logo
AmeriStarRail pitches coast-to-coast high-speed rail project, with High Desert stops

AmeriStarRail pitches coast-to-coast high-speed rail project, with High Desert stops

USA Today16 hours ago
Move over Brightline West, transportation company AmeriStarRail has pitched a Los Angeles to New York high-speed rail project, which would travel through the High Desert.
The Delaware-based company proposed its high-speed rail project dubbed the 'Transcontinental Chief' to the longtime passenger rail company Amtrak, according to Newsweek.
AmeriStarRail inked its proposal in June to Amtrak President Roger Harris about the possible joint venture connecting both coasts in under 72 hours.
The project would include dozens of stops, including Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Victorville, Barstow, the Grand Canyon, Kansas City, Chicago and New York.
The AmeriStarRail system would use existing infrastructure from host railroads, including BNSF, Norfolk Southern and New Jersey Transit, Newsweek reported.
Many variables
Victorville Mayor Elizabeth Becerra told the Daily Press on Wednesday that there are 'a lot of variables' to work through before the proposed project sees approval.
'It sounds like a great idea, but they'll have to deal with things like train schedules, permission to use BNSF tracks, funding, construction of a new station and a mountain of regulations,' Becerra. 'If they plan to bring the project through Victorville, I hope they let us sit down at the discussion table.'
The current Amtrak schedule shows a train passing through the High Desert twice a day.
Operational by 2026?
AmeriStarRail explained that the goal of the project includes having trains operational by May 10, 2026, in time for the FIFA World Cup and the United States' 250th anniversary celebrations, according to Newsweek.
The rail system would use existing TTX flatcars and auto carriers, along with Amtrak locomotives and passenger cars. It would also be on a route that is mostly double track, according to Trains Magazine.
'The Transcontinental Chief will be a great opportunity for Amtrak to team up with the private sector to confront the challenges of its money-losing long-distance trains and create opportunities to usher in a profitable Golden Age of rail travel for passengers and truckers, with the ingenuity of free enterprise, as we celebrate our great nation's 250th birthday next year,' the AmeriStarRail letter stated.
Amtrak has yet to respond to AmeriStarRail and has not acted on previous pitches made by the company, Newsweek reported.
The proposed route would replace Amtrak's Southwest Chief Line, which runs from Los Angeles to Chicago. Additionally, the Pennsylvanian Line on the East Coast.
Brightline West
One high-speed rail project in California includes Brightline West's 218-mile rail line between Las Vegas and Rancho Cucamonga, with stops in Apple Valley and Hesperia.
The Brightline West track will primarily run along the Interstate 15 median. Trains capable of reaching 186 mph or more will cut the trip between Las Vegas to Rancho Cucamonga to two hours – half the time to travel by car, the company said.
Brightline West's $12 billion high-speed rail project will be a fully electric, zero-emission system to become one of the greenest forms of transportation in the U.S.
Field testing has continued after Brightline West hosted a groundbreaking for its high-speed rail system in Las Vegas in April 2024.
In February 2025, Nevada Department of Transportation officials were told by Brightline officials that construction of the rail project would begin within the next two months.
California High-Speed Rail Authority
Earlier this year, President Donald Trump said the government would not fund the California High-Speed Rail Authority's project that would connect Los Angeles to San Francisco.
Nearly17 years after California voters initially approved a bond to help fund its construction, the project's main focus is now a Merced to Bakersfield railway with an expected operational date between 2030 and 2033, the Fresno Bee reported.
Railway News reported that while the California High-Speed Rail project has faced delays, cost overruns, and political scrutiny, the San Francisco Bay Area continues to ready itself to become a vital terminus.
Despite the controversy surrounding the project, regional leaders are steadily preparing infrastructure for its arrival.
During the American Public Transportation Association's High-Speed Rail Seminar, Andrew Fremier, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, asserted that the agency remains fully committed to bringing the California High-Speed Rail project to San Francisco and believes that it can be feasibly brought forward in increments.
Daily Press reporter Rene Ray De La Cruz may be reached at RDeLaCruz@VVDailyPress.com. Follow him on X @DP_ReneDeLaCruz
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tariffs, declining real wages, slowing growth: Japan's central bank has its work cut out
Tariffs, declining real wages, slowing growth: Japan's central bank has its work cut out

CNBC

timean hour ago

  • CNBC

Tariffs, declining real wages, slowing growth: Japan's central bank has its work cut out

