And when Amtrak was -- and still IS -- short of personnel, which impairs the ability to turn on a dime when Congress finally comes up with decent funding.This past congress was the most favorable in Amtraks history. Profitability parameters were removed in some cases. Unfortunately it came at a time with arguably Amtraks worse management and board in charge.
A lot of the complaints seem to come down to "why are there fewer cars now that Amtrak is fully funded? Why won't they put all non-totaled cars into service? They must not want to!"
Because the last time I checked, it's workers, not dollar bills, who maintain and repair train cars and engines. And:
1) A whole lot of businesses, in a variety of industries, who we don't reflexively presume to be self-sabotaging are also short of labor and having a hard time filling spots.
Yesterday, Superbowl Sunday, I waited until 6:25pm to get a pizza (etc.) order I placed at 7:55am for pickup at 5:10pm. I doubt sacking a whole slew of "suits" at that company would have prevented or changed that.
2) NARP/RPA seems to be keeping on top of Amtrak's hiring efforts and not taking things for granted. And anecdotally I've heard radio ads for Amtrak careers in Chicago. (I've also seen online ads for Amtrak careers, but those could be coming up for me due to my search/usage history.)
And yes, the job situation came about partially by Amtrak decisions made during Covid. But only partially; lots of people in lots of industries were not laid off but just plain retired. Also, unlike some looking back with 20/20 hindsight, I won't presume incompetence in those in charge of Amtrak in the first few months of Covid because they didn't stake the company on:
(1) Congress coming up with more money for Amtrak rather than robbing "who's traveling now?" Peter to pay swelling-Covid-expenses Paul, and
(2) ridership recovering as fast as it did, when the usually lively parts of Northeast and West Coast cities (and Chicago in my personal experience) looked like a post-apocalyptic movie minus the property decay. The parts of the country that weren't taking Covid terribly seriously and were more-or-less wide open in mid-2020 are generally not major Amtrak markets, while the parts of the nation where Amtrak is significant (Northeast, Cascades, California, Midwest centered on Chicago) were also the areas taking "lockdown" more-or-less seriously.
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