U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) joined Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), and Representatives Rick Larsen (D, WA-02), Derek Kilmer (D, WA-06), Marilyn Strickland (D, WA-10), Adam Smith (D, WA-09), Suzan DelBene (D, WA-01), and Pramila Jayapal (D, WA-07) released a joint statement to announce that the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) has awarded $49.7 million for planning work for the proposed Cascadia High-Speed Rail project, which would link the Pacific Northwest’s major population centers, including Vancouver, B.C., Seattle, and Portland, with regular train service running at up to 250 mph.

  • @PlantDadManGuy
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    35 hours ago

    Give them bitches some trains! Bitches love trains!

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      39 hours ago

      This is just for planning. A budget for actual construction will be in the billions.

  • @KoalaUnknown
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    211 hours ago

    Will this link to the California HSR?

    • @AA5B
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      33 hours ago

      Probably not for a long time. There’s a lot of distance with mountains and too little population for it to be worthwhile by itself.

      Hopefully once we have two segments of high speed rail, spending the money to connect the network will be an easier sale

  • @NateNate60
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    1820 hours ago

    Speaking from the other end of this line, a ticket on the Cascades to Seattle costs just $27 for a 3½-hour journey. A high-speed train travelling at an average speed of 350 km/h could traverse the 280 km between King Street Station and Union Station in just 48 minutes. This is affordable and fast enough that I could even imagine people living in one city commuting to work in the other. It would really benefit the tech sector in both cities.

    • @davidgro
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      11 hours ago

      280 km between King Street Station and Union Station

      I don’t understand. Those stations are literally across the street (4th Ave S) from each other, although as far as I know not actually connected to the same rails at any point since Union Station is light rail and King St. is not.

      Edit: I was really tired last night I guess, and confused it with International District Station.

      Apparently Seattle’s Union Station isn’t physically connected to rail at all now, but is the HQ of Sound Transit

  • @[email protected]
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    213 hours ago

    It should probably be noted these are Washington State lawmakers not Oregon State lawmakers.

    Kind of an odd mixup since the article is apparently published/written out of Portland, OR.

    • @sploosh
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      27 hours ago

      KPTV is a privately-owned station that serves the Portland/Vancouver WA metro area. Reporting on it like this makes sense and is in line with the sorts of things they generally report on.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 hours ago

        I am aware that, it’s just they seem like they should most of all be aware enough not to call a group of Washington lawmakers Oregon lawmakers. They appear to have updated the headline now at least but not the article body.

  • @pdxfed
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    1119 hours ago

    It’s better than nothing, but not by much. Criticize China for many things but they had ZERO HSR in 2007 and now have the largest network in the world they had an essential network completed within ~10 years and now are just adding to it.

    $50m for planning and nothing actually happening. $8b in 2010 was allocated by Obama and it went to planning in Florida and CA and “improving service” in 11 other high impact states with rail including WA. Compared to $50b bailout auto industry got, it of course amounts to nothing which is why the US is a nothing burger of HSR (don’t buy the marketing of Acela in the NE as HSR, that’s just semantics and categorization–just like how internet companies lobbied for decades to categorize crappy speeds as “high speed internet” when it wasn’t anything close to what was offered in other developed countries.

    If anything close to what we waste on roads was allocated to rail in the US, we could have HSR in logical corridors in 10 years. As it is, I fear I won’t see it in my life now with the Trump Trifecta government.

    • @RubberElectrons
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      412 hours ago

      We the people are not fans of use of eminent domain. It severely damages a project’s reputation, see Robert Moses’ destruction of many parts of NYC with shitty highways.

      We do need more rail, and it gets easy to build in flat, unoccupied areas. CA HSR is taking advantage of that, so will WA. Maybe some day they’ll connect.

    • sp3ctr4l
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      314 hours ago

      Yep.

      It’s just $50m for an initial assessment.

      At this rate, this one high speed line might be built in something like 20 years.

      Its been about 15 years of building just a light rail system in the Seattle area… and we’ve got One line as a spine from Lynnwood to SeaTac (about 30 miles), and Two line as a spine from Redmond to Bellevue (about 8 miles).

      These lines don’t even link up.

      Whole system planned completion date?

      2045?

      Total cost so far?

      50 billion dollars? More?

      Total planned cost out to project completion date?

      150 billion dollars? More?

      I pose these all as question marks as it takes a fairly involved effort to actually figure out real numbers.

      If anyone can give me an accurate, unbiased breakdown, I’d appreciate it, I can’t find one easily with a fucked up wrist, on a phone.

      I like transit. I think we should build more transit.

      I know HSR has less stops and stations than an urban light rail system.

      The point here is that this scale of costs and timetables are ludicrous compared to what other countries or regions or cities of other countries have achieved.

