The prospect of a high-speed rail line slicing through the rural stretch of land between the Twin Cities and Rochester, and financed by Chinese and other private investors, is to some an exquisite dream.
To others, it's folly.
The proposed $4.2 billion train would travel between the two cities at 220 miles an hour in 30 to 45 minutes, a trip that takes twice as long by car. Once known as Zip Rail, the project was abandoned earlier this year by the Minnesota Department of Transportation and Olmsted County after nearly 25 years of study, due to a dearth of funds.
But a privately held Bloomington firm called the North American High Speed Rail Group (NAHSR) is keeping the idea of a high-speed rail line alive. Recently the group said that it was reorganizing and is now known as the Minnesota Corridor Project. None of NAHSR's officers has experience developing such a project.
The group's reorganization will continue to meet opposition from a determined grass-roots group called Citizens Concerned About Rail Line (CCARL) and several southern Minnesota lawmakers.
"Do we want Chinese foreign nationals owning the major transportation corridor cutting through the southern portion of Minnesota?" said Rep. Steve Drazkowski, R-Mazeppa. "I don't think so." He plans on reintroducing legislation next year that would cripple efforts to build high-speed rail.
Some residents along the route fear that their farms and homes could be taken for public use through eminent domain, a prospect they find even more distasteful because it would be a private company engaged in the taking. They also worry about the project's impact on the area's environment, safety and quality of life. And they question whether there's sufficient ridership to sustain the service.
"There's nowhere near the capacity to support this," said CCARL co-founder Heather Arndt, whose farm in Hader is a few miles away from the proposed rail corridor. "There's no economic benefit for us or local businesses. By taking our farmland, they're decreasing our income and devaluing our land.