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The saga of high-speed rail in Texas takes another dramatic turn as the Trump administration revokes $60 million in funding previously allocated to Amtrak for the Texas Central project. Despite this setback, we explore why the Dallas-Houston line might actually be closer to reality than ever before.
• Texas high-speed rail initiatives date back to the 1990s when Southwest Airlines played a significant role in derailing early efforts
• Texas Central, the current iteration of the project, would connect Dallas to Houston in 90 minutes using trains capable of 205 mph
• After years of lawsuits, Texas Central gained crucial eminent domain authority by being classified as a utility
• Amtrak briefly took over the project in 2024 before Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy pulled federal funding
• A private investment firm, Kleinheinz Capital Partners, has stepped in as lead investor just one day after federal funding was withdrawn
• The project could potentially be finalized by year-end with construction taking approximately 80-86 months
• Despite organized opposition groups like "Texans Against High Speed Rail," the project now has all legal frameworks in place
Check out our merch store for Transit Tangents shirts and sweatshirts, or support us directly via Patreon for access to bonus content and early episodes.
Send us a text
Support the show
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The saga of high-speed rail in Texas takes another dramatic turn as the Trump administration revokes $60 million in funding previously allocated to Amtrak for the Texas Central project. Despite this setback, we explore why the Dallas-Houston line might actually be closer to reality than ever before.
• Texas high-speed rail initiatives date back to the 1990s when Southwest Airlines played a significant role in derailing early efforts
• Texas Central, the current iteration of the project, would connect Dallas to Houston in 90 minutes using trains capable of 205 mph
• After years of lawsuits, Texas Central gained crucial eminent domain authority by being classified as a utility
• Amtrak briefly took over the project in 2024 before Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy pulled federal funding
• A private investment firm, Kleinheinz Capital Partners, has stepped in as lead investor just one day after federal funding was withdrawn
• The project could potentially be finalized by year-end with construction taking approximately 80-86 months
• Despite organized opposition groups like "Texans Against High Speed Rail," the project now has all legal frameworks in place
Check out our merch store for Transit Tangents shirts and sweatshirts, or support us directly via Patreon for access to bonus content and early episodes.
Send us a text
Support the show
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