crescent2
Conductor
Yes, very interesting post. Can you provide a link to your discussion of the western LD trains?
And if we also don't have a smartphone and therefore can't use apps?You can get it on iOS (waiting for mine to come in the mail)Any hope of posting a quick rundown here for those of us who don't get Trains magazine and none of the local bookstores/newsstands carry it?There is an excellent article in the July 2014 issue of Trains magazine that details the amenities cuts as applied to the Coast Starlight.
iPad. Or digital download from their site. Or wait till it shows in my mailAnd if we also don't have a smartphone and therefore can't use apps?You can get it on iOS (waiting for mine to come in the mail)Any hope of posting a quick rundown here for those of us who don't get Trains magazine and none of the local bookstores/newsstands carry it?There is an excellent article in the July 2014 issue of Trains magazine that details the amenities cuts as applied to the Coast Starlight.
http://trn.trains.com/digitaleditionsAnd if we also don't have a smartphone and therefore can't use apps?You can get it on iOS (waiting for mine to come in the mail)Any hope of posting a quick rundown here for those of us who don't get Trains magazine and none of the local bookstores/newsstands carry it?There is an excellent article in the July 2014 issue of Trains magazine that details the amenities cuts as applied to the Coast Starlight.
The problem of "trains not paying attention to schedules" applies mostly to just the LD network, which is a minority of trains run by Amtrak. Most corridors where by numbers most trains are, do adhere to schedules quite nicely most of the time.I read through this thread, and didn't see any actual reports about the eastbound Lake Shore.
Is the sleeper boarding procedure now just to get on the train at 9:15 PM? Oops, I almost forgot. I was writing about the Lake Shore.
Is the sleeper boarding procedure now just to get on the train at 11:15 PM?
At least I'll be on the section to Massachusetts on my planned trip, so I'll get dinner.
They could save a lot more money by not publishing schedules. The trains don't pay attention to them anyway.
Someone did. Michelle was the LSA on our southbound star trip at the beginning of May, and had purchased flowers/vases for the diner herself. They were nicer than the original ones amtrak had.I recently took the northbound Silver Star from Ft Lauderdale and Amtrak has a lot of problems to deal with in the dining car besides the flowers on the table. But really, how much could fake flowers in a vase cost? Hell, send someone to the Dollar Store and the problem is solved. For a little class, buy some extra ones for the washrooms too! $30 should do it.
That sounds like a smart move to me. The more Amtrak diners revert to their generic fiberglass and vinyl cores the more they risk subconciously aligning with diner level tipping. About half of my tip is a conscious decision based on the quality of the meal and the service but the other half is partially an emotional reaction. If I felt like I just dined in a rolling McDonalds then my tips are likely to suffer, even if the staff was top notch.Someone did. Michelle was the LSA on our southbound star trip at the beginning of May, and had purchased flowers/vases for the diner herself. They were nicer than the original ones amtrak had.I recently took the northbound Silver Star from Ft Lauderdale and Amtrak has a lot of problems to deal with in the dining car besides the flowers on the table. But really, how much could fake flowers in a vase cost? Hell, send someone to the Dollar Store and the problem is solved. For a little class, buy some extra ones for the washrooms too! $30 should do it.
Poor Michelle probably has to pack them all up and take them off the train at the end of the trip! I watched Charles in the PDX sleeper do that with the stuff he bought on to make everything nice for his pax. But good for Michelle anyway, it probably does help with the tips for the crew.Someone did. Michelle was the LSA on our southbound star trip at the beginning of May, and had purchased flowers/vases for the diner herself. They were nicer than the original ones amtrak had.I recently took the northbound Silver Star from Ft Lauderdale and Amtrak has a lot of problems to deal with in the dining car besides the flowers on the table. But really, how much could fake flowers in a vase cost? Hell, send someone to the Dollar Store and the problem is solved. For a little class, buy some extra ones for the washrooms too! $30 should do it.
Well, I see one relatively short-term solution for this. As the new bilevels come into service, a lot of Horizons and a few Amfleet Is will be freed up. The Amfleet Is will probably sink into Virginia service immediately.(2) The Eastern LD trains really, really need more equipment.
Oh yeah.-There is probably a substantial case for adding frequencies (and/or routes) to part or all of the Eastern LD system.
