I agree!Keep steady gwolfdog! &
FYI - I'm pretty sure Dylan's line is "said the Joker to the Thief"
I agree!Keep steady gwolfdog! &
FYI - I'm pretty sure Dylan's line is "said the Joker to the Thief"
What's it called when you drop a shot-glass of fish-tank cleaner in it?I was drinking Lysol on 'Desolation Row' when I wrote it. You guys should work for CNN.
Finally we know what Covfefe is, after all this timeWhat's it called when you drop a shot-glass of fish-tank cleaner in it?
In response to lower ridership demand because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Amtrak, in partnership with the Wisconsin and Illinois state transportation departments, is temporarily substituting daily Amtrak Thruway Buses for Amtrak Hiawatha Service trains between Milwaukee and Chicago.
As of Friday, Bus 3332 has been operating in place of Hiawatha Service Trains 330 and 332. The bus leaves the Downtown Milwaukee Intermodal Station at 7:55 a.m. and arrives at Chicago Union Station at 9:54 a.m. Also as of Friday, Bus 3339 is operating in place of Hiawatha Service Train 339, originating in Chicago at 5 p.m. and arriving at the Milwaukee Intermodal Station at 6:59 p.m.
I'd rather make an honest living shoveling manure, than to work for CNNI was drinking Lysol on 'Desolation Row' when I wrote it. You guys should work for CNN.
Some dogs simply refuse to learn new tricks.There is at least one car blocked off completely. There are people in almost every row (3 feet apart) that is being made available to us. Sad the way the crews are brainwashed.
Although it makes sense right now I really hope this doesn't become a trend long term.The Hiawatha train service has been replaced with reserved buses. Buses temporarily replacing Amtrak Hiawatha trains between Milwaukee and Chicago
I'd rather hear who you do trust than who you don't.I'd rather make an honest living shoveling manure, than to work for CNN
Back to trains please.
I'd rather make an honest living shoveling manure, than to work for CNN
Back to trains please.
I'd rather hear who you do trust than who you don't.
Thirdrail7,
That looks about right. I got the following from someone who keeps close tabs on these things with the railroads themselves:
I checked it out for the first full week in May and it checks out.
jb
Right. I only have east coast records going back to 2006 and elsewhere after that. I don't recall it happening either.I apologize for the poor phrasing. I know the trains are cancelled and I know why. What I am wondering is if this is the first time the Star (or any other LD train) has been cancelled in its entirety, multiple days in a row for track work. I don't recall this happening. Usually, they push back the Star's departure time 4 hours and 91 isn't typically impacted.
How timely, I need some help cleaning up a dog run this weekend. Are you available?I'd rather make an honest living shoveling manure, than to work for CNN
That would be your job @ Fixed Noise, that's what they do!How timely, I need some help cleaning up a dog run this weekend. Are you available?
And my archive records are JB's records.Right. I only have east coast records going back to 2006 and elsewhere after that. I don't recall it happening either.
jb
As I detrained this morning in Greensboro, it became obvious to me what was going on in the car I was riding. I regret not getting a picture, but will make an attempt at describing what I saw. When I detrained, about 1/3 of the rear of the car was "blocked off" as seen in thread #612...except for one row on the right-hand side, in the middle of the said area. That seat was being occupied by a conductor and being used as a "work area" as a bag of destination tags was present on a seat-back tray and the seat was covered by some kind of sheet. That is when it hit me...the conductor had "quarantined" herself away from passengers, by at least two empty rows in all directions. A total disregard for those paying to be on the train. Pitiful.
Sorry, I have to take the side of the conductor. Look at it this way: Suppose there's a "hot zone" (like an Amtrak car) where the evil virus is lurking, and there's a 1% chance of catching it. Say the hot zone holds 99 passengers and a conductor (I know, that's a humongous Amtrak car, but let's just stipulate it for this example.) Now, if 99 passengers board, each one only has a 1% chance of catching the virus on that trip. On the other hand, the conductor is riding in the car, interacting with every passenger, not only on that trip, but on all his or her trips of the day, every day. After 100 trips, the conductor would have a 100% chance of catching the virus unless he or she did something to reduce his or her risk. This is not even counting for the fact that more people get off and on at intermediate stations, which might increase the exposure some to a passenger making one trip, but really increases the risks to the conductor, who is making trips every day, possibly multiple trips per day.
The conductor is at a much greater risk of infection than any passenger, so I totally 100% support what this conductor did. By the way, when all this started, the WHO said that 3 foot (1 meter) social distancing was fine. This is what I used when I rode home from Boston on March 10, and I suspect I may have been exposed to some risk when the New York passengers boarded the train. I haven't gotten sick yet, so either the New Yorkers who boarded weren't infected or the 1 meter social distancing was sufficient to reduce my risk. I think that the car attendants and conductors had more to worry about than I did as a passenger, even if I wasn't able to maintain 6 ft. social distancing.