      • @pdxfed
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        611 hours ago

        Some of the broader reasons why it’s expensive are here:https://www.governing.com/finance/why-are-u-s-transit-projects-so-costly-this-group-is-on-the-case

        It boils down to the US not having established experts in house, whether for design, permitting, technology, supply chain, etc. so they have to outsource it which makes us pay 3-7x global average cost. Artificial dominance of auto travel due to lobbying over decades does not help political resistance and transience either to completing such a project.

        • sp3ctr4l
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          37 hours ago

          Yeah… I can see why Not Just Bikes just said fuck it and moved to the Netherlands.

      • @RubberElectrons
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        212 hours ago

        Seems like Seattle is doing ok.

        Link across lake Washington was supposed to be done already, but the floating bridge itself has an issue with improperly made concrete for the tremendous additional tonnage frequent train service will add (particularly if there was a seismic event).

        This has had a number of knock-on effects, particularly the lack of access to the main OMF (operations and maintenance facility) in Bellevue, so the 1 line only has access to the smaller facility near sodo. That also means the additional train sets ordered can’t be stored in a useful place, and messes up the phases of other parts of the schedule.

        Good news: tracks are done, most likely we should expect to get trains testing for a few months in mid to late spring, with the cross-bridge connection finally opening to the public in summer 25.

        Little late, sure, but I’d say this system is coming along quite nicely, after having previously supported NYC’s transit systems.

        • sleet01
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          311 hours ago

          Just a slight correction: the Link Light Rail project officially opened their first station (although served by bus at the time) in 1997. It’s taken almost 28 years to get to this point.

          • sp3ctr4l
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            7 hours ago

            The Tacoma Link started in 97 as just a bus line/station, and later grew into a low speed, at grade/street level, street car system.

            It does not and cannot directly connect to Link Light Rail, which is a different thing, uses completely different train cars with significantly higher speed and passenger capacity, which could not make many of the tight street car system’s turns, has much more high capacity stations, many of which are below ground or elevated… both just include ‘Link’ in the name.

            What is now called the One Line of Link Light Rail was originally named Central Link.

            Construction on that began in 03, went down from Westlake Center to Seatac, completed in 09, later expanded up to the U District, Northgate, Lynnwood, etc.

            Its not helpful at all that the nomenclature is confusing and basically changing every couple of years, but basically, Tacoma Link (which is now called the T Line) is a street car… not a lightrail system comparable to a subway.

            Seattle also has its own street car lines… but these are managed by the city itself and the county Seattle is in… whereas the proper light rail system and the Tacoma streetcar are managed by SoundTransit.

            Its all clear as mud.

            Anyway thats a long way for me to say I’m counting the 03 starting date of the Central/One Line under SoundTransit as the starting point for the light rail system, not Tacoma Link, which is a streetcar.

            EDIT: Fucking woops, I’m actually counting from roughly when the first segment of the One Line / Central Link was completed, not started, in my original post.

            I lived in and near Seattle since 07 and I can’t even keep any of this straight, blargh.

            EDIT 2: Just for shits and giggles;

            When Seattle’s first, modern streetcar system opened up (we used to have one back before WW2, but car companies lobbied the city to tear out the tracks)…

            It was officially named the South Lake Union Trolley.

            So, within a week, people began making tshirts with ‘I rode the S.L.U.T.!’

            It was then renamed to South Lake Union Streetcar in about 2 or 3 months.

            … Seattle is a place that is so bad at naming things that the official name, in all the official documents and such, the name that the automated voice on the lightrail speaks aloud when you arrive in a section of downtown is:

            Chinatown/International District.

            Because … it used to be called Chinatown, due to mostly being comprised of Chinese migrants.

            But then other, mostly asian minorities began to move in, and Chinatown was seen as a racist term, so it was changed to International District.

            But them the Chinese community got angry, because they’d been there longer and were still the majority minority in that area, and they actually liked the name Chinatown.

            So then the official name became both, and not either/or, both.

            And then it got even more specific with block by block different secondary languages on road signs after english.

            Some are Mandarin, some are Japanese, some are Vietnamese…

          • @RubberElectrons
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            11 hours ago

            Oh, sure, it’s been a while. I just wanted to point out that the system has a lot of positive inertia coming towards the end of the project.

            For the record, I’m sad that a system this size still took almost an engineer’s career to implement, time-wise.

  • Drusas
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    622 hours ago

    I would visit Portland and Vancouver all the time if this were in place.

  • @ch00f
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    220 hours ago

    There’s already the frontier flights from Seattle to Portland. Like a dozen flights a day. Great opportunity for light rail.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 hours ago

    And right when the US is off the list for travel destinations due to horrible human rights. With the TSA skimming data from your phone I don’t think I even want to connect flights through America.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      19 hours ago

      I fail to see how your comment is relevant to an interstate high speed rail system.

  • @ronmaide
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    223 hours ago

    deleted by creator