>Maglev transit project pushed, could create jobs
>
>By <mailto:msan...@tribweb.com>Matthew Santoni
>TRIBUNE-REVIEW
>Saturday, November 7, 2009
>
>Supporters of a proposed maglev train from
>Pittsburgh International Airport to Greensburg
>wooed state representatives Friday with promises
>the project could create thousands of jobs in
>high-tech manufacturing, if the government could
>pay the $5.3 billion price tag.
>
>Building the 54-mile magnetic guideway between
>the airport, Downtown, Monroeville and
>Greensburg would create demand for an estimated
>533,000 tons of steel and 712,000 cubic yards of
>concrete, and the precision-welding technology
>that would be used to turn the steel into the
>track could then be exported around the world,
>proponents told members of the state House
>Transportation Committee during a hearing at Carnegie Mellon University.
>
>The first magnetic levitation trains for
>Pittsburgh would be manufactured in Germany by
>Transrapid International, which built the only
>maglev trains in commercial operation, in China.
>Using magnets that attract and repel each other,
>the trains hover a few centimeters above the
>track and can travel at speeds up to 300 mph.
>But the company would seek to "Americanize"
>train production if the technology catches on in
>the United States, moving executives and
>engineers back and forth across the Atlantic to
>establish manufacturing facilities here, said
>Walter Buss, president of Transrapid International-USA.
>
>"If we could grab this opportunity and run with
>it, we could become the hub for the (maglev)
>industry — not just for this country, but foor
>this hemisphere," said Bill George, president of the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO.
>
>Fred Gurney, president of McKeesport-based
>Maglev Inc., said the curves and twists to each
>piece of the steel guideway required his company
>to cut costs by developing manufacturing
>techniques that could be applied to other
>projects such as bridges, highways and ships.
>
>In written testimony submitted in opposition to
>the project, Randal O'Toole, a senior fellow at
>the libertarian Cato Institute based in
>Washington, questioned whether the project would
>serve destinations people actually want to go to.
>
>"Americans simply have too many potential
>destinations for rail transit to be useful. Our
>homes, jobs and other activity centers are
>finely spread throughout metropolitan areas," O'Toole wrote.
>
>The project's hefty startup cost and the slow
>trickle of money have drawn out the planning
>process during nearly 10 years. The
>environmental impact statement was started in
>2001 and only recently landed on the desk of
>Federal Railroad Administrator Joe Szabo, where
>it awaits his signature, Gurney said. Final
>approval that would enable bidding on the
>project would take at least another six months,
>and though a $28 million federal grant for
>additional preliminary engineering was announced
>in September, none of it has been released.
>
>"We're trying to build high-speed rail, and
>we've got slow-moving paper. That's the biggest
>challenge we have," said Donald Dunlevy, state
>legislative director for the United Transportation Union.
>
>The $28 million federal grant, which comes from
>a $90 million account for maglev projects in the
>2005 transportation funding bill, requires a 20
>percent state match, said Rep. Joe Markosek,
>D-Monroeville, the majority chairman of the
>House Transportation Committee. Finding that
>state money would be another hurdle for the project, he said.
>
><http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_651985.html>http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_651985.html
- Jerry Schneider -
Innovative Transportation Technologies
http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans