Big Green Chauvanist
Service Attendant
I have been using the King Street Station for years as my downtown Seattle go-to if I need a pleasant space to relax between engagements or just because I like the excitement of the place. Today, which was a very cold day for Seattle, and having missed by a minute getting my old, no-longer-functioning ORCA card replaced at the nearby King County Metro customer service center, I thought I would go around the corner to KSS to read the book I was carrying, until the customer service center reopened an hour later after their lunch break. (Why they have to close for an hour for lunch--all of them at once rather than rotating so that there would be at least one agent in the center at all times--I have no idea. This is something new and is not even mentioned on the website--you first learn of it if you are unlucky enough to arrive at 12:01 as I did). So you can imagine my frustration when I was stopped at the entrance to KSS by a security guard asking if I was traveling by AMTRAK. I explained my situation and was duly ushered to the door. I tried to explain the situation again (as the guard had poor English skills, to say the least), but I gave up and left without further protesting. It also would have been useless, pointless, and perhaps not even à propos in the circumstance, to mention the hundreds of dollars of dollars, probably thousands over the years, I have spent on AMTRAK, tempted as I was. A very long-winded way to ask is this a new policy in ALL AMTRAK stations or rather station-by-station? I'll have to research it out as it has been some time but I think KSS station is owned by the City of Seattle and rented out by AMTRAK. If so, I'll let someone at the city know of my frustration. At larger and busier stations, I can't see that such a policy could be even attempted, but with one entrance and moderate traffic, all it took was this one guard to turn me away. It is true that downtown Seattle, once lively and clean, is now appallingly dirty, with many empty storefronts boarded up and offices closed and with large numbers of homeless individuals on the streets and sidewalks, some mentally ill or drug-addicted. And KSS is located in Pioneer Square, the epicenter of this unfortunate situation. But still, as I was well dressed and MMOB, I felt I shouldn't have been treated to cavalierly.