WASHINGTON - A panel studying Amtrak's future favors stripping the railroad of the tracks and stations it owns, but still must decide whether and how to open train operations to competition. <br>
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The Amtrak Reform Council, which will deliver its recommendations to Congress on Feb. 7, gathers Friday for what could be its last meeting. On the agenda: scenarios for how to break Amtrak's 30-year monopoly on intercity train travel. <br>
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The panel has drawn praise from free-market reformers who say Amtrak is responsible for its financial problems. Amtrak supporters say the real problem is a paucity of federal funding for an overlooked mode of transportation. <br>
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The council's recommendations hold no legal weight but will help frame the debate in Congress on Amtrak's future. <br>
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Under one scenario, private companies would submit bids for certain train routes. Government subsidies would be available as long as they are lower than those Amtrak is receiving. <br>
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Every scenario under consideration envisions transferring ownership of Amtrak's tracks, bridges, tunnels and stations, said Tom Till, the council's executive director. <br>
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The new owner would likely be one or more new subsidiaries of the National Rail Passenger Corporation -- an existing federal entity that, until now, has been synonymous with Amtrak. Under the council's plans, Amtrak would function only as an operating company under the federal corporation. <br>
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Eventually, ownership of the stations and track could be transferred to states or cities. <br>
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Amtrak owns 730 miles of track, mostly in the Northeast Corridor between Boston and Washington, plus in Michigan. It owns stations along the Northeast Corridor, plus Union Station in Chicago. <br>
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Amtrak serves 500 stations over 22,000 route miles. Most of the tracks are owned by freight railroads, which receive usage fees from Amtrak. <br>
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The railroad uses its assets to raise revenue. It plans to build a hotel inside Baltimore's Penn Station and an office tower or hotel near 30th Street Station in Philadelphia. <br>
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But the assets also impose substantial costs. The reform council estimates that it takes $800 million to $1 billion each year to keep the Northeast Corridor in a state of good repair. It says Amtrak has spent just $71 million on Northeast Corridor maintenance each of the past two years. <br>
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The National Association of Railroad Passengers said Thursday that recommendations to separate Amtrak from its non-rail assets "bear a disturbing similarity to the early steps in the process that led to Britain's current railway crisis." <br>
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A 1997 law gave Amtrak until Dec. 2, 2002, to begin operating without federal subsidies. It created the reform council to monitor the railroad's progress. <br>
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A majority of council members concluded last month that Amtrak will not achieve that goal. That finding meant the council had 90 days to draw up a plan for a restructured national rail system. <br>
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Amtrak posted a cash loss of $405 million in the first eight months of 2001 and has consumed more than $25 billion in subsidies since its inception in 1971. <br>
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