V&T project rolls along, faces funding shortfalls

John Barnhill Jul 6, 2007

  1. John Barnhill

    John Barnhill TrainBoard Member

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    V&T project rolls along, faces funding shortfalls

    Dave Frank
    Appeal Staff Writer
    July 3, 2007

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    Work on four and a half more miles of an 18-mile track that will carry a
    tourist train from Virginia City to Carson City will be done in about a
    year, according to a project engineer.

    Ken Dorr, who works for the Nevada Commission for the Reconstruction of the
    V&T Railway, said all the property needed to lay track from outside the
    Overman Pit in Storey County to Mound House in Lyon County has been bought
    or donated.

    Dorr said the commission will be ready to start taking bids at the end of
    July and will award the contract by October.

    The contract will probably be for about $6 million, he said.

    So far, workers have finished 1.8 miles of track from Gold Hill to around
    the Overman Pit. The project - funded by state grants, private donations and
    revenue from room and sales taxes in Carson City and Store County - is
    expected to cost $54 million and be finished by 2011.

    But costs for the project continue to rise. At a meeting on Monday,
    commissioner Ray Allen said that Carson City couldn't continue to do the
    commission's accounting work for free. Washoe, Storey and Lyon counties,
    which are involved in the project, don't have employees available to do the
    work either, he said.

    The commission voted to contract an accountant for $36,000 a year.

    Carson City Mayor Marv Teixeira, also a commissioner, said he tried to find
    someone to do the work, but couldn't and hopes the commission will find a
    qualified person soon, someone who hasn't "fallen off the turnip truck."

    With all the spending on the project, the public wants to see results from
    its investment soon, said commissioner John Tyson. A good way to do this, he
    said, was to restore and operate one of the five railroad cars on which the
    commission has spent over $54,000.

    This should be done as soon as possible, he said, so the commission will
    have at least one of the cars "pristine, Pullman green, with V&T Railway
    across the top of the letter board and ready to roll."

    The commission told Tyson to look into it. Already, however, the company
    selected to operate the railway declined to help pay to restore the car.

    Near the end of the meeting, press manager Ken Ray brought up spending
    several thousand dollars on newspaper ads to thank people who have donated
    to the railway.

    But Teixeira, who said this might be a good idea, pointed to the ads as an
    example of how the commission was forgetting what it need to do and that it
    was $14 million short of what it needed to finish the project.

    "We're out there to build a railroad," Teixeira said "Give them a plaque,
    send them a letter."

    . Contact reporter Dave Frank at dfrank@nevadaappeal.com or 881-1212.
     
  2. JCater

    JCater TrainBoard Member

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    Man... I am really getting excited about this!! Looks like they are about on schedule and if the funding does not dry up they will be operating trains soon enough!
    John
     

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