- Joined
- Feb 19, 2016
- Messages
- 845
Exactly. You want to know who to blame? Tour operators who gobble up all the prime time seats months and months and months in advance, wait until the last second to try and sell them, and dump them for a refund weeks or even DAYS before the train actually travels; seats which then often go unsold, due to people not have time to plan to take the trip, because when they checked it was uber bucket or "Sold out".
Keep strangling that golden goose, and eventually you kill it.
If playing the blame game, the former Amtrak policies shared it with tour operators for allowing it or even promoting it. The new policy is less tour-friendly, more everyday pax-friendly. A good thing.
Treating tour operators as a desirable class probably dates back many years, before and after Amtrak, when there was plenty of spare equipment and a vibrant extra board (staff) to press into service. The extra business added to their bottom lines. The equipment surplus is long gone, and the extra board is not what it used to be. It shouldn't be surprising that Amtrak finally saw that treating tour operators as desirable clients was a fool's errand.
As one of those everyday pax, it is nice to know that I won't be sharing as many train journeys with others who are part of a group movement. Many I've encountered in the past behaved as if they were the ultimate entitled class. And if a few more sleeping accommodations open up as a result of the new policy, that's a win-win.
Let the tour operators go the PV route if they want to survive. It's still possible, if they begin and end itineraries at a route terminus where switching equipment and yard space are available.