Yep. One example is the Cardinal, where I have repeatedly tried to plot out a trip to Indianapolis and I just can't make it work out right because of the less-than-daily frequency from the east. Another example is Columbus, where I would likely go to a convention yearly if I could get there by train, but instead I don't go at all. There's also the missing service from Michigan eastward -- I know there's a bus to Toledo, but nobody wants to change to a bus at 1 AM.A number of major cities have badly-timed train service (Ohio suffers from this, with lots of late-night service and not much during daylight) while others lack service at all (Dayton, Columbus, etc.). You could probably close to double service in the East without doubling losses in the East, especially since increased frequencies would allow some trips which would otherwise be awkward/inconvenient on one leg or another. Increased frequency equals increased convenience, which tends to equal increased ridership.
Yep. Evening departure / morning arrivals are needed in these places.--You even have examples of this in Virginia. Service to Lynchburg (and to a lesser extent Charlottesville) is presently set up so that if you're spending the weekend there, you have to lose almost all of Sunday because the trains leave in the morning. In Hampton Roads, things are a bit better because of train 83 (there's a reason this train runs), but trying to get into Hampton Roads in the morning is still impossible (67 gets inot NPN at 1150).
Perhaps it is time for the latest revision of my "six Amtrak long distance trains west of Chicago" essay.(3) Cuts on either side of Chicago present serious problems. East of Chicago, the problems stem from the trains not losing much money to begin with (and with those losses being controllable). West of Chicago, the problem is more political: There are a lot of Senators and Representatives willing to protect "their train" but who, if deprived of service, will turn on Amtrak writ large.
The political situation (my analysis which may be wrong in places):
Mostly true, although support for Amtrak is increasingly partisan. Rail advocates need to try reversing this, but it will be a hard slog.
- The Empire Builder has heavy political support. Montana and North Dakota Senators and Representatives are big Amtrak supporters, as are Congresspeople from Minnesota, and until recently, also Wisconsin.
You may be right, but if I were Amtrak, I wouldn't want to do anything that would annoy Patty Murray, Barbara Boxer, and other powerful western Senators. Several of us have been thinking about scenarios in which the west coast "secedes" from Amtrak and runs our own trains, and we calculate that such a scenario is quite viable. I, for one, don't want to see a fracturing of the national system, but frankly, Amtrak needs the west coast more than vice versa.
- The Coast Starlight goes through districts of strong Amtrak support for practically its entire distance, and all three states are big Amtrak supporters. However, would any of these Representatives turn on Amtrak if it was cancelled? Probably not; Washington, Oregon, and California support a lot of Amtrak corridor serivce. OR-2 and CA-1 are only served by the Coast Starlight, but the other Congressional districts the CS goes through are all served by other Amtrak trains.
Bear this political analysis in mind as you read the rest of this.
That would be a huge project. Even in the good old days, Portland to Medford and Ashland took over 12 hours. So to be time-competitive with driving, you'd need higher-speed service than anything currently happening on the west coast (not counting CAHSR...which is another discussion entirely). And AFAIK, there has been no passenger service south of Ashland for a long, long time.
- Three of the routes have a "mountain problem". The Empire Builder, Coast Starlight, and California Zephyr have to cross big mountains, and they do so *slowly*. ...
- All of the double-overnight routes have severe timekeeping problems, ...
- The Coast Starlight takes the wrong route through southern Oregon; it should stop at Medford, although this would require the state of Oregon to spend a lot on track upgrades.
Parts of the CS do well enough. But SEA-EUG is covered by the Cascades corridor, and SAC-SJC-SLO has other corridor service, as does SBA-LAX. We need Coast Starlight/Daylight frequencies, and timekeeping that is as reliable as the corridor services, but that's very hard to do on the coast line. As things stand, unless they are going to places outside the corridors, very few riders will choose the CS over the local services. Especially now that amenities like the wine tastings have gone away.
- The Coast Starlight connects three regions (Southern California, Northern California, Pacific Northwest) which are extremely supportive of passenger train service and whose demographics are more favorable to passenger trains than average; and it's the only service serving the Salinas region as well, which should be fertile ground. And it's actually a single-overnight train. The CS really should be doing better, and I'm not sure why it isn't. Maybe it's just too slow, due to those mountains.
