

Putnam Commute: 30.6 min Statewide rank: 4
Nassau Commute: 28.2 min Statewide rank: 8
St. Johns Commute: 25 min Statewide rank: 19
Duval 23.1 min 25
Flagler 22.9 min 27
Source: Census Bureau 2006 American Community Survey


JACKSONVILLE'S TRANSPORTATION PUNDIT GIVES YOU NEWS, OPINION AND INFORMATION, REIGONAL AND THE WORLD.
It just had to happen, Mayor John Peyton, of Jacksonville finally showed his hand at the poker table. The long term disinterest in Mass Transit, the canceled LRT studies of the 1990's, and the sudden embrace of BRT as the be - all - save - all for our city. Nobody it seems can get to the king for all the Emperor's standing in the door. He has refused to meet with any group with an idea of Rail or any other alternate transit. Isn't this the behavior we would expect from this Mayor who's family owns both Gate Petroleum and Gate Concrete.
Here's the news release:
The city of Jacksonville has a new sibling.
Mayor John Peyton and Mayor Beto Richa of Curitiba, Brazil, signed an agreement making that Latin American city Jacksonville's seventh sister city.
The time is ripe.
Curitiba, located on Brazil's southern coast, is a river city. It is also a business center, having been chosen three times by the Revista Exame, a local business publication, as the best place in Brazil to do business.
But Jacksonville stands to gain more than enriched business opportunities from its relationship with Curitiba. It stands to gain lessons in sustainable living too.
According to Yes! Magazine - a nonprofit publication that focuses on sustainable environments -Curitiba has one of the world's best mass transit systems. Aided by a series of express lanes, its buses transport people quickly through town, and around 85 percent of the people use it.
Its urban planning model has been lauded by UNESCO as one that could be emulated in rebuilding Afghanistan cities, and its efforts toward recycling and conservation have earned it accolades as the ecological capital of Brazil.
One goal of Jacksonville's Sister Cities program is to stimulate economic development.
This new sister has the potential to offer the city more insights on strategies to put that development on a greener path.
Yeah, "Greener path on Earth Day 2009," more buses, more fumes, more pavement, more heat, more waste... This is pretty darn transparent, you can read between the lines for yourself.
Amtrak has offered Florida a pre-High Speed Rail plan of 5 trains each way per day, per route. Taken to the fullest possible extent, this would equate to 25 trains each way per day in Jacksonville's terminal, in other words 50 trains and that is without any Commuter Rail development.
It's time we held our own railroad summit meetings and pull every community from Norfolk, to Charlotte, Atlanta , Birmingham and New Orleans into a Jacksonville Hub promotion. Atlanta is making noise like they'd love to be the new rail center of the Southeast, but keep in mind Atlanta destroyed and complete buried any trace of both Union Station and Terminal Station. Birmingham wants in too but has the drawbacks that most of the current New York - Southeast traffic by passes them by as it moves up and down the East Coast. Charlotte and North Carolina have become leaders in their own regions by funding and then pulling Amtrak across the State to build a Carolina Corridor. Again, station and numbers still favor an East Coast city. So it all comes back to Jacksonville, the pin in the Southeastern hinge of rail transportation.
Even the planners on the side of other cities are savvy enough to know the "F Word" aka: FLORIDA must be included for them to have any chance of success. If we continue to fiddle in both Tallahassee and Jacksonville, they might just discover a way to cut us out of the majority of these new rail projects. We need a RAIL SUMMIT JACKSONVILLE, with confident city promotional figures to tour our great Jacksonville Terminal, and start planning how they can connect with this hub. Meanwhile over in Birmingham, planning for Atlanta, New Orleans and Houston, they still toss the bone to Jacksonville as every railroad line into the state passes through our Terminal.
From the Birmingham Business Journal:
The Birmingham City Council is getting behind efforts to bring high speed rail to Alabama.
Three weeks after the state reversed its position and released $120,000 to pay delinquent membership dues to the Southern High-Speed Rail Commission, Birmingham’s City Council will debate allocating matching funds for federal intercity passenger planning and construction programs. A resolution supporting the Southern High-Speed Rail Commission’s efforts to create a line between Atlanta and New Orleans is scheduled to be introduced at the April 14 council meeting. A Southeastern high-speed rail line could mean billions worth of construction projects with regional leaders negotiating with the federal government to provide as much as 80 percent of the funds.
The council’s Transportation and Communications Committee voted unanimously to send the resolution to the full committee. Councilor Carol Duncan chairs the committee and said the timing is right to back efforts to upgrade city, regional and national transportation infrastructure.
“We’re really moving and it is getting exciting,” Duncan said. “Funding should be put in place. We’re getting ourselves in place so it can happen in Alabama.”
