Turboliner Trains Have Been Rotting In a Rail Yard Since 2004 at Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars in Storage Costs
Governor Andrew Cuomo today announced plans to
dispose of outdated, obsolete and non-functioning trains that have been sitting
idle in a weed filled industrial park in Glenville.
In addition, millions of dollars of unused and
unneeded replacement train parts that have been stored in a warehouse in
Rotterdam will also be sold.
Taxpayers will save more than $150,000 in yearly
lease costs as well as benefit from the proceeds from the sale and disposition
of the equipment.
"I have repeatedly said that state
government must be more efficient and must stop wasting taxpayer money,"
said Governor Cuomo.
"In this case, millions of dollars of
taxpayer money were used to buy obsolete equipment, and hundreds of thousands
more spent to store it. This is exactly why we are scouring through the
operations of every agency - to make sure cases like this are found and stopped."
The trains were part of a high speed rail
program that was launched in 1998 and was supposed to provide faster service
between Albany and New York City.
Originally built in 1976, seven train cars were
supposed to be rehabilitated and upgraded for $70 million as part of the $185
million project. Two trains were upgraded and put into service for a short
period in 2003. But poor planning and engineering problems made the trains
unusable and the program was stopped. Since then four of the trains – each consisting
of two locomotives, a café car, and two passenger cars have been decaying in an
industrial rail yard.
Today, these types of trains are considered
obsolete, with none in service in the United States, and are used in only a
handful of countries around the world.
The trains were identified for disposition
during our ongoing review of New York state agencies—a review meant to root out
waste. At the Governor’s direction, the Office of General Services (OGS) will
oversee the sale and disposal of the locomotives, cars and unneeded rail parts
located at the Rotterdam and Scotia Industrial Parks.
OGS will engage a technology parts broker to
assess the value and condition of the trains and the parts, and to manage the
sale and disposition of the equipment. The trains may have to be sold for
scrap, depending on the outcome of the evaluation. Industry experts will help
determine how best to sell the equipment by the end of the year.
The locomotives and train cars, in various
stages of disrepair, have been stored at a facility in Scotia, Schenectady
County, at an annual cost of $58,000.
The unneeded train parts are warehoused in
Rotterdam, also in Schenectady County, at an annual cost of $95,000. New York State
has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars for leasing spaces to store this
equipment.
The millions of dollars of train parts stored at
the warehouse would fit into more than 100 tractor trailer trucks and include: 4
large turbine engines, 4 medium sized turbine engines, 1 used medium sized
turbine engine, 8 train transmissions, 8 new large electric generators, HVAC
systems, hundreds of seat frames, cushions and upholstery, and dozens of new
train wheels and brake rotors
"There is no better example of the extent of government dysfunction inherited by Governor Cuomo than these rusted and rotting trains to nowhere which wasted millions in tax dollars. Our efforts to root out government waste will end these shocking examples of poor planning and incompetent management that have plagued New York State government for a decade," said Howard Glaser, Director of State Operations.
The Governor's plan to rid the state of these
trains is part of his overhaul of New York's government operations.
In February, Governor Cuomo launched the
"NYSStore," a new eBay-based online platform to sell unneeded state
vehicles and other items, as well as real estate available through eBay and
other means.
To date, more than 108,909 people have visited
NYSStore.com. Since the "NYSStore" launch, the state has sold $
258,212, 02 worth of non-vehicle excess state assets, and 324 excess vehicles,
totaling in $1,129,533.29.
Governor Cuomo's administration has taken a
different approach to high speed rail development, one designed to deliver
tangible improvements in reliability, on-time performance and speed.
Seven major rail projects are underway, with
$567.3 million in funding from the federal government matched by $104.4 million
from the state.
The projects focus on improving, upgrading, and
modernizing the state’s rail infrastructure to eliminate current problems and
put the state on track to the rail system of the future. Work underway now
includes the following:
Harold Interlocking - Harold Interlocking is the busiest passenger rail interlocking in North America, serving 783 Amtrak, LIRR and NJ Transit trains each weekday – 136 of them are Amtrak trains. The project will build separate tracks for Amtrak between Hell Gate Bridge and Penn Station. Cost: $368.2M
4th Track
at Rensselaer Station Project –a new passenger track to eliminate
congestion and delays at the station caused by trains waiting for the platform
to become available. Cost: $50.5M
Albany
Schenectady Double Track Project –building 17 miles of new track where only a
single track exists, eliminating a critical bottleneck for the entire corridor.
Cost: $91.2M
Two signal
line projects on the Hudson Line: replace obsolete signal wires that are
the source of frequent outages along the Hudson line. Cost: $36.5M
Ballston
Spa 2nd Main Track – Canadian Pacific Railways is adding a track near
Saratoga Station and the busy Saratoga Freight Yard, reducing delays to
Amtrak’s Adirondack Service. Cost: $6.63M
Station
Improvements at Buffalo Depew Station –project will improve the station building
and parking lot. Cost: $770K
Schenectady
Station –building
new track and infrastructure while CDTA constructs a replacement station. Cost:
$13.5M
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