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Sunset Limited

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Sunset Limited
The Sunset Limited at Palm Springs, California in 2011
Overview
Service typeInter-city rail
LocaleSouthwestern United States
First service1894 (1894)
Current operator(s)Amtrak
Former operator(s)Southern Pacific (1894–1971)
Annual ridership76,937 (FY24) Decrease -0.5%[a][1]
Route
TerminiLos Angeles, California
New Orleans, Louisiana
Stops20
Distance travelled1,995 mi (3,211 km)
Average journey time
  • 45 hours, 40 minutes (eastbound)
  • 46 hours, 35 minutes (westbound)[2]
Service frequencyThree round trips per week
Train number(s)1 (westbound)
2 (eastbound)
On-board services
Class(es)Coach Class
Sleeper Service
Disabled accessTrain lower level, all stations
Sleeping arrangements
  • Roomette (2 beds)
  • Bedroom (2 beds)
  • Bedroom Suite (4 beds)
  • Accessible Bedroom (2 beds)
  • Family Bedroom (4 beds)
Catering facilitiesDining car, Café
Observation facilitiesSightseer lounge car
Baggage facilitiesOverhead racks, checked baggage available at selected stations
Technical
Rolling stockGE Genesis
Superliner
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Operating speed44 mph (71 km/h) (avg.)
79 mph (127 km/h) (top)
Track owner(s)UP, BNSF

The Sunset Limited is a long-distance passenger train run by Amtrak, operating on a 1,995-mile (3,211 km) route between New Orleans and Los Angeles. Major stops include Houston, San Antonio and El Paso in Texas, as well as Tucson, Arizona. Opening in 1894 through the Southern Pacific Railroad, the Sunset Limited is the oldest continuously operating named train in the United States.

With three round-trip journeys per week, the Sunset Limited is tied with the Cardinal for the lowest frequency of any regularly-scheduled Amtrak route. Each end-to-end journey takes about two days. West of San Antonio, the train runs combined with the Texas Eagle.

From 1993-2005, the Sunset Limited operated an extended service to Miami, Florida, becoming Amtrak's longest and only coast-to-coast train route. Major stops between New Orleans and Miami included Mobile (Alabama), Jacksonville, Orlando, and Hialeah (Florida).[3] However, the route east of New Orleans was permanently halted in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

History

[edit]
The Sunset Limited circa 1910.
Early depiction of the train at Yuma, Arizona.
The train crossing Ciénega Creek near Vail, Arizona, in 1921.

Southern Pacific

[edit]

Before the start of Amtrak on May 1, 1971, the Sunset Limited was operated by the Southern Pacific Railroad. The Sunset Limited is the oldest named train in the United States, operating since November 1894 along the Sunset Route (though originally named the Sunset Express). The Sunset Route (originating in New Orleans) is the southernmost of the three gateways to the West Coast envisioned through the Pacific Railroad Acts. The other two embarked from Chicago and St. Louis. However, the Sunset Route had two major advantages over the other two routes. It was an all-weather, year-round route that did not face the crippling snows of the Wasatch or Sierra mountain ranges to reach the Pacific Coast. Additionally, the other two routes had to assault the front range of the Rockies.

In addition, opened 20 years before the Panama Canal, the Sunset Route vastly shortened the time to reach the West Coast from the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, as New Orleans was already an established seaport for Atlantic shipping lines’ passengers, seeking to reach the US interior. The Sunset Limited allowed passengers to reach the West Coast in a few days, not weeks.

The Sunset Limited was Southern Pacific's premier train.[4] Initially, the Sunset Limited was an all-Pullman train, with sleeping cars and no coaches, running from New Orleans to San Francisco via Los Angeles.[5] From its beginning in 1894, until streamlining in 1950, all the train's cars had 6-wheel trucks and dark olive green paint, with black roofs and trucks. In the summer of 1926, it was scheduled at 71 hr 40 min New Orleans to San Francisco; it then carried a coast-to-coast sleeper from Jacksonville to Los Angeles.

