Title 45 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - REGIONAL RAIL REORGANIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - UNITED STATES RAILWAY ASSOCIATION › § 716
Create a final system plan that meets several clear goals for rail and express service in the region. The plan must aim to build a financially self-supporting rail and express system, keep rail service enough to meet the region’s needs, improve high-speed passenger service consistent with the Secretary’s September 1971 recommendations, preserve existing railroad service patterns and tracks when possible (especially near fossil fuel resources), encourage competition, meet environmental rules such as the national air quality standards, move passengers and freight efficiently and safely (including commuter and intercity needs and coordination with the National Railroad Passenger Corporation), identify short-to-medium distance corridors where high-speed upgrades would give big public benefits, and reduce job losses and related community costs. Make decisions based on all relevant facts. The plan must consider costs to repair and modernize track and equipment, ways to save money in operations, how to reorganize services, marketing and traffic studies, financial studies, worker impacts, consumer needs, and any other factors the Association or the Secretary has identified. It must say which railroad properties will be transferred to the Corporation, which will be offered for sale to profitable railroads, which may be bought by the National Railroad Passenger Corporation, and which may be sold or leased to states or local transportation authorities or used for public purposes. Transfers from profitable railroads to the Corporation must be in exchange for Corporation stock or securities. Sales to profitable railroads must bring compensation. Important deadlines: the Corporation must notify the Association within 95 days after the plan’s effective date about possible subsidiary transfers; certain offers to profitable railroads end 7 days after February 5, 1976 unless accepted sooner; authorizations to offer profitable-railroad properties end 95 days after the plan’s effective date unless a binding deal is made. The plan must show projected earnings and capital structure, give property and securities values, suggest joint use arrangements, state how much Association borrowing is needed, and may set terms for securities (but any direct Association obligation in those terms needs Congress approval.
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Railroads — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
45 U.S.C. § 716
Title 45 — Railroads
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73