Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - RAIL PROGRAMS › Part PART C— - PASSENGER TRANSPORTATION › Chapter CHAPTER 247— - AMTRAK ROUTE SYSTEM › § 24711
The Secretary of Transportation must write a rule within 18 months to run a pilot program that could let up to 3 long-distance Amtrak routes be operated by someone else instead of Amtrak. Eligible petitioners (rail owners, States, or partnerships of States and rail carriers) can ask to run a route. Bids are for 4 years of operation, with an optional one-time 4-year renewal. The Secretary must tell the petitioner and Amtrak and publish a notice within 30 days, set a bid deadline no more than 120 days after that notice, and publish the winning bidder, the route, and the reasons for the choice with up to a 30-day public comment period. Each bid must describe capital needs, finances, and how the service will run, including staffing, and the winning bid must be made public with needed redactions. For state-funded routes, the funding State(s) must agree to bids from others. If the winner is not Amtrak, the Secretary must sign a contract within 270 days after the bid deadline. The winner gets the right and duty to run the route if it meets or beats Amtrak’s last-year performance and, if needed, must make access agreements with track owners. The Secretary may give an operating subsidy to non-Amtrak winners: the first year up to 90% of the route’s prior-year subsidy (adjusted for inflation) and the same amount for later years (adjusted for inflation). The Secretary must make Amtrak facilities and systems available if needed and can ask the Surface Transportation Board to decide access disputes. Contractors’ workers are employees of the contractor and must follow applicable federal rules; winners must give hiring preference to qualified Amtrak employees who lose their jobs. If a winner stops or fails, the Secretary, working with the Surface Transportation Board, can install an interim carrier, pay needed subsidies, and rebid the route. The Secretary must also provide certain appropriated funds to cover subsidies and to reimburse Amtrak for costs tied to losing a route. States may still introduce competition on their State-supported routes, and Amtrak’s access rights to rights-of-way and facilities are unchanged.
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Citation
49 U.S.C. § 24711
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73