News

Wanted: Faster trains

Wanted: Faster trains

HB 4279 / SB 3285 Photo: Contributed/High Speed Rail Alliance


Springfield, IL (CAPITOL CITY NOW) – Imagine passenger trains departing Chicago every hour for St. Louis, Indianapolis, Champaign, and other places. That’s the goal of a bill announced during a statehouse news conference Tuesday by the High Speed Rail Alliance and State Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan).

“Less cars on the roads are more safe roads, and for individuals that have anxiety driving one to two to four hours away, such as coming to Springfield, having these more frequent train services, allowing individuals to go from Point A to go visit Grandma, you can take the entire family. It can become more of an experience.”

“We need now, if we are ever going to get to truly competitive service, we need to start doing that design work right now,” said Rick Harnish, executive director of the alliance. “That means planning for hourly service on these critical routes and IDOT (Illinois Department of Transportation) is doing planning work we are just saying set it up to a higher standard.”

Recent Headlines

3 days ago in National

What to watch as the midterms begin with Tuesday’s primaries

After months of speculating, pontificating and spinning, the midterm election season begins in earnest Tuesday. The primary results in Texas, North Carolina and Arkansas will provide some of the first concrete evidence for what voters want as President Donald Trump's second term approaches the halfway mark.

3 days ago in Entertainment, Music

Eddie Vedder turns solo vulnerability into a powerful plea in Netflix’s ‘Matter of Time’

The first time Eddie Vedder toured without Pearl Jam, he made some glaring mistakes onstage and felt discouraged. A few shows later, he ran into Bruce Springsteen, who told him that performing solo is terrifying but that vulnerability can be a force to harness.

3 days ago in Sports

NCAA football oversight committee proposes stiff penalties for violations of transfer portal window

The NCAA football oversight committee is recommending emergency legislation to protect the transfer portal window by issuing penalties for schools and coaches who circumvent the rules.