The San Francisco–Los Angeles portion of the Sunset Limited was cut on January 5, 1942. The cut was intended to last only several months to allow for equipment overhaul, but became permanent.[6] On June 2, 1949, the Southern Pacific introduced faster schedules on several named trains. The Sunset Limited was reduced to 49+34 hours eastbound and 48 hours westbound.[7]

In contrast to its earliest Amtrak years,[8] the Sunset Limited, up to its later years, made stops not only at Phoenix, but also at Mesa and Chandler, Arizona.[9]

Amtrak

[edit]

Amtrak assumed operation of most intercity passenger train routes in the United States on May 1, 1971, including those of the Southern Pacific. Amtrak retained the Sunset Limited and initially left its route unchanged.

On October 2, 1981, Amtrak began operating the Chicago-bound Eagle (known as the Texas Eagle since 1988) in conjunction with the Sunset Limited. The routes operate as one train between Los Angeles and San Antonio, Texas.

Extension to Florida

[edit]

The Louisville and Nashville Railroad had operated the Gulf Wind between New Orleans and Jacksonville, Florida, from 1949 to 1971, when Amtrak dropped the route. This corridor saw limited service over the next two decades: in 1984–1985 the Gulf Coast Limited ran between New Orleans and Mobile, Alabama, and from 1989 to 1995 the Gulf Breeze served the segment from Mobile to Atmore, Alabama.[citation needed]

On April 4, 1993, Amtrak extended the Sunset Limited eastward to Miami. The train followed the former route of the Gulf Wind between New Orleans and Jacksonville, restoring service on that corridor, and used the route of Amtrak's Silver Meteor south of Jacksonville.[10] It was serviced at Amtrak's Hialeah yards for the return trip. It was only the second direct rail link between Orlando and Miami, following local trains by the Atlantic Coast Line and Seaboard Coast Line in the mid-1960s.

Schedule unreliability caused the Sunset Limited's eastern terminus to be truncated to Sanford on November 10, 1996. Service was re-extended to Orlando on October 26, 1997, and the train deadheaded (operated empty) between Orlando and Sanford for servicing. Sanford was, and still is, the servicing point for Amtrak's Auto Train.[citation needed]

1990s accidents

[edit]
On September 22, 1993, the Sunset Limited fell into water from a swing bridge that had been knocked out of alignment and had its rails deformed by a row of barges colliding with it. 47 people were killed in the accident.

On September 22, 1993, the three locomotives and four of the eight cars of the eastbound Sunset Limited derailed and fell off a damaged bridge into water near Mobile, Alabama. Known as the Big Bayou Canot rail accident, the incident is Amtrak's worst train wreck and resulted in 47 deaths.[11]

On October 9, 1995, in an event known as the Palo Verde derailment, saboteurs derailed the Sunset Limited near Harqua, Arizona, by removing 29 spikes from a section of track, and short-circuited the signal system to conceal the sabotage. The attack killed one person and injured dozens of others. The crime still remains unsolved.[12]

Bypassing of Phoenix

[edit]

On June 2, 1996, the Sunset Limited was rerouted to a more southerly route between Tucson, and Yuma, Arizona, bypassing Phoenix. Union Pacific, which had acquired Southern Pacific earlier in the year, wanted to abandon a decaying portion of its Phoenix–Yuma "West Line", particularly the Roll Industrial Lead, that had previously been used to serve Phoenix due to deteriorating track conditions and very light freight traffic. By then the Sunset Limited was almost the only train using the Wellton Branch, and service was slow and bumpy along this worn-out section.[13] UP demanded that Amtrak pay for the maintenance, which they would not do.[14] Thus by June 1996, the Sunset Limited was bypassing Phoenix, and UP promptly put the 64-mile midsection of the Wellton Cutoff out of service. This made Phoenix one of the nation's largest cities without direct passenger service; although the designated Phoenix-area stop is in Maricopa, a suburban community about 40 miles (64 km) south of downtown Phoenix. Amtrak Thruway service, run by Stagecoach Express, connects the two cities.[15]

Hurricane Katrina

[edit]

