Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
1:03 pm Saturday, July 27, 2002

Amtrak headed down another expensive trail

By Staff
July 21, 2002
Action in a congressional conference committee late last week indicated that Congress continues to head down an expensive trail with regard to Amtrak funding. Congressional negotiators put another $205 million into an emergency supplemental appropriations bill to keep Amtrak running for a while longer.
Now, let's understand this: "Emergency supplemental appropriations" become necessary when Congress fails to act in a timely manner on critical funding measures. Congress can not agree on spending priorities and the resultant bickering produces political gridlock. So, amazingly, as various needs and desires arise  some of them legitimate members of congressional conference committees seem to snatch money out of thin air for programs and projects that many Americans neither need nor want. Despite renewed talk of federal budget deficits and the high cost of financing the war on terrorism and a spate of other federal initiatives, the money flows under the guise of "emergency" funding.
Funding for Amtrak would qualify for such "emergency" status only if you believe the republic would come crashing down if the national passenger rail service went under. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Amtrak has been a drain on the national treasury for nearly three decades and will get this new shot of money because of its successful lobbying campaign. A responsible Congress would embrace the findings of the Amtrak Reform Council and move immediately to restructure Amtrak into something more closely resembling an effective element of a real national transportation system.
The $205 million approved last week is only a dribble. As Amtrak chairman and Meridian Mayor John Robert Smith put it in a press release on Thursday, "This appropriation enables us now to move forward on our fiscal year 2003 appropriation request of $1.2 billion to support Amtrak's critical capital and operating needs across the national system; a level of funding to which more than 160 House members and a majority of the Senate have pledged their support."
If his assessment is correct, Amtrak will get more public dollars and American taxpayers will lose again by funding a national passenger rail service that has managed to spend more than $25 billion since its creation  never once even coming close to its initial congressional mandate of breaking even.
We don't fault Smith and his fellow Amtrak advocates for passing the hat in Washington, but otherwise fiscally conservative members of Congress and senators should call a halt to all wasteful spending, including this one.

Also on Franklin County Times
Suspect’s boyfriend held without bond
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
May 6, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A 26-year-old Georgia man charged with dozens of counts ranging from sodomy to producing and disseminating child pornography will remai...
Judge grants attorney’s request to withdraw
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
May 6, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Brandy Dowdy’s original attorney will no longer be part of her case moving forward. Birmingham-based attorney Jessica Bugge filed a mot...
Vina spends $50K to upgrade park
Franklin County, Main, News, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 6, 2026
VINA — Mayor Sue Raper said concerns about deteriorating playground equipment at the park helped spark a broader effort to improve and beautify the to...
Higgins celebrates 100th birthday
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 6, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Eunice Greenhill Higgins celebrated her 100th birthday April 26 with a gathering of more than 70 relatives, friends and others at the F...
Vets clean park at county archives
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 6, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Members of VFW Post 5184 gathered Saturday at the Franklin County Archives to clean the Veterans Park located outside the building. Cle...
State’s outdoors is key to economic growth
Columnists, Opinion
May 6, 2026
From the mountains of the Tennessee Valley to the shores of the Gulf Coast, and everything inbetween, our state is second to none in the country when ...
Book Lovers Club honored at state
News, Russellville
HERE AND NOW
May 6, 2026
Members of Russellville’s GFWC Book Lovers Study Club joined clubwomen from across Alabama for the 131st annual GFWC Alabama Federation of Women’s Clu...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *