Former Nevada Sen. Harry Reid — the same person for whom our airport is named — had a pivotal role in backing high-s
Regulation · 2024-05-23

Former Nevada Sen. Harry Reid — the same person for whom our airport is named — had a pivotal role in backing high-speed rail instead of an innovative maglev project.

Former Nevada Sen. Harry Reid — the same person for whom our airport is named — had a pivotal role in backing high-speed rail instead of an innovative maglev project.

People driving to and from California this and last week may have seen work crews in the Interstate 15 median and on some highway shoulders surveying the landscape and taking core samples.

It’s the initial work for the $12 billion Brightline West high-speed rail line being built between Las Vegas and Southern California.

And it’s about time.

People have been talking about connecting Southern Nevada with its largest tourism market for more than five decades. It’s been so long that many people aren’t even familiar with the most revised proposal and others who thought a train to and from SoCal would never happen are still convinced it never will.

For those new to the area or unaware of the difficulties getting to where we are now, here’s a short history of what you’ve missed.

Back in the 1970s, people began talking about a new transportation system in development called “magnetic levitation,” or maglev for short. Instead of the traditional steel wheels-on-rails, engine-propelled trains, maglevs floated inches above a magnetically charged guideway system with vehicles moved by the opposing forces of magnets.

Proponents believed an L.A.-to-Vegas maglev line was a perfect way to bring the new technology to the United States because visitors to Las Vegas would be fascinated to travel in vehicles that were silent and frictionless and capable of safely traveling more than 350 mph.

The innovative transit mode was seen as a perfect match for our city and consultants and investors lined up support along a transportation corridor that extended from Los Angeles to Las Vegas.

Among the early backers was Sen. Harry Reid — the same guy our airport is named for — who saw maglev as a good fit and he supported and encouraged it.

Meanwhile, a competitive group that favored traditional rail began questioning maglev’s viability.

But Reid remained patient — for a while.

Reid, a former Nevada lieutenant governor and Nevada Gaming Commission chairman, understood the value of a groundbreaking technology that benefited tourism. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1987 after two terms in the U.S. House, and in that role, he was able to assist the maglev effort.

But by 2010, Reid could support it no more.

Reid complained that maglev had three decades to prove itself and that it was time to move on to the more conventional high-speed rail advocated by a company then known as DesertXpress.

“I have no ill will toward the people behind the maglev project and want it to be clear that no one, including me, is stopping them from moving ahead with their project,” Reid said at the time. “During the many years I supported maglev, Congress made more than $50 million available, including a $45 million appropriation in 2008. We are now well into 2010 and maglev has failed to come up with the 20 percent match needed to obtain these federal funds, which is why I reprogrammed the $45 million for a transportation project in Southern Nevada that will actually create jobs right away,” he said.

“While Nevadans are rightfully impressed with the maglev technology, they, like me, just want to see something get done. DesertXpress is ready to break ground and put Nevadans back to work this year.”

But, as everyone knows, that never happened.

In December, the Nevada Department of Transportation, in partnership with Brightline West, was awarded $3 billion from the U.S. Department of Transportation toward the system. The 218-mile, all-electric high-speed rail service would include a flagship station in Las Vegas, with additional stations in Apple Valley, Hesperia, and Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. At 186-plus mph, trains will take passengers from Las Vegas to Rancho Cucamonga, where commuter rail can be used to get to Los Angeles, in two hours and 10 minutes, twice as fast as the average drive time.

Brightline West plans to break ground this year with an ambitious schedule of being open in time for the Los Angeles Summer Olympic Games in 2028.

It’ll also whisk hundreds of thousands of people to Las Vegas, taking thousands of cars off I-15.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at [email protected] or 702-477-3893. Follow @RickVelotta on X.

The convergence of Olympic curling triumphs, a Canadian fan base and a nonprofit club have laid the groundwork for a new local facility.

While MGM’s lawsuit against the Federal Trade Commission and a “60 Minutes” story offered new details, there are still unanswered questions about last year’s cyberattack.

Two companies, Z4Poker and MGM Interactive, ask regulators to extend the activation of their licenses a 14th time so that they can enter a lackluster market.

The transition of The Mirage to Hard Rock Las Vegas will generate nostalgic memories, but it’s part of the Las Vegas way of constantly evolving to what’s next.

A legal expert says Fontainebleau’s response to Wynn for poaching employees sounds more like a divorce proceeding than a business lawsuit.

The typical Las Vegas visitor in 2023 was younger than in the past, spent more money, chose different activities over shows — and had a great time while here.

Gaming industry analysts applaud return of IGT to Nevada with $6.2 billion spinoff and merger with Everi Holdings Inc.

One might think one extra day in the year doesn’t make much difference. But in gaming and tourism, it means an additional millions of dollars spent.

By the time Las Vegas hosts its next Super Bowl, new infrastructure will help make transportation and accommodation better, but the need for another airport looms large.

Without legal sports wagering in California, Vegas sports books continue to prosper for the Super Bowl and another Golden State initiative fails to gain tribal support.

Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal, Inc. Privacy Policy Terms of Service

熱門文章
Across 6 Cities: HUIDU Invites You to 8 World Cup Parties Redefining High-Value Social Networking
HUIDU Focus
Gaming & Technology Expo Makes a Powerful Entrance in CDMX
Marketing
1spin4win releases unique slot Don Catleone Hold and Win featuring gangster cats
Online Game
New Jersey July Gambling Revenue Hits $606M, Sweeps Casinos Banned
Regulation
Super PAC Raises $48 Million: Sports Betting Forces Ramp Up Political Push
Regulation
GAT CDMX 2025 Institutional Academy: Leaders and Experts Analyze the Present and Future of the Gaming Industry in Mexico and Lat
Sports Game
Institutional Academy that exceeded expectations marked the opening of GAT CDMX
Online Game
Brazil Proposes Raising Gambling Tax Rate to 24%, With Revenue Allocated to Social Security and Healthcare
Regulation
Online gambling, crypto pose ongoing money laundering risks in Philippines, analyst says
Southeast Asia
UK MPs reopen 2025 gambling inquiry as reform stalls
Regulation
1spin4win grows its Latin American presence by partnering with Fortuna Juegos
Online Game
British gambling levy rates confirmed for each vertical
Regulation
GGC Awards 2026 Shines in Colombo: Honoring Leaders and Innovators in the iGaming Industry
HUIDU Focus
Are you ready to maximize your earnings? Try ProPush.me Constructor!
Marketing
Vietnam’s Controlled Gaming Shift Gains Ground, But Domestic Demand Still Lags
Southeast Asia
首頁
遊戲
合作
發現
我的