June 2005 in rail transport

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2004, 2005, 2006

2004 in rail transport
2005 in rail transport
2006 in rail transport

This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in June 2005.

Contents

[edit] June events

June
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
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5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30
 
2005

[edit] June 1 – June 4

June 1
June 2
  • France - Railroad workers across France go on strike to demand better wages and jobs. The strike, which began at 18:00 GMT on Wednesday, is expected to last through 6:00 GMT Friday. Nearly 40% of all TGV schedules are dropped for the duration of the strike. [3]
  • United Kingdom - Chris Green, CEO of Virgin Trains since 1992, announces that he will join the Board of Directors for Network Rail; his resignation from Virgin is scheduled for September 2005. Green began his railroad career with British Rail in 1965. [4]
June 4

[edit] June 5 – June 11

June 6
June 8
June 9
  • United States - Service is restored on the Alaska Railroad after the Moody Tunnel was closed for three days due to damage when a large forklift loaded on a southbound train struck one of the tunnel's timber supports, causing a partial collapse of the tunnel. The forklift's size made it an oversize load, which meant that the railroad was required to measure it before departure. Although the forklift was successfully hauled north by the railroad earlier in the year; the measurements made for its return south were incorrect. [9]
  • United States - Amtrak's senior vice president of operations, William Crosbie, tells a Transportation subcommittee in the United States House of Representatives that some Acela Express service may be restored as early as July 2005. Spokepeople for Amtrak and Bombardier, the Acela's lead manufacturer, said that up to 20 trains could return to limited operation in July, but full service restoration isn't expected until Autumn. [10]
  • United States - FreightCar America's (formerly Johnstown America Corporation) first new railroad car built at the company's Roanoke, Virginia, plant is delivered to Norfolk Southern. The car delivered was a coal hopper car, which is typical of the majority of cars that will be built there; the Norfolk plant was once owned by Norfolk Southern. [11]
June 10
June 11

[edit] June 12 – June 18

June 12
  • Russia - At 7:10 AM local time, a bomb explodes between Uzunovo and Bogatishchevo, Russia (about 95 miles / 153 km from Moscow), derailing the locomotive and first four passenger cars of the Grozny-Moscow train. Investigators found wires leading from the explosion site to a control panel and hideout about 164 ft (50 m) from the site. [14]
June 13
  • People's Republic of China - Citing the inadequacy of current rail connections in Xinjiang, China, deputy chairman Zhang Zhou explains that a second railway is needed to connect to Kazakhstan. The new connection is proposed between Jinhe station in China, Khorgos on the border between China and Kazakhstan, and a point on the Kazakhstan railway system between Almaty and Urumqi. [15]
  • United States - The United States Surface Transportation Board (STB) issues a Certificate of Interim Trail Use regarding the former New York Central railroad's "High Line" elevated right of way through New York City. City officials want to turn the unused elevated line into a 22 block long public park, CSX Transportation, the High Line's current owner, filed for abandonment of the line. Monday's decision by the STB effectively authorizes the transfer of the line from CSX to the city for use as a park. [16] [17]
  • United Kingdom - The Docklands Light Railway in East London begins construction of a new extension to Woolwich Arsenal. [18]
June 16
June 18

[edit] June 19 – June 25

June 19
June 21
  • Israel - A southbound passenger train collides with a coal delivery truck near Revadim, about 25 miles south of Tel Aviv; the train was bound for Beersheba when the accident occurred. At least seven people die in the accident and more than 200 are injured. (CBS)
June 22
  • Switzerland - The entire network of the Swiss Federal Railways shuts down due to a power failure in its overhead wire system. The power failure is also affecting international transit through Switzerland as such intercity trains use the same system. Initial reports indicate that the power failure started with a voltage drop in Ticino (in the St. Gotthard region) that then spread to the entire system. It is unknown when service will be restored. [29] [30]
  • Russia - Russian Railways president Vladimir Yakunin meets with Saudi Arabian officials regarding the planned Trans-Saudi Railroad. The Saudi delegation has invited Russian Railways to build the Riyadh-Medina-Jeddah-Mecca section due to the company's experience in railroad building. Russian Railways is conducting a feasibility study, which is expected to be released in November 2005, on the route. [31]
June 23
June 24

[edit] June 26 – June 30

June 29
  • United States - The United States House of Representatives passes a $1.17 billion funding bill for Amtrak in fiscal year 2006, an amount that is still short of the $2 billion Amtrak was originally seeking. The funding was approved in an amendment to a more general transportation and treasury appropriations bill. The House also removed the requirement in the bill that would mandate Amtrak to end passenger train service on currently unprofitable routes. The funding has yet to be approved by the Senate. [36]
  • United Kingdom - Bombardier officially opens a new railway equipment refurbishment center in Derby, England, following an investment of nearly £2 million to renovate the company's former manufacturing facility. (RailwayPeople.com)
June 30
  • United States - The United States Federal Railroad Administration issues a ruling requiring locomotive "black boxes" on trains operating in the US be more resistant to the loss of data from exposure to fire, impact, fluid immersion and other damage that could occur in the event of a train accident.

[edit] References