A few additional corrections:BellaVilla wrote:^thank you for the correction.
You can go in 3 directions out of St. Louis on Amtrak - to KC, Chicago and San Antonio - not 2.
Also, what makes you think this, “Chicago moves in 7 directions that acutally split into 9 directions. None of which it does profitably.” ?
Last year Amtrak reported an operating profit on the Chicago-St.Louis, Hiawatha, Illinois Zephyr and Illini routes. The KC-STL route also had an operating profit. If you set aside the long-distance routes out of Chi, all of the regional/intrastate routes taken together posted a net operating profit last year.
The albatross around Amtrak’s neck is the long distance cross country routes that travel through a lot of nowhere. The routes linking KC, STL, CHI, Milwaukee, Detroit do comparatively well, though nothing like the hugely profitable Northeast Corridor.
Allocations from taxpayers are still needed for capital investments (new bridges, sidings, improvements for higher speeds, improved crossings, new equipment, modernized track systems, etc...), but the regional routes are not the operational money pits you make them out to be.
Additionally, should Amtrak even be expected to make money? Every other form of transportation in this country is heavily subsidized by tax dollars, why should passenger rail be any exception?




