Report: Midwest firms coupled to high-speed rail

Manufacturers positioned to cash in

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In this Oct. 19, 2012 file photo, Gov. Pat Quinn (left), U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood (center) and Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, celebrate in Pontiac, after the Amtrak train they are riding reached 110 mph during a test run between Pontiac and Dwight. A new report shows that hundreds of Midwest manufacturers stand to benefit from a web of high-speed passenger rail routes emerging from Chicago’s rail hub. (AP)
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Also highly visible are the rail car makers awarded contracts, including the U.S. subsidiary of Nippon-Sharyo, the maker of Japan’s bullet trains. Its plant in Rochelle, will build 130 double-decker rail cars for high-speed projects in Illinois, Michigan, Missouri and California.

Less obvious, though, is the business generated for those supply-chain companies identified in the policy center’s report. The businesses it found are located in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin.

They include family-owned firms with humble beginnings like Bo-Mar Industries, a metal fabrication shop in Indianapolis whose founder started it in 1991 in his father’s barn. Today, Bo-Mar’s work includes cutting sheet metal with lasers and high-pressure water jets. Its rail industry product line includes sleeper car bunks, interior lighting, battery boxes, stainless steel kitchens and bicycle racks.

Company President Bob Buchanan, a former Amtrak engineer, notes the economic food chain extends farther still because he sub-contracts work to painters and buys from local welding equipment suppliers.

“It goes deeper,” he said. “I bet we generate $200,000 a year in secondary operations that we send out locally.”

In Gladstone, Mich., the 30 employees of the Independent Machine Co. do business with Amtrak and other rail companies, supplying them with gear cases, wear plates and the plows attached to the front of locomotives to clear debris from the tracks. The company started in a garage in 1975 with a single lathe used to knock the flat spots out of worn locomotive wheels.

“It’s very beneficial to us,” sales manager Wendy Wils said of the increasing business. “The more locomotives they have out there, the more replacement parts we build.”

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