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Environmental

Mar. 14, 2000

Rail World

Getting Rail Hundreds of private firms and public entities have united in a one-of-a-kind partnership to develop the Alameda Corridor, a huge rail-cargo infrastructure that would enable trains to travel nonstop, at twice the currently allowed speeds, from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach through seven Southern California cities and on to the transcontinental rail-system hubs east of downtown Los Angeles. But the project has run into a few bureaucratic snags along the way.

        
        
        Getting Rail Hundreds of private firms and public entities have united in a one-of-a-kind partnership to develop the Alameda Corridor, a huge rail-cargo infrastructure that would enable trains to travel nonstop, at twice the currently allowed speeds, from the ports of Los Angeles and...

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