rtabern
Conductor
I read last night in another post on here (the one about certain discounts not being accepted) -- major changes to Trails & Rails coming for 2018. The OP didn't elaborate, but I was able to do some digging last night and this morning -- and apparently three weeks ago the announcement was made that all overnight Trails & Rails programs would be going away (or will be transitioned into day-time programs only) and that docents will have to pay for their own meals on the train from now on. From what my sources told me, Amtrak initially wanted to do away with the program all-together effective next year, but the National Park Service and Trails & Rails' founder pushed back and are trying to reach a compromise that would keep a minimal number of short routes that do not require meals and will just be day-trips out and back (i.e. the Chicago-based program on the Wolverine that just goes 89 miles over to Niles, MI).
I can't imagine the Zephyr without guides on from Denver through the Rockies.
Even though Trails & Rails was horribly mis-managed by its founder in my opinion... I'm sad to hear this.
I was a docent for Trails & Rails on the Empire Builder program between Chicago and Minneapolis (2007-2010) and then basically single-handily started a new T&R program on the Southwest Chief between Chicago and La Plata, MO that operated between December 2012 and July 2015; it was co-sponsored by Amtrak, NPS, and the American Passenger Rail Heritage Foundaiton out of La Plata, MO. After about 2.5 years, we didn't see eye-to-eye with the Trails & Rails founder... and after he was a complete jerk to us... the program on our route unraveled... we separated ways... and went on to found our own program called the APRHF Rail Rangers. We narrate now on private rail excursions out of Chicago and 2-3x a month on the South Shore Line between Chicago and South Bend. We still work with the National Park Service out of the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore and are still Volunteer-in-Parks for our program.
Still, a lot of people pour their hearts and soul into Trails & Rails and enhancing passengers' experience... this is a slap in the face from Amtrak. Yes, I know not all guides are good (I've seen several and kicked several out of my programs!)... but I would say most agree having someone on board to tell you what you are seeing our your window enhances the trip.
Only Amtrak would take a volunteer thing that basically costs them nothing and want to cut it. It's kinda like what they did with National Train Day here in Chicago. All of the people working the event were volunteers (including Amtrak employees who came in on their day off to be there but not get paid!!)... it couldn't have cost Amtrak much if anything to put on because they were using Union Station ----- which they own... yet they were clearly making money because they sold yard tours for $10/pp, merchandise, t-shirts, wooden whistles, etc... but somehow National Train Day needed to be cut because it "cost too much to put on".
I can't imagine the Zephyr without guides on from Denver through the Rockies.
I was a docent for Trails & Rails on the Empire Builder program between Chicago and Minneapolis (2007-2010) and then basically single-handily started a new T&R program on the Southwest Chief between Chicago and La Plata, MO that operated between December 2012 and July 2015; it was co-sponsored by Amtrak, NPS, and the American Passenger Rail Heritage Foundaiton out of La Plata, MO. After about 2.5 years, we didn't see eye-to-eye with the Trails & Rails founder... and after he was a complete jerk to us... the program on our route unraveled... we separated ways... and went on to found our own program called the APRHF Rail Rangers. We narrate now on private rail excursions out of Chicago and 2-3x a month on the South Shore Line between Chicago and South Bend. We still work with the National Park Service out of the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore and are still Volunteer-in-Parks for our program.
Still, a lot of people pour their hearts and soul into Trails & Rails and enhancing passengers' experience... this is a slap in the face from Amtrak. Yes, I know not all guides are good (I've seen several and kicked several out of my programs!)... but I would say most agree having someone on board to tell you what you are seeing our your window enhances the trip.
Only Amtrak would take a volunteer thing that basically costs them nothing and want to cut it. It's kinda like what they did with National Train Day here in Chicago. All of the people working the event were volunteers (including Amtrak employees who came in on their day off to be there but not get paid!!)... it couldn't have cost Amtrak much if anything to put on because they were using Union Station ----- which they own... yet they were clearly making money because they sold yard tours for $10/pp, merchandise, t-shirts, wooden whistles, etc... but somehow National Train Day needed to be cut because it "cost too much to put on".