Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program
Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program
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Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program

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Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program

The Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency (CREATE) Program is a $4.6 billion program to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of freight, commuter and intercity passenger rail and to reduce highway delay in the Chicago region. The Program consists of 70 projects, which includes constructing grade separations, flyovers and other rail projects to ease both rail and roadway congestion. The status of each of the 70 projects varies, with many having been completed, others in design or construction and some not yet started. Costs for the projects are covered by public and private funding from the Program's partners: the United States Department of Transportation, the Illinois Department of Transportation, Cook County, the City of Chicago, and public and private railroads (represented by the Association of American Railroads).

The CREATE Program was formally announced on June 16, 2003. It began as a task force convened by the federal Surface Transportation Board in the early 2000s in recognition of the growing urgency of the Chicago region's rail capacity needs. That task force included representatives from the railroad industry, the State of Illinois and the City of Chicago.

Today, the CREATE Program is a unique collaboration whose members include railroads and municipal leaders working together to increase the efficiency of Chicago's unique rail network. Six of the seven Class 1 railroads operating in North America serve Chicago; each of those six is a CREATE partner alongside the State of Illinois, City of Chicago, and Cook County.

The CREATE Program is supported by public and private funding and enjoys widespread support from community, civic and elected leaders. Its work and operations are governed by a Joint Statement of Understandings that the partners developed, approved and regularly affirm.

Chicago is considered the railroad hub of North America. The region dominates the U.S. rail market in both market share and total volume, handling 47% of the nation's intermodal rail containers and 28% of rail cars, carrying a total of $641 billion worth of goods each year. Twenty-seven percent of all jobs in Cook County are freight-dependent industries that produce 56% of the county's economic output.

The Chicago region's rail infrastructure was largely configured to serve transportation needs and demands at the time it was originally built more than a century ago. By the 1990s, many decades of modernization and consolidation within the freight and passenger railroad industries had drastically changed the operational demands being placed on this network. Train lengths, routing patterns, capacity needs, rail-highway grade crossing conflicts and control technologies had all evolved over the years, but the region's rail infrastructure had not been sufficiently modernized to accommodate the new demands. This resulted in serious delays, which had cascading effects across the nation's rail network. Oftentimes, shared control of rail facilities within the Chicago region had created institutional challenges to implementing needed modernization. Under direction from the Surface Transportation Board and various elected officials and following several years of cooperative study and analysis by public agencies and private railroads, the CREATE Program was initiated in 2003 to identify, prioritize and address these infrastructure modernization needs. The closely related Chicago Transportation Coordination Office was also established at that time to address rail operations coordination needs in the region.

Because delays in the Chicago region's rail network can have impacts nationwide, the benefits to the CREATE Program also extend nationwide. A 2015 study showed that the economic benefits of full implementation of the CREATE Program are $31.5 billion.

The program currently comprises 70 separate projects. As of April 2025, a total of 35 had been fully completed, six were under construction, seven were in final design and another eight were in the preliminary design and environmental review process. The remaining 14 were awaiting identification of funding to enter preliminary design and environmental review.

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