ATLANTA - A passenger rail line between Atlanta and Macon no longer is the state's first choice for commuter railroad, putting the projected July 2005 start date for the rail in jeopardy. <br>
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Gov. Roy Barnes said Norfolk Southern Corp., which owns two rail lines between the cities, is asking too steep a price for the rights to one of the lines. <br>
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``What (Norfolk Southern) has been wanting is too high,'' Barnes said Thursday at a conference sponsored by the Georgia Press Association. <br>
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``I'm not telling you it's not going to happen, but it's going to be a good deal when it does happen.'' <br>
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Barnes declined to reveal the asking price, and said negotiations are ongoing. <br>
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State Sen. Robert Brown, D-Macon, called the decision ``a devastating blow.'' <br>
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The state's first commuter-rail line now likely will be in the northern Atlanta suburbs, Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor said. <br>
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``DOT has changed their priorities,'' Taylor said. ``I had hoped (the first rail line) would have been the Macon line, but it looks like that won't be the case.'' <br>
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Arthur Vaughn, executive director of the Georgia Rail Passenger Authority, declined to comment. Calls to Norfolk Southern seeking comment were not returned. <br>
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One lawmaker said a commuter-rail line in the northern Atlanta suburbs probably would be more expensive to create than an Atlanta-Macon line. <br>
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``The right of way for a rail line in the northern arc would be on some of the most expensive real estate in the country,'' said Robert Reichert, D-Macon. <br>
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Barnes did not include $12 million in funding recommended by officials for the Atlanta-Macon rail line in his budget for next year. If the $12 million had been approved, it would have triggered a federal match of $68 million for the Atlanta-Macon connector.
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