For the first time, local governments are picking up the tab for Central Florida’s SunRail commuter service that runs across four counties.
State transportation officials acknowledged the big milestone reached Jan. 1 during what’s been a long, complicated process to move the system from the Florida Department of Transportation which has operated and maintained SunRail since 2014. Now, the Central Florida Commuter Rail Commission (CFCRC), which is made up of the city of Orlando, Orange County, Seminole, Osceola and Volusia counties, are paying for the operations that are still run by the state.
Much work still lies ahead to create a stand-alone system, warned SunRail CEO John Tyler as he gave an update during Tuesday’s Senate Transportation Committee meeting.
Tyler highlighted the next steps, warning it could take up to three years for the state to hand off the operational logistics for CFCRC to run the system on its own.
“The next milestone is to complete the operational transition,” said Tyler who is also the FDOT District 5 Secretary. “This is broken down into a series of steps, some of which are the responsibility of the department, like completing the DeLand station, and some are the responsibility of the CFCRC, like hiring legal counsel, hiring their own Chief Executive Officer and key staff.”
He added, “It is a complicated, laborious process that will take time. However, all parties, FDOT and the five partners that make up the CFCRC are all committed and actively engaged in working through the process to complete the ultimate vision authorized by the Legislature more than a decade ago.”
Tyler didn’t bring up some of the common complaints about SunRail, which doesn’t have weekend or late-night service and doesn’t go to the Orlando International Airport.
But officials did present good news about SunRail’s ridership.
SunRail hit more than 1.2 million riders in 2024 — a 12% year-over-year jump.
“Human Behavior certainly changed in 2020, and ridership numbers have been steadily coming back to their previous levels,” Tyler said.
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