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| 3/18/2010 |
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By KELLY THAYER Rail is Energizing Cities Coast to Coast America is a nation on the move. Call it progress, call it freedom, or call it frenzy: People are going places in record numbers. But they're going nowhere fast. Traffic expands twice as quickly as the population because sprawl forces families to practically live on four wheels. Passengers pack the major airports, with the number of ticket holders expected to soar almost 60 percent by 2010 to one billion a year. Cities are
breaking through the gridlock, however, by investing in a proven technology:
Passenger rail service. Not the belching steam engines of yesteryear,
but whisper-quiet electric trains that weave through downtowns and sleek
high-speed commuter trains that whisk between cities. Absent from this rail renaissance, however, is Detroit the nation's largest metropolitan area without urban passenger rail. Detroit is also the ninth-most congested city in the country. Its idleness, while other cities speed ahead, raises two key questions: Why is Michigan missing the train, and how can the state's largest cities get on track? The answers are critical for Detroit, as well as Grand Rapids, which compete globally with other metropolitan areas for jobs, visitors, and corporate investment. More than industrial strength, the economic future of Michigan's major cities increasingly depends on how attractive they are to businesses and to people who want affordable, convenient places to live, work, and play. MICHIGAN'S ROAD TO RAIL The answers point to three main
stops on Michigans way out of stifling congestion and
on to the time-saving and money-making opportunities that rail delivers.
Rail can figure in Michigans future once 1) cities start planning
for it 2) leaders start selling it and 3) taxpayers respond to its promise
of lower transportation costs and new development.
On to the First Stop >> |
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