On August 29, 2005, the Sunset Limited route was truncated east of San Antonio, Texas, as a result of damage to trackage in the Gulf Coast area caused by Hurricane Katrina. In late October 2005, service was restored between San Antonio and New Orleans, as the line through Louisiana had been repaired. Service east of New Orleans was suspended permanently despite CSX Transportation completing repair of the track in January 2006.[16]

Recent years

[edit]

The Sunset Limited received a modified schedule on May 7, 2012, moving its westbound movements from New Orleans to a Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday circuit. The times allow several 7- to 12-hour rides between major-city pairs; for example, overnight between Tucson or Maricopa (for Phoenix) and Los Angeles in both directions.[17]

While most Amtrak trains saw service reductions in 2020–2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Sunset Limited and its existing sub-daily schedule were not affected.[18][19] The Texas Eagle was reduced to tri-weekly from October 2020 and May 2021, temporarily matching the Sunset Limited.

On July 11, 2023, the Surface Transportation Board announced that it was opening an investigation into the poor on-time performance of the Sunset Limited.[20]

Proposed expansion

[edit]

Re-extension to Florida

[edit]
Amtrak's Return to Service Special arrives in Chipley, Florida, on February 19, 2016.

As time has passed, particularly since the January 2006 completion of the rebuilding of damaged tracks east of New Orleans by their owner CSX Transportation, the obstacles to restoration of the Sunset Limited's full route have been more managerial and political than physical. Advocates for the train's restoration have pointed to revenue figures for Amtrak's fiscal year 2004, the last full year of coast-to-coast Sunset Limited service. During that period, the Orlando–New Orleans segment accounted for 41% of the Sunset's revenue.[21]

Section 226 of the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008, signed into law by President George W. Bush on October 16, 2008, gave Amtrak nine months to provide Congress with a plan for restoring service that "shall include a projected timeline for restoring such service, the costs associated with restoring such service, and any proposals for legislation necessary to support such restoration of service."[22]

In January 2016, Amtrak and the Southern Rail Commission announced jointly that a Gulf Coast passenger rail inspection trip was to be made from New Orleans to Jacksonville, with elected officials among those on board during the February 18–19 excursion. Stops were planned for all of the stations formerly part of the Sunset Limited's route between those two cities.[23] In June 2018, the commission missed the deadline for submitting a request for service restoration along the Gulf. It said that it could not apply for the Federal Railroad Administration's (FRA) fiscal-year 2017 Consolidated Rail Infrastructure Safety and Improvements (CRISI) funding because Alabama and Mississippi were unwilling to assist with funds. Alabama's share would have been $5.3 million. The Louisiana governor, on the other hand, was willing to provide the funds. The three states' cooperation was needed to secure the $35.5 million in federal CRISI funds.[24]

New Gulf Coast service

[edit]

On February 23, 2021, following the conclusion of one year of negotiations with CSX and Norfolk Southern, Amtrak officials announced that a new Gulf Coast corridor service between New Orleans and Mobile would start as early as January 2022.[25] Amtrak plans to pay for repairs along the route.[26] In late 2022, with lengthy negotiations with Amtrak, Norfolk Southern, and CSX expected, the Gulf Coast service was projected to begin sometime in 2023.[27][28] However, in early August 2023, it was reported that an agreement between Amtrak, CSX, and the city of Mobile on the design and construction of the station there had not yet been reached, and that the service was now not expected to start until the first quarter of 2024.[29] In late August the working name of the train was reported to be Mardi Gras Service.[30] As of August 2024, Amtrak is planning to have service operational by early 2025, possibly in time for Super Bowl LIX.[31]

Restoration of the Florida Panhandle Service

[edit]

In terms of the rest of the route for the restoration of Florida Panhandle service, Amtrak stated that their "focus has been on restoring service from New Orleans to Mobile, Alabama," and they would be "willing to explore such service [on the Florida Panhandle] with the state’s financial support."[32] Meanwhile, the Florida Department of Transportation stated that they would support service restoration "as long as the restored service is a National Network long-distance train that will not require a future annual operating subsidy from state sponsors."[33] The mayors and city councils of Pensacola, Tallahassee, and Lake City have shown much interest in resuming the service. The corridor would eventually need to be upgraded for speeds greater than 45 miles per hour (72 km/h), and some of the stations require refurbishment or replacement.[34]

