I mentioned in Eric and Pat's excellent trip report that we'd done a similar trip recently and I'd be providing a trip report. Well, life has intervened and a full trip report will have to wait, but while things are fresh in my mind I thought I'd comment on the highs and lows we experienced of Amtrak staff on the Lake Shore Limited and the Southwest Chief.
We were two old folks and a 10 year old granddaughter, with a bedroom and roomette on both trains. Our SCA on the LSL was, unfortunately, not a good advertisement for Amtrak service standards. She was AWOL the whole trip, though she did warn us that we needed to have our beds made up at 7 pm if we wanted her help. When I clarified--thinking that she must have meant we needed to contact her by 7 pm, she clarified--"No, that's when I'll make them up!" When I tried to bargain, "How about 8;30?" she replied, "I have a lot of stuff to do. But you can do them yourself if you want to stay up late." Of course, she was nowhere to be found when we went to dinner, so I checked the other roomettes to see if she was around, and did find her on her phone. She reluctantly agreed to make up the beds for us "if I have time." She did, but then failed to turn up to put them back down in the morning, which we did ourselves. Only time I have ever failed to tip a SCA, though she had her hand out for one. And I have to say that I have had great, good, and not-so-good SCAs on previous trips, but she took the cake.
On the Southwest Chief we had one very good staff experience and one not so good one. Let me start with the good: our SCA, Julio, was friendly, hard-working, and stopped by our rooms several times to ask if we needed anything. He was exemplary, on a trip where a lot of people were unhappy, and earned his tip (plus the one we didn't give our LSL SCA!) I told him that I intended to give him an online commendation, and he seemed surprised and grateful. (And I did the day we got back home.) The other staff experience was, frankly, unprecedented in all our trips on Amtrak over the years. We boarded in Chicago and of course, we knew that we needed our ticket scanned as we had an onward train, so we stayed in the room waiting for the ticket to be scanned. And waited. And waited. Naperville, the next stop, came and went with no sign of the conductor. We got our dinner reservation, and still no ticket scan. We heard the announcement for the next station stop after Naperville--and still no sign of a conductor. I went out looking for him, and ran into the assistant conductor. He said he'd get the conductor to come to our room, and I heard him make an announcement over the public intercom telling the conductor to report to Room E on the car to scan our tickets. I was a little surprised this went over the public intercom.
When the conductor arrived, I explained that we'd boarded in Chicago and hadn't had our ticket scanned. He responded by pointing to our granddaughter and telling us that we needed to pay for her ticket. When I showed him our paper ticket, clearly noting that one of our three tickets was a child fare, and it was paid for, he seemed not to be able to read the ticket, having to look at it for a couple of minutes. Finally he acknowledged that we were paid up, and did scan the ticket. He then proceeded to go on a rant about suing Canada for the smoke, though it was hard to understand him, as his speech was slurred. Later on, I was talking to another women in our sleeper who was having difficulty about her connecting train, the Coast Starlight. I asked her if it was on the same ticket as the SWC, and it was, and I also asked whether her ticket on the Chief had been scanned. It hadn't been. Luckily, Julio was around and offered to get the conductor to help her. I wonder if anyone in our car got scanned... At best, the conductor screwed up at least two sleeping rooms by not scanning our tickets. At worst, he may have missed more. And either he was having some medical issues which made him unable to read our paper ticket correctly and slurring his speech, or substances were involved. I have never seen this before, and it made me wonder whether the call by the assistant conductor over the regular intercom was an indication that this was not a one-off...
We were two old folks and a 10 year old granddaughter, with a bedroom and roomette on both trains. Our SCA on the LSL was, unfortunately, not a good advertisement for Amtrak service standards. She was AWOL the whole trip, though she did warn us that we needed to have our beds made up at 7 pm if we wanted her help. When I clarified--thinking that she must have meant we needed to contact her by 7 pm, she clarified--"No, that's when I'll make them up!" When I tried to bargain, "How about 8;30?" she replied, "I have a lot of stuff to do. But you can do them yourself if you want to stay up late." Of course, she was nowhere to be found when we went to dinner, so I checked the other roomettes to see if she was around, and did find her on her phone. She reluctantly agreed to make up the beds for us "if I have time." She did, but then failed to turn up to put them back down in the morning, which we did ourselves. Only time I have ever failed to tip a SCA, though she had her hand out for one. And I have to say that I have had great, good, and not-so-good SCAs on previous trips, but she took the cake.
On the Southwest Chief we had one very good staff experience and one not so good one. Let me start with the good: our SCA, Julio, was friendly, hard-working, and stopped by our rooms several times to ask if we needed anything. He was exemplary, on a trip where a lot of people were unhappy, and earned his tip (plus the one we didn't give our LSL SCA!) I told him that I intended to give him an online commendation, and he seemed surprised and grateful. (And I did the day we got back home.) The other staff experience was, frankly, unprecedented in all our trips on Amtrak over the years. We boarded in Chicago and of course, we knew that we needed our ticket scanned as we had an onward train, so we stayed in the room waiting for the ticket to be scanned. And waited. And waited. Naperville, the next stop, came and went with no sign of the conductor. We got our dinner reservation, and still no ticket scan. We heard the announcement for the next station stop after Naperville--and still no sign of a conductor. I went out looking for him, and ran into the assistant conductor. He said he'd get the conductor to come to our room, and I heard him make an announcement over the public intercom telling the conductor to report to Room E on the car to scan our tickets. I was a little surprised this went over the public intercom.
When the conductor arrived, I explained that we'd boarded in Chicago and hadn't had our ticket scanned. He responded by pointing to our granddaughter and telling us that we needed to pay for her ticket. When I showed him our paper ticket, clearly noting that one of our three tickets was a child fare, and it was paid for, he seemed not to be able to read the ticket, having to look at it for a couple of minutes. Finally he acknowledged that we were paid up, and did scan the ticket. He then proceeded to go on a rant about suing Canada for the smoke, though it was hard to understand him, as his speech was slurred. Later on, I was talking to another women in our sleeper who was having difficulty about her connecting train, the Coast Starlight. I asked her if it was on the same ticket as the SWC, and it was, and I also asked whether her ticket on the Chief had been scanned. It hadn't been. Luckily, Julio was around and offered to get the conductor to help her. I wonder if anyone in our car got scanned... At best, the conductor screwed up at least two sleeping rooms by not scanning our tickets. At worst, he may have missed more. And either he was having some medical issues which made him unable to read our paper ticket correctly and slurring his speech, or substances were involved. I have never seen this before, and it made me wonder whether the call by the assistant conductor over the regular intercom was an indication that this was not a one-off...