The N.C. Railroad Co. commissioned a study that found up to 8,238 riders per weekday by 2022 projected for a possible commuter rail line between Durham and the Johnston County town of Wilson’s Mills. It looked at the whole Greensboro to Goldsboro stretch and concluded a 50-mile section in the Triangle had the highest possibility for ridership – up to 2 million riders per year.
Here’s the Raleigh N&O article. And here’s WRAL TV’s version.
Note the projected cost to construct the line $5 million to $7 million a mile. That’s eye-popping to be sure. But according to N.C. Department of Transportation Secretary Gene Conti, building a mile of interstate highway is $30 million to $50 million a mile. Makes the rail look awfully cost-effective, doesn’t it?
As the N&O article says,
If the forecast is accurate, the Triangle would have a busier rail line than the commuter trains that now serve such cities as San Diego and San Jose.
“Look at other high-growth areas around the country,” said Scott Saylor, the N.C. Railroad president. “There aren’t many that don’t have commuter rail.”
All together now: We know of a big one! We’re living in it.