As of 2022, Amtrak's schedules and maps describe the route between Mobile and Orlando as suspended.[15]

Daily service

[edit]

In 2009, Brian Rosenwald, a now-departed Amtrak executive, outlined ideas for a complete overhaul of the route, including daily service.[35] It was to have the Texas Eagle operate over the Sunset Limited's route west of San Antonio, with a stub train connecting San Antonio (with a cross-platform transfer) and New Orleans. The plans were halted when Union Pacific stated that to get a daily Sunset Limited, Amtrak would need to pay $750 million for infrastructure improvements.[36]

Passenger totals would double with daily service, according to the PRIIA study that looked at Texas Eagle/Sunset Limited service. It forecast an incremental improvement of more than 100,000 passengers from the daily service, which is already running in excess of 100,000 a year.[37] In the meantime, the Union Pacific has double-tracked much of the route with its own money. However, Amtrak still lacks the equipment and funds needed to move to daily service.

In June 2021, Senator Jon Tester of Montana added an amendment to the Surface Transportation Investment Act of 2021 which would require the U.S. Department of Transportation (not Amtrak itself) to evaluate daily service on all less frequent long-distance trains, meaning the Sunset Limited and Cardinal.[38] The bill passed the Senate Commerce Committee with bipartisan support,[39][40] and was later rolled into President Biden's Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), which Congress passed on November 5, 2021.[41] The report is known as the Amtrak Daily Long-Distance Service Study and must be delivered to Congress within two years.[42]

In June 2023, Amtrak submitted an application for a federal grant to increase Sunset Limited service to operate daily.[43]

Return to Phoenix

[edit]
Map
Phoenix Subdivision (UP), black: Inactive Portion blue: Gila Subdivision orange: Phoenix Subdivision (BNSF)
Roll Industrial Lead
Roll Industrial Lead
Phoenix Subdivision
(West Phoenix industrial spurs)
Salt River Spur
Phoenix Yard & Intermodal Terminal
Tempe
Tempe Industrial Lead
Chandler Industrial Lead
Coolidge

Since its Wellton branch closure, officials have intermittently considered different options for how to reopen the line and restore Sunset Limited direct passenger service to Phoenix and potentially launching intercity service to LA. In 2009, the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) requested federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds to help restore the Wellton Branch and bring the Sunset Limited back to Phoenix but was unsuccessful. In 2014, ADOT hired the consultants URS to do a more in-depth Wellton Branch rehabilitation study. The study was commissioned by ADOT in an effort to understand the existing condition of the Wellton Branch and to develop improvement scenarios and capital cost estimates for freight and passenger rail service between Arlington and Wellton, a distance of 90.8 miles.[44] In that study, it was determined that light freight demand along the Wellton Branch line/Phoenix Subdivision does not warrant re-opening the Wellton Branch and that re-opening this corridor solely for passenger service is not cost effective, although if freight demand increased, phased rehabilitation made sense. It also recommended that the State seek to identify and develop freight opportunities for the Wellton Branch.[43][45][13]

Results of ADOT's Wellton Branch Railroad Rehabilitation Study[43][45]
Track grade Freight max speed Passenger max speed Total Est. Cost (millions) Avg. Cost/Route mile (millions)
1 Class 2 Track 25 mph NA $165.4 $1.8
2 Class 3 Track 40 mph 60 mph $194.8 $2.1
2A Class 3 w/PTC 40 mph 60 mph $266.0 $2.9
3 Class 4 Track 60 mph 79 mph $420.3 $4.6

Ideally, to get the line running again, Amtrak and the ADOT should work with UP to come up with a detailed capital improvement plan. Such a plan would determine exactly what projects are needed and what will they cost. The capital project plan could present an opportunity to propose rebuilding curves (with increased superelevation) and other improvements to increase train speeds. Straight sections could be feasibly improved for trains traveling faster than 100 mph.

