Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program
The Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program is a $3.2 billion project to improve the efficiency of the rail network in the Chicago area by building, amongst other things, flyovers to separate rail traffic on conflicting lines. While the need is fairly clear, finance for the project has been done by piecemeal in the United States Congress, Illinois General Assembly, and private entities.
Problems
The tracks and junctions in the Chicago area have grown with little coordination between the railroads and the city since the first railroads arrived in the 1830s. There are a large number of at-grade crossings, sometimes not located a train length apart which is a problem as train lengths have grown. Some flyovers exist but do not always have sufficient clearance for tall or double-stack trains. Some connections that would create short cuts for traffic are missing. There are also many highway crossings at grades. The congestion in the Chicago area is predicted to lead to severe disruption by the late 2010s without the completion of the CREATE program.
Projects
The program is composed of a total of 71 separate projects, of which 46 are eliminating rail junctions and the remainder are eliminating grade crossings. As of November 2017, a total of 29 had been fully completed, 5 were under construction, four are in final design, and another 13 are in the preliminary design and environmental review process.
A $140 million project in Englewood, Chicago planned since 2002, began construction in 2011. The junction would get a flyover for Metra trackage above a Norfolk Southern route, eliminating a diamond crossing. 138 trains a day operate through the junction, which is the cause of the majority of delays in the Midwest for Amtrak trains. On June 22, 2011, it was announced that the State of Illinois, Amtrak, Norfolk Southern, and the Federal Railway Administration had signed a final agreement for financing the project with the federal government paying 95% of the cost. The project was completed and began service in October 2014.
General improvements to roadways near railroad overpasses
Additional trackage, improved signaling and grade separations on CSX trackage in Alsip
Funding
CREATE is a public-private partnership estimated to cost around $3 billion, up from an initial predicted cost of $1 billion. $230 million is to be supplied by railroads that are part of the program, with the remainder coming from governments at federal, state and local levels. In July 2010, a $100 million TIGER grant from the federal government was finalized. As of late 2010, a total of around $320 million had been committed to the project, with an additional $133 million to be provided from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. In 2018, CREATE received a $132 million grant from the United States Department of Transportation's Rebuilding America grant program. Other sources of funding included grants from the Illinois Department of Transportation, the Association of American Railroads, Cook County, Metra, the City of Chicago, and Amtrak.