Commission explores rail service between Lehigh Valley, Philly

Restoring line would require overcoming obstacles

The Lehigh Valley Planning Commission's Road to Rail initiative is exploring the possibility of restoring rail service between the region and Philadelphia.
The Lehigh Valley Planning Commission/Facebook

A plan to reconnect the Lehigh Valley to Philadelphia through rail service is getting a look. 

The Lehigh Valley Planning Commission (LVPC) announced Tuesday that a coalition of local mayors have jumped on board to try and bring a passenger train system to the region. 

The commission's Road to Rail initiative will consider adding rail service between the Lehigh Valley's three major cities – Allentown, Bethlehem, and Easton – and improving existing services like buses.

The initiative will also explore reviving rail service from the region to New Jersey, New York and Harrisburg. 

A train hasn't carried passengers from the Lehigh Valley to Philadelphia since 1981 when a SEPTA train ran from Bethlehem, according to a 2011 report from the LVPC, which indicated the likelihood of restoring similar service in the near future was "remote."  

Philly.com reports that a number of obstacles still stand in the way of restoring a line between the two communities, including funding and new forms of transportation that inhabit the old line's rights-of-way. 

Still, a rail line could create an "economic boom" for the two regions in the future, Becky Bradley, executive director of the LVPC, told Philly.com.