Train Tracks (File)

Florida Passenger Rail Proposal Gets Change

Train Tracks (File)
Train Tracks (File)

A Senate committee revised a proposal Tuesday that could help extend a private passenger rail system from Orlando to Tampa.

A bill (SB 1226) initially would have led to the Florida Department of Transportation setting aside a 44-foot-wide rail corridor in the Interstate 4 right-of-way “to extend to Tampa the existing passenger rail service currently terminating in Orlando.”

But Senate Transportation Chairman Nick DiCeglie, R-Indian Rocks Beach, made a change that removed that proposed directive to the transportation department. Under the change, the Florida Rail Enterprise would be required to include the preservation of “future rail corridors and rights-of-way in coordination with the department’s planning of the state highway system.”

Read :Florida Woman Wins $1 Million On Florida Lottery Scratch-Off From Shell Gas Station

DiCeglie said concerns had been raised that putting in law a requirement about the I-4 right-of-way would “tie the hands” of the department.

“They didn’t want to be essentially mandated,” DiCeglie said after the committee meeting. “They’ve got processes in places which clearly I’m comfortable with. They’re always aware of the potential, in this case, of the rail going from Orlando to Tampa.”

Also, the Senate and House have moved forward with budget proposals (SB 2500 and HB 5001) that don’t include lawmakers’ requests to provide $50 million for rail improvements in the Interstate 4 corridor.

The Senate and House will take up the proposals Wednesday and negotiate a final spending plan in the coming weeks.

Read: Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz Endorses Kevin McCarthy For RNC Chair Following McDaniel’s Exit

“There’s always next year,” DiCeglie said. In September, the passenger-rail company Brightline completed a 170-mile, $6 billion project that connected its service to Orlando from South Florida, where stations have operated since 2018.

Brightline has signaled that it wants to extend the service to the Tampa area. Christine Kefauver, Brightline senior vice president of corporate development, told lawmakers in December that the company was “making tremendous strides” toward an Orlando-to-Tampa route.

DiCeglie’s bill must clear two more committees before it could reach the full Senate. The rail issue is included in a wide-ranging Senate transportation package. A final version will have to be negotiated with the House. The House version of the bill (HB 1301) doesn’t include the rail proposal.

Android Users, Click To Download The Tampa Free Press App And Never Miss A Story. Follow Us On Facebook and Twitter. Sign up for our free newsletter. 

Login To Facebook To Comment