Canadian Pacific plans inaugural round trip for BR-NOLA passenger rail

Dec. 13, 2021
Passenger rail is on its way to reality for the SoLA super region.

The Canadian Pacific Railway announced its commitment to the establishment of passenger rail between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, La. 

The announcement was made by James Clements, senior vice president of strategic planning and technology transformation for Canadian Pacific, and he was joined Louisiana  Gov. John Bel Edwards, Louisiana Secretary of Transportation Shawn Wilson, local elected officials and business leaders representing the SoLA Super Region for a conversation on Southern Louisiana passenger rail.   

Passenger rail service between Louisiana’s two largest cities would follow Canadian Pacific’s approved control of the track, as proposed in the pending Canadian Pacific-Kansas City Southern merger application, and completion of necessary infrastructure improvements in conjunction with stakeholders.   

In his announcement, Clements expressed the willingness of Canadian Pacific Railway to open capacity of a Canadian Pacific-owned track to an initial one round trip per day. Increased capacity could be accommodated depending on available funding for required capital improvements. 

“We look forward to the expansion and working with Amtrak to develop passenger service,” said Clements. “This is historic. We’re excited about what this does for our customers, and what this does for our communities.”   

“We are absolutely committed to working with the freight and passenger community,” added Gov. Edwards. “I stand here to welcome Canadian Pacific to Louisiana and look forward to having a long, successful relationship with them. Now is the time to think big for transportation in our state.” 

The merger between Canadian Pacific and Kansas City Southern is currently under regulatory review. Canadian Pacific expects to formally merge by the fourth quarter of 2022, which would create Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) and directly connect the United States, Mexico and Canada. 

After the acquisition, every Class I railroad that operates in the United States will have a presence within Louisiana and at the Port of New Orleans. Clements highlighted Canadian Pacific’s longstanding leadership in passenger rail delivery, while highlighting institutional priorities of safety, accessibility and sustainability.    

Erin Monroe Wesley, 2021 chair of SoLA and Southeast Vice President of Government and Public Affairs for Cox Communications, said, “According to a 2019 poll, 85 percent of respondents are in favor of passenger rail service between New Orleans and Baton Rouge.”   

She elaborated on the invitation extended by SoLA to Canadian Pacific representatives to review passenger rail priorities, leading to the announcement. 

Passenger rail between Baton Rouge and New Orleans has been studied extensively. A poll conducted of 1,050 registered voters from Ascension, East Baton Rouge, Jefferson, Orleans, St. James and St. John Parishes in February and March of 2019 demonstrated that 63 percent of regional residents are interested passengers. Expanded passenger rail capacity will be studied and implemented as customer demand and needed line upgrades are understood. Analyses will be performed as quickly as possible to get the infrastructure up to capacity to support a second train pair that would not interfere with existing freight service on the line. 

Expansion of passenger rail funding is included in the recently passed Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), offering $66 billion in total for rail and multiple relevant programs, such as Federal-State Partnership for Intercity Passenger Rail grants.   

The IIJA will supply funding for Amtrak to further its 15-year corridor vision plan, which envisions routes accessing additional communities and specifically identifies passenger rail between the Baton Rouge and New Orleans metros as a service corridor. Amtrak’s plans outline its goal to carry 20 million more passengers by 2035. 

The SoLA Super Region Committee has long advocated for passenger rail service between Baton Rouge and New Orleans as a priority for economic competitiveness, business and talent attraction, and disaster preparedness, and the commitment by Canadian Pacific Railway advances this regional effort.