Note also that the areas that are not covered by other corridors have miserable station times. A Seattle friend has been wanting to visit her mother in Redding for several years now, but she just can't face the 2-3am schedule.
Oh, and by the way, there is a Thruway bus from KFS to Medford, Ashland and Brookings, but it only connects without an overnight to 11 southbound and 14 northbound, and it has to be one of the longest bus schedules in the system: 10 hours from Brookings to KFS, with a 3-hour layover in Medford. This is a schedule that only Swadian could love
Absolutely. WSDOT definitely wants another SPK-SEA train (possibly via Stampede Pass to serve college town Ellensburg); it's just a matter of coming up with the money, something that isn't likely to happen fast in our current deadlocked legislature. And Minnesota has a Wisconsin problem: they aren't going to put up the money unless Wisconsin does...not likely at present. (Although it has been suggested that a MN-supported train could be called "The Golden Gopher" and painted appropriately. That might annoy the WI folks enough to get them to pony up some support.)
- Assume that the current Empire Builder mess is fixed eventually. MSP-Chicago still needs its own train for timekeeping reasons if nothing else. So does Spokane-Seattle. Both would improve ridership on the Empire Builder by providing multiple frequencies per day.
Yes, although if the EB's timekeeping problems continue for 5+ years, I wouldn't be surprised if the states start looking seriously at the NCH (and the Pioneer) as alternative services.
- Montana really would like a train which stopped at its major cities, and it should have one; unfortunately it hasn't been willing to pay for it. Similarly, I'd go to Bismarck if it had a train (I have friends there). The North Coast Hiawatha would probably do as well as the Empire Builder... trouble is that still requires a substantial subsidy.
You're right that the EB has no logical place for a split. Whitefish comes closest in terms of location and schedule time, but it's hardly a teeming metropolis.
- So, I think that double-overnights are a bad idea. But where would you split them? It's not really possible for the SW Chief, Empire Builder, or Sunset Limited; none of them have a logical or appropriate place to change trains, since well over half the passengers are continuing through any given point and there aren't any midpoint cities suitable for layovers.
Frankly, one of the problems facing the western trains is that there is a status quo bias, partly due to the state of the politics; it's very hard to start a new train service.
I'd happily cancel the Sunset Limited ($25 million direct losses in 2012, $29 million in 2009) and put the operating funds into a daily North Coast Hiawatha (Amtrak estimate of direct losses $31 million in 2009 -- I think that's an underestimate of revenue), but that's not really possible, even with the political support in Montana.
Indeed, yes, although the NCH may be looking pretty good right now, as there seems to be no end to the EB's problems.
The cost to benefit ratio on that would be amazingly bad. Even if it costs less than other modes, that's not necessarily an argument for doing it.As EB_OBS says, the Builder's strength, historically, is that it serves a lot of people who are not going end to end. If the EB goes away, ND, WA and MN are going to have to figure out a way to serve the workers who are commuting to the Williston area -- since there are a lot of these folks from Puget Sound and the Twin Cities.
In an ideal world, we'd have a twice-daily Builder, a twice-daily NCH, and at least a daily Pioneer. These trains would give sightseers and long-distance travelers who aren't in a hurry plenty of choices, while serving all of the thriving communities along all three routes. And I think a reasonable case could be made that whatever funding is needed for these trains would be less than what it would take to build and run services using other modes.
True, but assuming we move to Seattle next year:But a chronic late train will cause people to start looking for a different transportation means.
Just as chronic late freight shipment cause shippers to look for a different carrier.
I know. I admit I was using a particularly whiny example of why I don't want the EB to go away.I think it's pretty clear at this point that the "can't fly, refuse to drive" crowd is not nearly large enough to keep the Western trains operating within the realm of what America's government is willing to fund. That's not a knock against you so much as a reminder that Amtrak has to do what it can to remain relevant in today's market. I think we can all agree that Amtrak will have fewer and fewer federal dollars to spend as time goes on. I think we can also agree that there is only a finite amount that Amtrak can raise fares before they begin to price themselves out of the market. Assuming we can agree on those two points then over a long enough timeline some of the current routes will probably need to be cut in order to save other routes.
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