S-71-119
Passed Senate with an amendment by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S2204; text: CR S2204)
Sponsored by Peter Welch (D-VT)
What it does
This bill would require Amtrak passenger rail trains to have at least one baby changing table in each car, including in at least one Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)-compliant restroom. The requirement would apply to trains owned and operated by Amtrak and to new trains solicited for purchase after the bill's enactment — it would not retroactively apply to trains already in service or under contract.
Who benefits
Parents and caregivers of infants and toddlers who travel on Amtrak, particularly those on long-distance routes where diaper changes are unavoidable. Caregivers with disabilities who currently cannot access changing facilities in ADA-compliant restrooms. Amtrak passengers broadly, who may benefit from improved sanitation conditions. Disability advocacy groups who have pushed for accessible changing facilities.
Who is hurt
Amtrak, as a federally chartered corporation, would bear the cost of retrofitting existing cars and incorporating changing tables into new train procurement specifications. Taxpayers who fund Amtrak's federal subsidies may indirectly bear some of these costs. Rail car manufacturers may face additional design and compliance requirements. In older or smaller rail cars, installing changing tables could reduce available restroom space for other passengers.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Amtrak serves millions of passengers annually, including families with young children, and that the absence of changing tables forces caregivers — disproportionately mothers — to change infants on seats or floors, creating unsanitary conditions for all passengers. They contend the ADA-compliant restroom requirement closes a longstanding accessibility gap, since caregivers with disabilities currently have no accessible option, and that the cost of adding changing tables to new train procurements is minimal relative to overall rail car costs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating specific restroom fixtures on Amtrak trains is a prescriptive federal requirement that adds procurement and retrofitting costs to a railroad that already depends heavily on federal subsidies — costs that may ultimately fall on taxpayers or be passed through in ticket prices. They contend that Amtrak, as an operational entity, is better positioned than Congress to make facility decisions based on ridership data and car design constraints, and that legislating individual amenities sets a precedent for micromanaging Amtrak's operational choices through statute.