they botched it, believing the state's agreement to purchase 61 miles of track from CSX Corp., plus Washington's commitment to help fund it, would provide the momentum needed to get other state lawmakers to hop aboard.Wrong. It was derailed by trial lawyers who wanted deeper pockets in case of accidents and a Lakeland lawmaker who wanted fewer freight trains routed to her city to make room for commuter rail.Our elected officials say they won't let that happen again. We'll push them to make sure it doesn't. They're certainly better positioned than last year with locals like Sen. Lee Constantine heading the Senate Judiciary Committee that caved to the lawyers, and Sen. Andy Gardiner running the Transportation Committee. Rep. Dean Cannon, who successfully led the charge in the House, is handling the chore again this year.But they and Gov. Charlie Crist, whose tardy efforts for rail last year resembled a traveler arriving at the station too late, need to wrap up negotiations on liability issues long before the next session ends.United States Reps. Corrine Brown and John Mica, and commuter-rail commission chief Buddy Dyer, also need to convince Tallahassee that it can't afford to miss this train again. The stations will spur development, the construction and maintenance will create thousands of jobs, and the momentum should jump-start new rail systems in Tampa and Jacksonville. It's essential. Lawmakers mustn't pass it up.

Mica vows rail push

Click title for story link. Jan. 1, 2009By Isaac Babcock Observer Staff Central Florida Commuter Rail may be on the back burner for some politicians during the holidays, but for Florida Congressman John Mica, all railroads lead through him these days. The chairman of the U.S. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee met with Gov. Charlie Crist and other state officials Dec. 18 to outline a new plan to bring commuter rail — which was recently named SunRail — to Central Florida.