By Karen Brasher MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Local economic development officials, a Mississippi State
University team and railroad owners are working to revive a 92-mile
section of tracks linking the Delta and the eastern part of the state. It
has gone through several name changes, but what is today the Columbus
and Greenville Railway, commonly referred to as C&G, was built
in the late 1800s to ship cotton and other agricultural products out
of the Delta to points in the Southeast. Most of the line has been
inactive since 2002 because costly repairs were needed for the 156
bridges and deteriorating track throughout the line's six counties:
Leflore, Carroll, Montgomery, Webster, Oktibbeha and Clay. “When
the railroad first made its way through Mississippi, it not only transported
goods but indirectly helped establish rural communities near the railroad
depots,” said Cynthia Wilson, Webster County development council
executive director. When
the line first became inactive, the idea for a “rails for trails” tourism
line developed. However, after meeting with other economic developers
in the six counties and officials with the railroad, Wilson said it
became apparent that the best option could be to refurbish the line. “We
also had to establish a regional rail authority to acquire state and
federal support in refurbishing the line,” Wilson said. “By
establishing a regional rail authority and an executive board, we
will hopefully secure funding for the rail line.” The
economic development council applied for and received a $40,000 grant
from the Appalachian Regional Commission to initiate an exploratory
study of revitalizing the Columbus and Greenville Railway line. Wilson,
a retired Mississippi State University Extension Service employee,
immediately turned to the university for help. After
visiting with Wilson, Virgil Culver, director of the MSU Community
Action Team, assembled a group of MSU experts, including personnel
from the Industrial Outreach Service and the departments of Political
Science and Public Administration and Industrial and Systems Engineering
to address the potential of the inactive railway. “In
light of escalating fuel prices, rail is the most fuel-efficient and
environmentally friendly mode of transportation,” said Roger
Bell, president and chief executive officer for the C&G railway. “Rail
transport is also considered an advantage many times when an industry
is looking to locate to an area.” The
MSU team is evaluating the impact reopening the line would have on
recruiting industry to north-central Mississippi by estimating how
it would affect freight flow throughout the state. “Currently,
there is not an east-west line north of Jackson,” said Bill
Martin, Industrial Outreach Service project manager. “The research
team will determine what, if any, benefit will be realized in the
distribution of goods, including use of the Port of Greenville, the
state's largest river port.” The
cost to renovate the line is estimated to be almost $40 million. To
determine if the benefits will outweigh the cost, the team is evaluating
the economic potential to rural counties, including the role a rail
line will have in attracting industry, Martin added. The
MSU-led project includes the creation of a freight-flow map for Mississippi
to demonstrate how goods move through and around the state. “The
team will evaluate the abandoned line to determine if its reopening
would improve the movement of goods considering the other modes of
transportation,” Martin said. “This includes reviewing
the current transportation system that serves Mississippi and the
region, including the ports of Mobile, Gulfport, New Orleans, Greenwood
and Memphis.” The
research team is also conducting informal, one-on-one interviews with
industry representatives to learn about methods and cost of freight
shipment used by regional industries. The
interviews will determine if and how much cost savings to industries
would result from reopening the line. After the study, a market assessment
of refurbishing the line will be presented to C&G. Martin,
however, is already optimistic about the potential. “We
see, on this dormant railroad, an opportunity to improve transportation
and attract new industry to the state,” he said. If
he is right, the sounds of locomotives may return to many small towns
in central Mississippi. -30- Released:
April 19, 2007 Publications
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MSU
team explores railroad recovery
MSU College of Forest Resources
Contact: Bill Martin, (662) 325-0513
Visit: DAFVM
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