Northeast Corridor Commission
Commission overview | |
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Formed | 2010 |
Headquarters | Washington, D.C. |
Commission executives |
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Website | NEC Commission |
Congress established the Northeast Corridor Commission (the Commission) under Sec. 212 of Public Law 110-432 (Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008) [1] to promote mutual cooperation and planning among owners and operators on the Northeast Corridor (NEC) rail line and to advise the U.S. Congress on Corridor policy and investment needs.
Description[]
The Commission consists of one member from each of the NEC states and the District of Columbia; four members from Amtrak; and five members from the U.S. Department of Transportation. The Commission also includes non-voting representatives from four freight railroads, states with feeder corridors, and commuter authorities not directly represented by a Commission member.
The Commission approved a Northeast Corridor Commuter and Intercity Rail Cost Allocation Policy (the Policy) in 2015 as a first step towards establishing a new framework for regional cooperation. The Policy employs consistent and transparent methods for sharing about $1 billion in annual operating and baseline capital costs among infrastructure owners and service operators. In addition, the Policy calls for a collaborative capital planning process among stakeholders, new performance reporting requirements, and a federal-state funding partnership to eliminate the $28 billion state-of-good repair backlog and address improvement needs not funded through the Policy.
Congressional passage of the FAST Act in December 2015 represented a significant step forward for the NEC. It marked the first time that intercity passenger rail was addressed in a multi-year authorization alongside other surface transportation programs and it codified many of recommendations included in the Policy aimed at increasing collaboration, transparency, and accountability for all NEC stakeholders.[2]
Members[]
The NEC Commission has five voting members from USDOT, four from Amtrak, and one each from the eight NEC states and the District of Columbia. Non-voting members include the NEC feeder states, freight railroads and independent commuter authorities.[2]
NEC States:
- Massachusetts Department of Transportation
- Rhode Island Department of Transportation
- Connecticut Department of Transportation
- New York State Department of Transportation
- NJ Transit
- Pennsylvania Department of Transportation
- Delaware Department of Transportation
- Maryland Department of Transportation
- District of Columbia Department of Transportation
U.S. Department of Transportation:
- 5 members, including:
- 4 members
Non-voting Representatives[]
- Conrail Shared Assets Operations
- CSX Transportation
- Norfolk Southern Corporation
- Providence and Worcester Railroad
- Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
- New Hampshire
- New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority
- Northern New England Passenger Rail Authority
- North Carolina Department of Transportation
- Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
- Vermont Agency of Transportation
- Virginia Department of Transportation
References[]
- ^ "49 U.S. Code § 24905 - Northeast Corridor Commission; Safety Committee".
- ^ a b "About The Commission". Northeast Corridor Commission. http://www.nec-commission.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/About-The-Commission.pdf
External links[]
- Northeastern United States
- Northeast Corridor
- Independent agencies of the United States government