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Tuesday, June 19, 2001

Amtrak lobbies for more stops

By David Bauerlein
Times-Union staff writer

In the heyday of passenger rail travel, trains rolled through St. Augustine every day, bringing travelers to the Sunshine State from the freezing north. In one colorful piece of marketing, the "Florida Special" carried a swimming pool on it during the 1935-36 winter travel season.

The Amtrak train that ran through St. Augustine Monday didn't have any swimming amenities in it, or for that matter, any tourists. Instead, it was a kind of lobbying campaign on wheels for the route Amtrak wants toalong the Florida coast by adding eight new stops, including the return of regular passenger rail service to St. Augustine for the first time since 1968.

So far, the state Department of Transportation has been able to identify less than one-third of the estimated $64 million needed to make the route ready for passenger trains again. To generate some buzz, Amtrak and the Florida East Coast Railway operated a demonstration train from Jacksonville to Miami yesterday, with a return trip today. Amtrak invited government officials and civic and business leaders to experience train travel by riding free.

"We need their enthusiasm," said Amtrak spokesman Kevin Johnson. "We need their support."

A few Northeast Florida officials took up the offer, including Jacksonville City Councilwoman Faye Rustin and St. Augustine City Commissioner Raymond Connor.

Amtrak has not set a target date for starting the service, other than to say that after funding is in place, it would take a year to get under way. Based on the state's budget situation, that would put it at mid-2003 at the earliest.

The $64 million would mainly be for building tracks at some places along the route so Amtrak trains and slower-moving freight trains won't interfere with each other. The funding also would cover the cost of signalization, improvements to railroad crossings and construction of train stations at eight new locations for Amtrak service: St. Augustine, Daytona Beach, Titusville, Cocoa/Port Canaveral, Melbourne, Vero Beach, Fort Pierce and Stuart.

The state Department of Transportation has set aside $15.5 million for the work and FEC has agreed to pay $3 million, said Nazih Haddad, manager of intercity passenger rail for the transportation department. Local governments would pay a total of about $2 million.

Beyond that, it's not clear where the rest of the money would come from, Haddad said.

"The DOT's position at this time is that certainly, we're still interested in it," he said. "We want to see it happen. It would be a lot of benefit to the east coast of the state. However, we don't have the money."

Amtrak trains now run from Jacksonville to Miami, but the route swings down the middle of the state.

Last month, Amtrak and FEC signed an agreement in which FEC will let Amtrak add two daily round-trip runs on the company's coastal tracks between Jacksonville and West Palm Beach.



This story can be found on Jacksonville.com at http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/061901/met_6471740.html.

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