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Railroad deal to speed train lines

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Monday, August 25, 2008

AUBURN - An agreement capping 18 months of negotiations between Guilford and St. Lawrence and Atlantic railroads should speed train traffic through Maine and settle traffic questions in Danville Junction.

The two railroads will officially close Station Road in the Danville area in southern Auburn. Saint Lawrence and Atlantic will move its track northeast, closer to Guilford's line. That will allow St. Lawrence to use the area south of its track for car storage. The two companies will share tracks south of Danville Junction, allowing each more car stacking and storage.

"They already use that area for sorting and stacking cars," Auburn Public Services Director Eric Labelle said. Between the two companies, track in that area is used for about 12 hours per day, he said. The changes will let them sort cars more efficiently. They expect to use the area about two hours per day.

"They say it will also increase the speeds through the area, from 5 miles per hour to 30," Labelle said. The companies claim it will reduce shipping time for cars headed out of Maine by as much as 24 hours.

"Ideally, it's good for shipping," Labelle said. "But if they ever want to use the lines for passenger rail, they can't have every train there tied up for hours at a time."

Work is scheduled to begin in September and to continue through November. It will break for the winter, beginning again early in 2009. It should be completed next fall.

The work is estimated to cost $5 million, Labelle said. The Maine Department of Transportation is paying $1.9 million and each railroad is paying $900,000. The Federal Transit Authority is paying the last $1.3 million.

The changes will close Station Road to through traffic once and for all. The land under the road is owned by the railroads but was used by south Auburn residents as a route between Washington Avenue and Old Danville Road, even though it is heavily pot-holed and rutted.

"The city actually wanted to go in and repave it two years ago, but the railroads asked us to desist," Labelle said. Instead, the city paved Black Cat Road, which runs parallel to Station Road.

Labelle said the city will ask the state to install a railroad signal and gate at Guilford's northern crossing with Black Cat Road.

CLICK HERE To Show/Hide Discussion Thread - (4 Comments)
Comments
Posted By:ray at August 25, 2008 6:15 AM (Suggest Removal)
Why is Maine DOT spending $1.9 million? With roads so poor in Maine you would think the railroad companies would be responsible for their own upgrades. Do the rail companies contribute to our road taxes by paying a "road tax" on the diesel fuel they burn? The taxes we pay to the State and Federal governments should be maintianed and used only for road improvements that vehicles travel on.

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Posted By:Jay Bee at August 25, 2008 7:20 AM (Suggest Removal)
Three words, Ray: "future passenger service." The SL&A line gives you access all the way to Montreal. If you could go south to Boston and north to Montreal on rail, that's huge. And $5 million, sadly, just isn't that much money anymore.

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Posted By:ojhuig at August 25, 2008 9:55 AM (Suggest Removal)
If you spend a little on train infrastructure, you keep a few trucks off the roads and that means fewer road repairs.

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Posted By:Chris (Brunswick) at August 25, 2008 12:12 PM (Suggest Removal)
Usually passenger rail follows the primary freight line, which is through Lewiston, Leeds Junction (where it branches), and then to Waterville. Upgrading the freight line would also help boost central Maine’s economy. However the legislature endorsed a “scenic” route instead, which goes through Brunswick, along the Kennebec River to Augusta and eventually Waterville. --- Obviously the “scenic” route is shorter but likely has longer bridges in worse condition as compared to the freight line. For example there is a long and decrepit rail bridge across the Androscoggin in Brunswick, which is visible from Route 196. That bridge is the same structural type as the bridge that collapsed in Minneapolis, and I would guess replacing that bridge alone could cost up to $20 million.

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