New higher Class 5 speed track than the FRA Class 4 track proposed by ‘Scenario 3’ in the 2014 ADOT study is possible. There is no technical reason to limit the Wellton Branch to Class 4. A staged plan for double-tracking the line is also needed, starting with upgrades to existing sidings. If UP needs to continue storing more railcars in the area, then additional sidings can be built for that purpose.[13]

In February 2023, the FRA indicated that it was studying a re-route of the Sunset Limited from Maricopa back to Phoenix as part of the Amtrak Daily Long-Distance Service Study ordered by the IIJA. The move would revert a 1996 route change that cut direct service to Arizona's most populous metropolitan area, with stops at Phoenix, Tempe, and Coolidge.[46]

In June 2023, Amtrak submitted an application to the FRA seeking funding for a project to return Sunset Limited service to Phoenix, paired with increasing the route's frequency to once-daily service.[43]

In December 2023, as a part of the Corridor Identification and Development Program, the Federal Government awarded a $500,000 grant to the State of Arizona to study Phoenix–Tucson passenger rail. The new rail line plan would send trains from Tucson to the far East Valley, through downtown and on to the West Valley, before reconnecting to UP's mainline in Wellton, near Yuma. Part of this route would include trackage needed for the Sunset Limited's return to Phoenix service.[47]

Operation

[edit]

As of 2024, a typical Sunset Limited train has one or two GE P42DC locomotives, a Viewliner II baggage car, a Superliner sleeper, a Superliner diner, a Superliner Sightseer Lounge, a Superliner coach, and a Superliner coach/baggage car. West of San Antonio, the train has an additional sleeper and coach that operate as Los Angeles–Chicago through cars via the Texas Eagle. Amtrak plans to eventually re-add a Superliner transition sleeper to the train.[48]

As with other long-distance routes, Amtrak plans to replace the P42DCs with Siemens ALC-42 locomotives by 2027, and the Superliner cars with new long-distance cars by 2032.[49]

Route

[edit]
Sunset Limited route map

For most of its existence, the Sunset Limited route was owned by the Southern Pacific Railroad. The name Sunset Limited traces its origins to the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway, a Southern Pacific subsidiary which was known as the Sunset Route as early as 1874.

Most of the current route from New Orleans westward is now owned by the Union Pacific Railroad, which acquired Southern Pacific in 1996. However, the route within Louisiana and some of Texas was partially sold to BNSF Railway[50] in 1995 in return for BNSF not objecting to the UP-SP merger.

On the portion of the route east of New Orleans, service was suspended after Hurricane Katrina. Those tracks, between New Orleans and Florida, include parts of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, and the Louisville and Nashville Railroad—all now merged into CSX Transportation. Currently, the segment of the former Atlantic Coast Line Railroad between DeLand and Orlando is owned by Orlando's commuter service SunRail, and the segment of track from Pensacola to Baldwin is now owned by the Florida Gulf & Atlantic Railroad.

The train uses the following route segments, identified here by the names of their original owners:

Route Original owner Current owner
New Orleans–Lafayette, Louisiana Morgan's Louisiana and Texas Railroad and Steamship Company (SP) BNSF/UP[50]
Lafayette–Lake Charles, Louisiana Louisiana Western Railroad (SP)
Lake Charles–Orange, Texas UP
Orange–Houston, Texas Texas and New Orleans Railroad (SP)
Beaumont-Houston, Texas Beaumont, Sour Lake and Western Railway (MP)
Houston–El Paso, Texas Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway (SP)
El Paso–Los Angeles, California Southern Pacific Railroad

