When did Congress remove the profitability requirement from Amtrak's enabling legislation? During or after Covid as I recall. When did Congress finally come up with a real budget for Amtrak? About the same time.
*Amtrak came up with the Corridor Development program, nobody forced that idea on Amtrak from the outside.
*Amtrak said little about new equipment other than the new Acelas, as I recall ... until December 2022 when it somewhat suddenly announced the Airos with great fanfare. The initial order has already been expanded, and at least one car has already been built.
*Amtrak has announced its intent to get mothballed long-distance cars back on the rails in 2024.
*Amtrak is proceeding apace with the process of acquiring new long-distance equipment. Even before the present RFP, its proposals a few months back about how it could comply alternatively with the ADA (multiple connected accessible cars without every car needing to be accessible) showed they were putting money, personnel, and thought into what replacement long-distance equipment would look like, including at least considering new bilevel equipment.
I know Amtrak has done some stupid stuff in the past. But I don't think it's entirely coincidental that it made its most skinflint and shortsighted decisions when it was under legal requirements to strive for profitability generally and particularly in food service. I also know lots of people second-guess how they handled worker retention during the worst of COVID, when it wasn't at all clear that passenger travel would recover as it has. But the sheer pessimism -- Amtrak wants rid of the LD trains altogether, Amtrak has no intention of buying new LD equipment, etc. -- is wearying. (I've said that before, I think.
).
Amtrak can't buy fleets of new equipment and hire a full workforce to run, clean, maintain, and market it at the drop of a hat like Thanos snapping. Even this long after the worst of Covid, worker shortages are rife. I don't think the airlines or the supermarket near me are
trying to drive away business by not staffing every position like it's 2019. We could give Amtrak the same benefit of the doubt.
I'm not saying just trust Amtrak leadership. Amtrak should be regularly reporting its hiring numbers, its progress in un-mothballing equipment, and the progress of ordering new LD equipment. RPA and others should be watching and making it clear to Amtrak that they're watching. (Judging from what I read on the RPA website, RPA seems cautiously optimistic and is working on a "trust but verify" basis.)
If Amtrak low-balls the LD order(s),
then will be the time to scream and shout.
As an aside, I firmly believe that if the plan to keep passenger trains running in 1971 had been to subsidize the freight railroads to keep operating passenger services, we would've lost passenger rail around the time of deregulation or maybe a little later into the '80s. Unless Congress was significantly more free-spending with the subsidies than it was with Amtrak funding in reality, the subsidies would have been perceived as a pittance compared to the negative impact on freight traffic, and freight-railroad lobbyists would have pitched ending the subsidized service as lifting another regulatory burden. The freights show every day that they've forgotten that Amtrak priority was
not a regulatory burden imposed on them but part of a grand bargain where
they got relieved of the ICC requirement to operating passenger trains. I think they'd have developed a similar amnesia after a few years in the alternate reality of subsidized private operation.
Oh, and turning to the marketing thing
I see plenty of online ads for Amtrak. Now I'm obviously getting more than the average internet user because of my personal interests, but it does show Amtrak
is advertising. And at least some of the ads I've seen pitch the views and comfort of LD travel, so it's clearly not trying to discourage LD ridership.