The Englewood neighborhood of Chicago features one of the most hopelessly tangled railway bottlenecks in North America. Hopeless, that is, until yesterday, when I paid a visit to my home state of Illinois to celebrate the groundbreaking of a rail project that will untangle that infamous bottleneck and quickly put 1,500 men and women to work.
U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, U.S. Congressmen Bobby Rush and Dan Lipinski, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn, and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel joined me in the honor of launching this project to improve performance and efficiency for the region's freight, passenger, and commuter rail.
The Englewood Flyover is part of a larger initiative, the Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program or CREATE. Once finished, the Englewood Flyover will eliminate congestion and backups for the 78 daily Metra commuter trains, 14 Amtrak trains, and 46 freight trains that run through the corridor. This will ease rail traffic to and from Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana, as well as other parts of Illinois.
And easing rail traffic means greater economic competitiveness. We can move parts to factories faster. We can move goods to market faster. And we can move people to their jobs faster. The new Englewood bridge will also expand capacity for future high-speed rail service.
But the part of this project I am most excited about is that it will immediately begin putting Americans to work. A strict “Buy America” requirement ensures U.S. manufacturers and workers receive the maximum economic benefits from this federal investment. This means that the Englewood flyover project will create nearly 1,500 jobs.
There’s no two ways about it; we have roads and bridges that desperately need work, and we have people who desperately want to get back on the job. The American Jobs Act addresses both of these challenges.
The Englewood Flyover solves a longstanding transportation problem while creating jobs in a tough economy. It is a project I am proud of, and it is the sort of thing we can do all over the country once we pass the American Jobs Act.

Two things that make me happy about a project like this. First is it puts good people to work, In a economy like the one we have now, an increase of 1500 jobs is a great thing.
Secondly I commute on the rails all the time and anything that eases traffic on the rails is a great thing, after a long day no one wants to get stuck on the rails any longer then they have to. From a business point of view a new rail system like this will greatly improve delivery times.
This is defiantly a project to be proud of.
Great news!
Posted by: Long Island Personal Trainer | November 27, 2011 at 04:49 PM