Stations and Connections

[edit]
Amtrak Sunset Limited stations
State/Province City Station Connections
Louisiana New Orleans New Orleans
Schriever Schriever
New Iberia New Iberia
Lafayette Lafayette
Lake Charles Lake Charles Bus transport Lake Charles Transit
Texas Beaumont Beaumont Bus transport Beaumont Municipal Transit System
Houston Houston
San Antonio San Antonio
Del Rio Del Rio
Sanderson Sanderson
Alpine Alpine
El Paso El Paso
New Mexico Deming Deming
Lordsburg Lordsburg
Arizona Benson Benson Greyhound Lines Greyhound Lines
Tucson Tucson
Maricopa Maricopa Amtrak Amtrak Thruway
Yuma Yuma
California Palm Springs Palm Springs
Ontario Ontario
Pomona Pomona
Los Angeles Los Angeles Union


Ridership

[edit]

Along with the Cardinal, the Sunset Limited is one of Amtrak's two long-distance services which operate thrice weekly.[51] Consequently, it carried the third-fewest passengers of any Amtrak train in fiscal year 2019 (92,827, a 4.4% decrease over FY2018). It had a total revenue of $10,769,179 in 2016, marking a 7.5% decrease over FY2015.[52][53]

Traffic by Fiscal Year (October–September)
Ridership Change over previous year Ticket Revenue Change over previous year
2007[54] 63,336 - $6,955,881 -
2008[54] 71,719 Increase13.2% $8,052,515 Increase15.8%
2009[54] 78,775 Increase9.8% $8,272,084 Increase2.7%
2010[55] 91,684 Increase16.4% $9,962,415 Increase20.4%
2011[55] 99,714 Increase8.8% $11,138,286 Increase11.8%
2012[56] 101,217 Increase1.5% $11,584,844 Increase4.0%
2013[56] 102,924 Increase1.7% $12,275,400 Increase6.0%
2014[57] 105,041 Increase2.1% $12,597,724 Increase2.6%
2015[57] 100,713 Decrease4.1% $11,639,368 Decrease7.6%
2016[52] 98,079 Decrease2.6% $10,769,179 Decrease7.5%
2017[58] 99,000 Increase0.9% - -
2018[59] 97,078 Decrease1.9% - -
2019[59] 92,827 Decrease4.4% - -
2020[60] 55,118 Decrease38.9% - -
2021[61] 57,562 Increase4.4% - -
2022[61] 73,904 Increase28.4% - -
2023[62] 77,288 Increase4.6% - -
2024[63] 76,937 Decrease-0.5% $10,800,000[64] -