Of course, if I were a conductor or other onboard staff, I'd be wearing a mask, or maybe Amtrak should be tricking them out with level 4 biohazard suits. And all passengers should be wearing masks.
And if it really bothers you about that car where the conductor provided himself an extra safety zone that he needed, there are other cars on the train without conductors, no? Or you could stay home, like CDC is telling us to do unless we have a REALLY good reason.
Sorry, I have to take the side of the conductor. Look at it this way: Suppose there's a "hot zone" (like an Amtrak car) where the evil virus is lurking, and there's a 1% chance of catching it. Say the hot zone holds 99 passengers and a conductor (I know, that's a humongous Amtrak car, but let's just stipulate it for this example.) Now, if 99 passengers board, each one only has a 1% chance of catching the virus on that trip. On the other hand, the conductor is riding in the car, interacting with every passenger, not only on that trip, but on all his or her trips of the day, every day. After 100 trips, the conductor would have a 100% chance of catching the virus unless he or she did something to reduce his or her risk. This is not even counting for the fact that more people get off and on at intermediate stations, which might increase the exposure some to a passenger making one trip, but really increases the risks to the conductor, who is making trips every day, possibly multiple trips per day.
The conductor is at a much greater risk of infection than any passenger, so I totally 100% support what this conductor did. By the way, when all this started, the WHO said that 3 foot (1 meter) social distancing was fine. This is what I used when I rode home from Boston on March 10, and I suspect I may have been exposed to some risk when the New York passengers boarded the train. I haven't gotten sick yet, so either the New Yorkers who boarded weren't infected or the 1 meter social distancing was sufficient to reduce my risk. I think that the car attendants and conductors had more to worry about than I did as a passenger, even if I wasn't able to maintain 6 ft. social distancing.
Of course, if I were a conductor or other onboard staff, I'd be wearing a mask, or maybe Amtrak should be tricking them out with level 4 biohazard suits. And all passengers should be wearing masks.
And if it really bothers you about that car where the conductor provided himself an extra safety zone that he needed, there are other cars on the train without conductors, no? Or you could stay home, like CDC is telling us to do unless we have a REALLY good reason.
1. I understand blocking off a few rows for the employee, but blocking off half the car is excessive especially if it results in passengers too close together. Most LD trains are also running with only one of two coaches, so changing cars is not necessarily possible.Sorry, I have to take the side of the conductor. Look at it this way: Suppose there's a "hot zone" (like an Amtrak car) where the evil virus is lurking, and there's a 1% chance of catching it. Say the hot zone holds 99 passengers and a conductor (I know, that's a humongous Amtrak car, but let's just stipulate it for this example.) Now, if 99 passengers board, each one only has a 1% chance of catching the virus on that trip. On the other hand, the conductor is riding in the car, interacting with every passenger, not only on that trip, but on all his or her trips of the day, every day. After 100 trips, the conductor would have a 100% chance of catching the virus unless he or she did something to reduce his or her risk. This is not even counting for the fact that more people get off and on at intermediate stations, which might increase the exposure some to a passenger making one trip, but really increases the risks to the conductor, who is making trips every day, possibly multiple trips per day.
The conductor is at a much greater risk of infection than any passenger, so I totally 100% support what this conductor did. By the way, when all this started, the WHO said that 3 foot (1 meter) social distancing was fine. This is what I used when I rode home from Boston on March 10, and I suspect I may have been exposed to some risk when the New York passengers boarded the train. I haven't gotten sick yet, so either the New Yorkers who boarded weren't infected or the 1 meter social distancing was sufficient to reduce my risk. I think that the car attendants and conductors had more to worry about than I did as a passenger, even if I wasn't able to maintain 6 ft. social distancing.
Of course, if I were a conductor or other onboard staff, I'd be wearing a mask, or maybe Amtrak should be tricking them out with level 4 biohazard suits. And all passengers should be wearing masks.
And if it really bothers you about that car where the conductor provided himself an extra safety zone that he needed, there are other cars on the train without conductors, no? Or you could stay home, like CDC is telling us to do unless we have a REALLY good reason.
I want to know how busy the train was? If there were only a dozen passengers that seems reasonable. They could have done what Metra did and run full trains to allow social distancing.
1. I understand blocking off a few rows for the employee, but blocking off half the car is excessive especially if it results in passengers too close together. Most LD trains are also running with only one of two coaches, so changing cars is not necessarily possible.
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