Alabama’s Southern High-Speed Rail Commission chapter needs $1.3 million to complete feasibility studies, according to state commission representative Richard Finley. He said just the Atlanta-Birmingham line could be a $400 million project.
Duncan said the state and region are working to ensure the funds needed for Alabama to have a seat at the high-speed rail table are available.
Finley, chairman of the Southern High-Speed Rail Commission, will host the group composed of representatives from Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi in Birmingham on April 23. The commission will discuss a plan of action for seeking federal funding to transform Crescent Corridor into a high-speed rail line.
Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford has called his own summit of 15 Mid-South mayors to unite behind a line that could link Atlanta and Houston. Langford mailed invitations for his April 30 summit on April 3. The mayors of Atlanta, Houston, Tuscaloosa, Meridian, Miss., Anniston, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Biloxi, Gulfport, Miss., Mobile are among those Langford invited.
He hopes to forge a partnership with his peers to broker a major regional economic development project. With the federal government allotting $8 billion for high speed rail projects, Langford said a united effort is needed.
“We must join forces and agree to cooperate if the mutual interests of our communities are to be met and that we are to receive our fair share of the funds devoted to what I am calling the ‘Mid-South High Speed Rail Corridor,” Langford’s invitation said.
Meridian, Miss. John Robert Smith applauded Langford’s vision and efforts to help the region speak with one voice as it seeks its slice of the federal high-speed rail pie.
“The corridors that link Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Texas and Alabama are critical for the future development of the Southeast,” Smith said. “Mayors are the strongest and best advocates for rail in this country.”
You see Mr. and Ms. Jacksonville politician, ours still stands and it just awaits your call to become the hub of the Southeast. Just remember when looking for railroads and funding, the "F" word is Florida, and Florida Railroad is spelled J-A-C-K-S-O-N-V-I-L-L-E.
Blue Lines = Florida East Coast
Green Lines = CSXT
Black Lines = Norfolk Southern
If the City of Jacksonville and FDOT bought the former Seaboard Air Line Mainline, replaced the missing link from Jacksonville Terminal to Springfield Yard (already in City hands), it would effectively open the door to ease traffic congestion. Moreover it could all be operated as the JaxPort Railroad, a terminal road with neutral switching access by all carriers. Who needs a new rail yard when we already have the largely empty Springfield Yard which could easily be rehabilitated into a first class container facility. Who needs a one railroad port, when we already have plans for Commuter Rail on those same tracks? Why not bust the port wide open and create a quick, responsive, shortline/terminal road.
Not only would CSX retain every carload that any customer currently requests via a CSX routing, The Florida East Coast and Norfolk Southern wouldn't have to bypass the Port and hustle everything to the new Titusville Intermodal facility in order the expedite shipments. Moreover by linking Port/ACE + Freight Railroad/FRA + Transit/FTA + Commuter Rail/FRA + Station Security/DHS, and beautification/FDOT, we open hundreds of more avenues by which to obtain those vital federal grants.
Then, and only then, will we be able to honestly claim we have 3 railroad service choices for our port shippers. Only then will we be able to control the destiny of our Commuter Rail and Passenger Terminal. The day that the first RDC car rumbles over the Trout River and the big diesels of FEC or NS freely mix with CSX out at Tri-Pac, JaxPort and JTA will have come of age.
Mayport Village to Ft. George Island:
6 a.m., 6:20 a.m., 7 a.m. and continuing on the hour and half hour, with final departure at 7 p.m.
7 a.m., 7:30 a.m., 8 a.m. and continuing on the hour and half hour, with final departure at 8:30
Interesting that this was simply a regular "medical" check-up required by law. The Jacksonville Port Authority which has graciously operated the vital service since Governor Crist flushed the funding from the State of Florida. The grand little ship should have returned on Feb. 23, but once in dry dock at Atlantic Marine the inspectors noted greater problems then anticipated in regular maintenance, so she was laid up for the extra days to make her whole again.
While the details of the added work are not known all is ship shape and she is once again crossing paths with giant container, freighter, tanker and passenger cruise ships, offering some of the greatest maritime views of a busy shipping channel to be found anywhere.
The first European Settlement in North America was founded when Frenchman Jean Ribault and the Huguenots that were with him established a village at the Mouth of a mighty river. It was called Mayport, and it's comforting to know that after 450 years, his name is still sailing on these waters.
Bus and Tour operators should pay attention to this ship and it's highway, from Fernandina's Centre Street, Fort Clinch, and snow white beaches, within the next 100 miles you'll find:
Great job Jax Port and just in time for the March madness, Spring Break and Summer fun in Jacksonville.
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