Amtrak Accounting.For private businesses, being self-sufficient means covering all your costs. For Amtrak Amtrak, the National Railroad Passenger Corp., authorized to operate virtually all intercity passenger railroad routes in the United States. Amtrak was created by Congress in 1970 in response to more than two decades of continuous operating deficits by privately run passenger railroads; over 100 of the nation's 500 passenger railroad lines at the time had filed discontinuation-of-service petitions with the Interstate Commerce Commission., recipient of more than $23 billion in subsidies since 1971, it means covering any of its costs. Certain incidentals don't count as legitimate expenses--like maintenance of locomotives and passenger cars, depreciation on this equipment, and employees' retirement plans. Or so say Secretary of Transportation Rodney Slater, Amtrak Chairman Tommy Thompson (who moonlights as the welfare-slashing governor of Wisconsin), and some of the senators who oversee Amtrak's government-granted monopoly. In late January, the Amtrak Reform Council, established a few years ago to help Amtrak locomote entirely on its own steam, released a report projecting operating losses of $567 million in 2002. Under a 1997 law, Amtrak must develop a plan to privatize itself-"complete liquidation" is the exact legislative language--if it is unable to cover its costs by the end of that fiscal year. The Reform Council report didn't start the dreaded privatization process, but Amtrak, and interest groups earning a living off it, still denounced its findings. Sonny Hall, head of the AFLCIO AFLCIO - American Federation of Labor - Congress of Industrial Organizations transport workers union, told the Associated Press that the report should have been called, "A Preliminary Death Wish 1. A desire for self-destruction, often accompanied by feelings of depression, hopelessness, and self-reproach. 2. A suicidal urge that presumably drives certain people to put themselves consistently into dangerous situations. The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing on February 24 to explore the issue, where Gov. Thompson maintained that forcing Amtrak to cover all its costs would doom its chances at ever being self-sufficient. Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-Texas) and John Kerry (D-Mass.) agreed, and urged the Amtrak Reform Council to adopt lower standards. Problem solved. |
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