Yes, the state routes are promoted as Amtrak and operated by Amtrak. But the Venture cars in question, with the seats in question, were purchased jointly by the Departments of Transportation of Illinois and California for exclusive use on routes in the Midwest and California, respectively. Amtrak didn't buy the cars, IDOT and CalDOT own them and hand them over to Amtrak to operate, same as NCDOT owns the refurbished older equipment Amtrak operates on the
Piedmonts.
Therefore, the fact that some think the seats suck is not evidence that Amtrak doesn't care about the passenger experience. When Amtrak gets down to brass tacks on the Airos and orders seats, then we can infer something about Amtrak from its seat choice.
As to my Victorian settee comment, I regret being flippant. But the fact that a seat doesn't resemble an admittedly comfortable Superliner seat doesn't automatically mean it's
uncomfortable, especially for corridor equipment. Aeron office chairs don't have a whit of padding and people sit in them for hours. Meanwhile, since the Amtrak* Venture seats
do have some padding and some recline, I tend to read online complaints that the seats are "rock hard" and don't recline as hyperbole.
I set out on Google to find out whether the seats on the Brightline Ventures and the VIA Ventures are the same as the Amtrak* Ventures, but I honestly couldn't find a clear answer after 15 minutes. (I
am supposed to be working.
) I saw stuff saying the only difference was the headrests, and other stuff saying the Amtrak* Ventures have different seats than Brightline's or VIA's. Interestingly, the headrest-only sources said Airo will have a headrest cushion, unlike the Amtrak* Ventures but like the Brightline and VIA Ventures.