Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - RAIL PROGRAMS › Part PART C— - PASSENGER TRANSPORTATION › Chapter CHAPTER 249— - NORTHEAST CORRIDOR IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM › § 24911
Creates a competitive grant program run by the Secretary of Transportation to pay for capital projects that fix worn rail assets, make trains faster or more reliable, or start or grow intercity passenger rail service (private operators can be included if an eligible partner is involved). Applicants can be States (including D.C.), groups of States, interstate compacts, state-created public agencies, local governments, Amtrak (alone or with States), federally recognized Tribes, or any mix of these. “Intercity rail passenger transportation” is defined in section 24102. The “Northeast Corridor” means the main rail line between Boston and the District of Columbia, the branch lines to Harrisburg, Springfield, and Spuyten Duyvil, and the facilities and services that support those lines. Grants can pay for projects that restore assets to a state of good repair; improve speed, frequency, capacity, reliability, electrification, or other performance; expand or create new service; groups of related projects; and planning, environmental study, and final design. For projects on the Northeast Corridor, the Secretary must follow a published Northeast Corridor project inventory unless major changes require adjustments, and projects that help both intercity and commuter rail must have Amtrak and commuter agencies in compliance with section 24905(c)(2) and show funding shares for intercity, commuter, and local parts before work starts. For projects not on the Northeast Corridor, the Secretary should favor projects where Amtrak is not the only applicant, that help Amtrak routes, and that appear in a corridor inventory under section 25101. The Secretary will weigh cost‑benefit, safety, environmental effects, economic impacts, private investment potential, applicant capacity and past performance, service to underconnected communities, and other relevant factors. At least 45 percent of grant money must go to non‑Northeast Corridor projects (and at least 20 percent of that must benefit a long‑distance route), and at least 45 percent must fund projects listed on the Northeast Corridor inventory. The Secretary must publish a Northeast Corridor project inventory within 1 year after the Passenger Rail Expansion and Rail Safety Act of 2021 and every 2 years after that, showing projects, applicants, proposed Federal funding, the order of funding, and funding expectations for the next 5 fiscal years, developed with the Northeast Corridor Commission and infrastructure owners. Federal funding may cover up to 80 percent of a project’s cost. Amtrak may use its revenues to meet the non‑Federal share when it is the applicant. The Secretary may issue letters of intent or phased funding agreements (allowed for highly rated projects where Federal help exceeds $80,000,000) that state contingent commitments but are not binding unless Congress provides funds. The Secretary must notify Congressional committees 30 days before issuing such letters or agreements. Appropriated funds remain available until spent. Each year by the first Monday in February the Secretary must report to key Congressional committees with proposed allocations, evaluations and ratings for projects with phased funding or letters of intent, and funding recommendations for the next 3 fiscal years. The Secretary may withhold up to 5 percent of the program funds for planning and development related to section 25101, including service development plans, planning guidance, and planning tools.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 24911
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73