• @Cort@lemmy.world
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          67 months ago

          Yeah, we let freight trains get so long that they don’t fit into the areas where they’d normally wait to let passenger trains through. Since they don’t fit, they don’t have to wait or yield the right of way to passenger trains.

          Should be illegal to run a train too long to fit in the waiting areas.

          • @You999@sh.itjust.works
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            37 months ago

            It’s not just the fact they no longer fit in sidings but every aspect that ends up hurting passenger rail on time preformace. Trains are getting so long they don’t fit within a yards switching lead which blocks the main tracks. They are limiting horse power per tonnage so strictly that there’s only just barely enough to crawl up grades. There’s no room for error with these trains and it’s a merical they haven’t caused a serious derailment.

    • astraeus
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      7 months ago

      The amount of industry actively opposing this in Washington is the reason we have plenty of freight trains and rail but very limited passenger transport. In fact, so much of America’s rail system is private that public transportation would have to either be serviced by the freight companies or would have to pay for second-tier access to the rail systems, after negotiating with a plethora of private rail companies.

      Here is one of the most significant train lobbyist groups, you can see their priorities in the first main paragraph: increase freight and maintain privatization of rail.

      They pour about 3.5 million dollars a year into Congress.

      • @regul@lemm.ee
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        47 months ago

        If Richard Nixon had nationalized the infrastructure nationwide instead of just the passenger operations…

        If Reagan hadn’t re-privatized ConRail…

      • @eltoukan
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        27 months ago

        I’m guessing they don’t put forward any arguments related to their climate impact, but out of curiosity do we know how prioritizing passenger trains in the US impacts the way these goods are transported ? Is this a minor inconvenience for the industry that’s they’re fussing about and nothing would actually change, or would the goods have to significantly shift to truck transportation ?

        I live in a country where there’s the opposite problem: we have a lot of passenger trains, but they’re attempting to revive freight trains because truck transportation is quite CO2 costly. Reduced emissions are definitely only one advantage amongst many for public trains, but I’m wondering how much you save/lose by replacing(?) one freight train passing with passenger train.