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Amtrak Fiscal Year 2024 Ridership" (PDF). Amtrak. December 3, 2024. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  2. ^ "Amtrak Timetable Results". www.amtrak.com. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  3. ^ "Amtrak Sunset Limited 1993 Route Guide". TrainWeb.com. February 5, 2000. Retrieved June 3, 2024.
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  14. ^ Johnston, Bob (February 27, 2024). "FRA releases long-distance study interim report, invites comments". Trains. Archived from the original on February 29, 2024. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
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  22. ^ Pub. L. 110–432 (text) (PDF), H.R. 2095, 122 Stat. 4848, enacted October 16, 2008
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  26. ^ "Amtrak to pay for repairs along Gulf Coast route". al. March 5, 2021. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
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  29. ^ Kirby, Brendan (August 3, 2023). "Mississippi cities ready with Amtrak platforms, while key details remain unresolved in Mobile". Fox 10 News. WALA. Retrieved August 4, 2023.
  30. ^ Kirby, Brendan (August 29, 2023). "Planned Gulf Coast train to be named after Mardi Gras, tourism official says". fox10tv.com. Retrieved August 29, 2023.
  31. ^ Perez, Mary (August 6, 2024). "Amtrak train from NOLA to Mobile finally gets approved. What's next and when will it roll?". The Sun Herald. Retrieved August 9, 2024 – via The Times-Pickayune.
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  33. ^ "Passenger Rail Corridor Assessment" (PDF). fdot.gov. January 2023. Retrieved December 8, 2024.
  34. ^ Perez, Mary (January 3, 2023). "Want to take a train from New Orleans to Miami? Amtrak has 'big time' plans for FL". Sun Herald. Retrieved March 8, 2023.
  35. ^ "Sunset Limited Marketing Meeting". RailPAC. June 11, 2009. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
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  37. ^ "PRIIA Section 210 FY10 Sunset Limited/Texas Eagle Performance Improvement Plan" (PDF). September 2010.
  38. ^ "Manchin Secures Language To Evaluate Ways To Restore Cardinal Train Daily Service Through West Virginia". www.manchin.senate.gov. June 16, 2021. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  39. ^ "Key Policy Victories in Senate Rail Title". www.railpassengers.org. Rail Passengers Association. June 16, 2021. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  40. ^ Luczak, Marybeth (June 17, 2021). "Senate Commerce Committee's Bipartisan $78B Surface Transportation Bill Advances". Railway Age. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  41. ^ "What's in the Investment in Infrastructure and Jobs Act (IIJA)?". www.railpassengers.org. Rail Passengers Association. November 8, 2021. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
  42. ^ "Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act" (PDF). pp. 285–256. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
  43. ^ a b c d Anderson, Kyle (June 5, 2023). "Amtrak Applies for Federal Grants to Improve Long Distance Network". Amtrak Media. Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2023. Cite error: The named reference ":0" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  44. ^ "Wellton Branch Rail Rehabilitation Study". ADOT. 2014. Archived from the original on February 28, 2024. Retrieved July 12, 2024.
  45. ^ a b "Wellton Branch Railroad Rehabilitation Study - 2014 Final Report" (PDF). ADOT. March 2014. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 30, 2024. Retrieved July 12, 2024.
  46. ^ "FRA Long-Distance Service Study: Regional Working Group Meeting 1" (PDF). Federal Railroad Administration. February 2023. p. 113. Retrieved March 28, 2023.
  47. ^ Stone, Kevin (December 6, 2023). "Arizona gets first federal funds for Amtrak train project". KTAR.com. Archived from the original on February 26, 2024. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
  48. ^ Johnston, Bob (July 29, 2024). "Amtrak adds to Texas Eagle capacity with dedicated Sunset through cars: Special report". Trains News Wire. Retrieved November 21, 2024.
  49. ^ "FY 2022-2027 Service and Asset Line Plans" (PDF). Amtrak. 2021. p. 133.
  50. ^ a b Bowen, Douglas John (December 2, 2014). "STB to weigh key trackage rights case". Railway Age. Retrieved August 9, 2021.
  51. ^ "With Increased Demand and Congressional Funding, Amtrak Restores 12 Long Distance Routes to Daily Service". March 10, 2021.
  52. ^ a b "Amtrak FY16 Ridership & Revenue Fact Sheet" (PDF). Amtrak. April 17, 2017. Retrieved February 6, 2018.
  53. ^ "Amtrak FY19 Ridership" (PDF). amtrak.com.
  54. ^ a b c "Amtrak Fiscal Year 2009, Oct. 2008–Sept. 2009" (PDF). Trains Magazine. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 30, 2013. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
  55. ^ a b "Amtrak ridership rolls up best-ever records" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 8, 2012. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  56. ^ a b "Amtrak Sets Ridership Record and Move the Nation's Economy Forward" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 24, 2020.
  57. ^ a b "Amtrak FY15 Ridership & Revenue" (PDF).
  58. ^ "Amtrak FY17 Ridership" (PDF).
  59. ^ a b "Amtrak FY19 Ridership" (PDF).
  60. ^ Luczak, Marybeth (November 23, 2020). "Amtrak Releases FY 2020 Data". Railway Age. New York: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Inc. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  61. ^ a b "Amtrak Route Ridership: FY22 vs. FY21" (PDF). November 29, 2022. Retrieved January 29, 2023.
  62. ^ "Amtrak Route Ridership: FY23 vs. FY22" (PDF). Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  63. ^ "Amtrak FY24 Ridership" (PDF). Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  64. ^ "Amtrak Monthly Performance Report YTD September FY 2024" (PDF). Retrieved December 3, 2024.

Further reading

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Notes

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  1. ^ Amtrak's Fiscal Year (FY) runs from October 1 of the prior year to September 30 of the named year.
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