Amtrak’s CEO is resigning, he announced on March 19.
“I am so proud of what the Amtrak team has accomplished to bring passenger rail service to more people and places across the country over these past 16 years, and I thank the Board for their trust and support.”
Amtrak’s board thanked Gardner for his 16 years of working for Amtrak.
“We will build on his accomplishments and wish him every success,” the board said, adding that it looks forward to working with President Donald Trump and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to “build the world-class passenger rail system this country deserves.”
The White House declined to comment. Amtrak did not respond to an inquiry.
Duffy told The Epoch Times in an emailed statement: “It’s time for Amtrak leadership to clean up Union Station. It’s time to rid of our nation’s treasures of homelessness and crime. Commuters and travelers need to feel safe in our Capital.”
It’s not clear who is serving as Amtrak’s acting CEO and who will replace Gardner on a permanent basis.
Congress created Amtrak in 1970 as a federally chartered corporation, with the U.S. government owning the majority of Amtrak stock. The Amtrak Board of Directors is appointed by the president of the United States. The board chooses the CEO.
The Amtrak CEO sits on the board, as does the transportation secretary.
Trump during his first term proposed cutting funding to Amtrak.
Congress recently passed an appropriations bill that allocated $3.4 billion for Amtrak in fiscal year 2025.
Amtrak has recorded an increased interest in rail travel in recent years, including a jump to 32.9 million trips in fiscal year 2024—up 15 percent from the previous fiscal year.
Tech billionaire Elon Musk, who has been advising Trump, earlier in March floated privatizing Amtrak.
He added later that the train system in the United States as it currently is will leave one “with a very bad impression of America.”