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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The U.S. Congress created Amtrak under the Rail | ||||||
3 | Passenger Service Act of 1970 (Public Law 91–158), and Amtrak | ||||||
4 | began serving customers on May 1, 1971, taking over the | ||||||
5 | operation of most intercity passenger trains in exchange for | ||||||
6 | access to the national rail network; and
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7 | WHEREAS, Congress passed the Amtrak Improvement Act of 1973 | ||||||
8 | (Public Law 93–146), which gives intercity and commuter rail | ||||||
9 | passenger transportation preference over freight | ||||||
10 | transportation in using a rail line, junction, or crossing, a | ||||||
11 | right codified as section 24308(c) of title 49, United States | ||||||
12 | Code; and
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13 | WHEREAS, U.S.C. Sec. 24308(c) of Title 49 states, "Except | ||||||
14 | in an emergency, intercity and commuter rail passenger | ||||||
15 | transportation provided by or for Amtrak has preference over | ||||||
16 | freight transportation in using a rail line, junction, or | ||||||
17 | crossing unless the [Surface Transportation] Board orders | ||||||
18 | otherwise under this subsection. A rail carrier affected by | ||||||
19 | this subsection may apply to the Board for relief. If the | ||||||
20 | Board, after an opportunity for a hearing under section 553 of | ||||||
21 | title 5, decides that preference for intercity and commuter | ||||||
22 | rail passenger transportation materially will lessen the | ||||||
23 | quality of freight transportation provided to shippers, the |
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1 | Board shall establish the rights of the carrier and Amtrak on | ||||||
2 | reasonable terms"; and
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3 | WHEREAS, Many host railroads have ignored the law by | ||||||
4 | refusing to give passenger rail the priority to which it is | ||||||
5 | statutorily entitled, resulting in poor and declining on-time | ||||||
6 | performance by Amtrak on most host railroads; according to | ||||||
7 | Amtrak during fiscal year 2019 alone, this caused 6.5 million | ||||||
8 | customers on state-supported and long-distance trains to | ||||||
9 | arrive at their destination late; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, Amtrak's Office of Inspector General, in a 2019 | ||||||
11 | report, showed poor on-time performance wastes taxpayer | ||||||
12 | dollars to the extent that a mere five percent improvement on | ||||||
13 | all Amtrak routes would result in $12.1 million in cost savings | ||||||
14 | to Amtrak in the first year; if on-time performance on | ||||||
15 | long-distance routes reached 75 percent for a year, Amtrak | ||||||
16 | would realize an estimated $41.9 million in operating cost | ||||||
17 | savings along with a one-time savings of $336 million due to a | ||||||
18 | reduction in equipment replacement needs; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, On-time passenger rail performance on host | ||||||
20 | railroads has historically been driven by the existence of an | ||||||
21 | effective means to enforce Amtrak's preference rights as shown | ||||||
22 | historically by: | ||||||
23 | (1) Enactment of the Passenger Rail Investment and |
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1 | Improvement Act (PRIIA) of 2008 (division B of Public Law | ||||||
2 | 110–432), which included provisions for the enforcement of | ||||||
3 | these preference rights: | ||||||
4 | (a) Two months afterward, the on-time performance | ||||||
5 | of long-distance trains improved from 56 percent to 77 | ||||||
6 | percent, and Class I freight train interference delays | ||||||
7 | across all routes declined by 40 percent; and | ||||||
8 | (b) One year after enactment of PRIIA, freight | ||||||
9 | train interference delays had declined by 54 percent, and | ||||||
10 | the on-time performance of long-distance trains reached 85 | ||||||
11 | percent; and | ||||||
12 | (2) Removal in 2014 of some of those provisions after | ||||||
13 | being ruled unconstitutional by a Washington, D.C., | ||||||
14 | Circuit Court: long-distance train on-time performance | ||||||
15 | declined from 72 percent to 50 percent, and freight train | ||||||
16 | interference delays increased 59 percent; and
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17 | WHEREAS, As a result of violations of Amtrak's right to | ||||||
18 | preference, Amtrak has been consistently unable on host | ||||||
19 | railroad networks to meet its Congressionally-mandated mission | ||||||
20 | and goals and does not have an effective mechanism to enforce | ||||||
21 | its statutory preference right in order to fulfill its mission | ||||||
22 | and goals; and
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23 | WHEREAS, Only the United States Attorney General can bring | ||||||
24 | a civil action for equitable relief in a district court of the |
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1 | United States to enforce Amtrak's preference rights but has | ||||||
2 | done so just once in Amtrak's entire history, against the | ||||||
3 | Southern Pacific Transportation Company in 1979; therefore, be | ||||||
4 | it
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5 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL | ||||||
6 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we support a strong | ||||||
7 | intercity passenger rail network and support the passage of | ||||||
8 | U.S. S.2922, the proposed "Rail Passenger Fairness Act", | ||||||
9 | providing Amtrak the ability to enforce its preference rights | ||||||
10 | by bringing a civil action before a federal district court (the | ||||||
11 | so-called "private right of action"); and be it further | ||||||
12 | RESOLVED, That we urge the Illinois Congressional | ||||||
13 | Delegation to support S.2922; and be it further
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14 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
15 | delivered to each member of the Illinois Congressional | ||||||
16 | Delegation.
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