The Bank of Japan faces a stiff challenge as it strives to normalize its monetary policy at a time when growth has been slowing, while steep U.S. tariffs further threaten the country's exports-driven economy. Declining real wages have compounded the BOJ's troubles. Real wages dropped at their fastest pace in 20 months in May, pressuring the central bank to raise rates and rein in inflation. Data from the country's ministry of health, labor and welfare shows that real wages dropped 2.9% compared to the year before, sharper than the revised 2% fall in April and also marking their fifth straight month of decline. The wage data highlights that inflation is taking a substantial bite out of incomes in Japan, despite sharp salary hikes. Japan's unions secured the highest wage increase since 1991 in this year's spring wage negotiations, with the Japanese Trade Union Confederation, or Rengo, saying last week that its members had received a headline pay bump of 5.25% for the year starting April. However, inflation has continued to run above the Bank of Japan's 2% target for more than three years, with the most recent reading coming in at 3.5%, diluting the net impact of wage hikes. Government data shows that while nominal wages have risen every month since December 2021, real wages have fallen year on year for more than 30 of the 41 months since. The BOJ has long stated that a "virtuous cycle" where higher salaries fuel growth in prices was needed for it to raise rates, but an economic slowdown appears to be constraining the bank's ability to tighten policy. Japan's economy also shrunk for the first time in a year in the first quarter, contracting 0.2% quarter on quarter as exports declined, hitting the trade-dependent economy. Should the BOJ raise rates to curb inflation, or should it continue to hold rates steady to support growth in the Japanese economy in a time of tariff uncertainty? Analysts have mixed views on the BOJ's path forward. Hirofumi Suzuki, Chief FX Strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, told CNBC that while's May's decline is "largely temporary," real wages are struggling to grow overall, which could dampen economic expansion as consumption slows. However, he said this slowdown in real wage growth suggests that the strength of the BOJ's "virtuous cycle" is not as robust as expected, and could be a factor in delaying rate hikes. In contrast, Jesper Koll, expert director at Tokyo-based financial services firm Monex Group said inflation rising faster than wages will strengthen BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda's commitment to hike Japan's policy rate, which will almost immediately boost purchasing power for the man on the street by way of a stronger yen. This is because one-third of the Japan's consumer price index is directly linked to import prices, he said, and a stronger yen will reduce imported inflation. Vishnu Varathan, managing director at Mizuho Securities puts it simply: "The optimal game-plan for the BOJ may be to do nothing. Sitting on its hands to affirm the tightening bias (albeit much further out) as it rides out tariffs uncertainties." The U.S. has threatened to impose 25% tariffs on Japanese imports from Aug 1. Varathan said that the BOJ ought to arguably step back, and not step in: the BOJ probably has no scope for further hikes, due to fears of crimping domestic demand.

Venezuela Bondholders Seek to Block Gold Reserve's Bid for Citgo
Venezuela Bondholders Seek to Block Gold Reserve's Bid for Citgo

Bloomberg

time2 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Venezuela Bondholders Seek to Block Gold Reserve's Bid for Citgo

Holders of some defaulted Venezuelan bonds are seeking to block a bid to purchase Citgo Petroleum Corp. 's parent company, as they claim the transaction would strip them of their rights for payment. The group told a Manhattan federal judge in a letter they are prepared to request a preliminary injunction 'promptly' against a $7.4 billion offer from a consortium led by Gold Reserve Ltd. to buy PDV Holding, Citgo's parent, in a court-ordered auction in Delaware.

Teen goes viral after bringing 200 tortillas on flight from Texas: ‘Just went on through'
Teen goes viral after bringing 200 tortillas on flight from Texas: ‘Just went on through'

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Teen goes viral after bringing 200 tortillas on flight from Texas: ‘Just went on through'

A teenager recently went viral after she showed an unusual dedication to a popular Texas grocery chain and its tortillas. Nashville resident Anna Jones recently boarded a flight from Austin to Tennessee with an unconventional cargo: She had over 200 flour tortillas from H-E-B with her. Jones recorded other people boarding the plane, then confessed her secret to the internet in a video on June 14. 'All these people and no one knows I have 200 H-E-B tortillas in my backpack,' Jones wrote on TikTok. Fox News Digital reached out to Jones for more details. Jones revealed to USA Today that hauling tortillas long-distance is something of a family tradition. The last time she visited her dad in Texas, he bought as many as 300 tortillas for her to bring home, Jones said. 4 Jones recorded other people boarding the plane, then confessed her secret to the internet in a video on June 14. Brent Hofacker – 'We bring them home, and we can freeze them, and we just use them until they run out,' the teen said. 'They normally last about two months.' She also noted that Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents didn't give her a hard time with her flatbread-filled backpack. 4 'All these people and no one knows I have 200 H-E-B tortillas in my backpack,' Jones wrote on TikTok. Annathecolassaltitan/TikTok 'I just went on through,' Jones told USA Today. She added, 'Nothing happened. It was pretty obvious that it was tortillas. This is kind of normal for them, I guess.' Some Texans on TikTok couldn't resist poking fun at Jones' video, which has been viewed more than 668,000 times as of July 7. 4 The last time she visited her dad in Texas, he bought as many as 300 tortillas for her to bring home, Jones said. pilipphoto – One Lone Star State resident asked, 'Are YOU the reason why there's never any left at the store?!?' 'They better be the butter ones,' another said. It turns out that Jones isn't the only H-E-B fan who's gone to great lengths to travel with Texas tortillas. 'I flew with H-E-B tortillas and H-E-B goods from San Antonio to Amsterdam, then drove them to Belgium,' one person said. 4 'We bring them home, and we can freeze them, and we just use them until they run out,' the teen said. Annathecolassaltitan/TikTok 'I flew with H-E-B tortillas from San Antonio to Italy,' another chimed in. 'Tortillas [are] in my carry-on from San Antonio to Japan & the Philippines,' a third user wrote. H-E-B is a Texas-based supermarket chain with over 400 locations in the Lone Star State and Mexico. What makes H-E-B tortillas so good? The supermarket chain did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment — leaving the ingredients behind the tortillas' popularity a mystery.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store