May 27, 2020

Duckworth, Durbin Announce $12 Million for Metra Improvements

 

[WASHINGTON, DC] – U.S. Senators Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) and Dick Durbin (D-IL) today announced that Metra will receive $12,482,600 in grant funding from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) for rail improvements. The funding will support the modernization of three interlockings on the Milwaukee North Line in Illinois, which will help lead to improved reliability and fewer delays for Metra and Amtrak commuters.

“I’m proud to announce today’s federal funding that will help improve the safety and enhance reliability of the Metra’s Milwaukee North Line rail system, an essential mode of transportation that many Illinoisans have relied on for decades,” said Duckworth. “I’ll keep working with Senator Durbin and other members of the Illinois congressional delegation to support infrastructure improvements across Chicagoland and the state of Illinois in order to bring in as much federal investment as possible.” 

“For many Illinoisans, Metra and Amtrak are the only affordable and accessible transportation options they have,” Durbin said. “The funding announced today will improve service for customers who depend on these trains running efficiently and safely. Senator Duckworth and I will continue to work with our colleagues in Congress to ensure we support passenger rail in Illinois.”

The Milwaukee North Line is used by Amtrak’s Hiawatha and Empire Builder services, Metra’s Milwaukee District North service, and two freight railroads. The project will bring signal components into a state-of-good-repair, improve compatibility with Positive Train Control, and replace obsolete components for which replacement parts are no longer available. Signals will be replaced and upgraded at all three interlockings, and at Rondout, a new track connection to Metra’s Fox Lake subdivision will be added, increasing capacity and reducing delays.

Today’s funding is awarded through the Federal Railroad Administration’s (FRA) Federal-State Partnership for State of Good Repair Program, which helps fund capital projects to repair, replace or rehabilitate publicly owned railroad assets, as well as to improve intercity passenger-rail performance.