Iowa Interstate Railroad
The Iowa Interstate Railroad is a Class II regional railroad operating in the central United States. The railroad is owned by Railroad Development Corporation of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
History
The railroad was formed on November 2, 1984, using former Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad tracks between Chicago, Illinois, and Omaha, Nebraska, four years after the Rock Island folded. It was in partnership with real estate firm Heartland Rail Corporation that the IAIS was able to operate. Heartland purchased the right-of-way and infrastructure for $31 million, and then leased it to IAIS for operations.The IAIS and the railroad infrastructure were purchased from Heartland by Railroad Development Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 2003.
In recognition of the railroad's Rock Island Railroad heritage, the IAIS logo uses a shape similar to the original railroad's logo and has also painted two of its General Electric ES44AC locomotives in Rock Island inspired paint schemes.
Operations
The company operates over 580 miles of track. The railroad's mainline is roughly a straight line between Council Bluffs, Iowa, and Chicago, Illinois, with a branch line connecting Bureau to Peoria, Illinois. The mainline is separated into 4 Subdivisions:- Council Bluffs Subdivision
- Newton Subdivision
- Iowa City Subdivision
- Blue Island Subdivision
- Peoria Subdivision
- Cedar Rapids Subdivision. This line is owned by the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railroad, but dispatched and operated by the Iowa Interstate.
Trains are dispatched from the company's HQ in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where a new dispatching office was completed in 2016. IAIS uses Wabtec's Train Management and Dispatching System, the same dispatching software used by several Class I railroads, including the BNSF and KCS. When the IAIS took control of the track, the former Rock Island signal system was already damaged beyond repair due to sitting dormant for several years. Operations on the railroad are primarily controlled by track warrants rather than signals as a result.
The Iowa Interstate is unique in that it is the only Class II railroad in the US that has connections to every Class I railroad, affording its customers a reach not offered by other regional railroads.
The railroad also maintains two intermodal operations at either end of its line in Chicago and Council Bluffs. The operation in Council Bluffs is also used by the Union Pacific, with IAIS crews interchanging with UP several times a day.
IAIS subsidiary Rail Traffic Control formerly provided consulting services for dispatching and operating small- to medium-sized railroads worldwide.
In 2004, IAIS was awarded the E. H. Harriman Award for its safe operational record.
Amtrak
Beginning in the mid-1990s, the IAIS mainline has been identified as a potential route for high speed passenger train service between Wyanet, Illinois, the Quad Cities and Iowa City, as part of the Midwest Regional Rail Initiative. The ultimate goal of the MRRI is to establish passenger train routes in a hub-and-spoke formation with Chicago as the hub that allows for speeds up to and above 110 mph.In July 2019, a new transportation bill was passed by the Illinois state legislature, supported by Governor J.B. Pritzker, $225M was appropriated to begin Amtrak service from Chicago to Moline, IL. A rail connector will be built between BNSF and IAIS to permit the Quad Cities service to use BNSF mainline from Wyanet to Chicago Union Station. This Amtrak route will use the IAIS main line between Wyanet and Moline, IL. Upgrades to IAIS rail crossings, track, and signaling for Amtrak's 79-mph requirements will be performed.
Motive power
IAIS uses 42 locomotives and two slugs to power its trains:- 4 EMD SD38-2
- 20 GE ES44AC ; unit 513 is painted in a Rock Island commemorative scheme; unit 516 is painted in a Rock Island inspired 30th anniversary paint scheme.
- 1 EMD GP38
- 17 EMD GP38-2 720 was sold/leased to ADM in Des Moines, Iowa in 2017.
- 2 Slugs 601 and 650 are semi-permanently mated, as are 721 and 651
Since 2018, the 6988 has made several excursion trips to raise money for local volunteer fire departments and promote awareness of Operation Lifesaver. As of 2022, both 6988 and 7081 are out of service pending overhaul; the former is currently located at the Railroading Heritage of Midwest America in Silvis, Illinois.
Pop-Up Metro
The Railroad Development Corporation has ordered at least one 2-car -variant of the Vivarail D-Train to operate on the Iowa Interstate Railroad in 2021 as a "pop-up" metro service.Iowa City, Iowa planned to use the Pop-Up Metro equipment to open a commuter rail line along the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railway. This service was scheduled to open in 2025, but the project was cancelled in January 2025 after CRANDIC refused to allow passenger trains to run on their line.
Company officers
Officers as of 2019:- Joe Parsons, President and CEO
- Carrie Evans, Vice President Sales & Marketing
- Allen Polfer, CFO
- Al Satunas, COO
- Greg Wilson, Director- Operating Systems
- Bryan Pierce, Director of Information Technology
- Tom Meierhoff, Director of Compliance and Dispatch
- Adam Sutherland, Director of Safety and Security
- Mike Stuver- Chief Transportation Officer
- Chad Lambi, Chief Engineer
- Andrew Reid, Chief Mechanical Officer
- Bobbi Allen, Director of Human Resources
- Frederic W. Yocum Jr.
- Doug Christy
- Jon R. Roy
- Dennis H. Miller
- Jerome Lipka