montana mike
Conductor
The EB's are becoming "intermodal" transportation (i.e.. using busses and trains to get the pax from point A to point B)
Yeah...I thought I wouldn't mind the delayed train but frankly I started getting delirious when I was on that 30 hour late EB. Plus it didn't help that we missed meals and than had nasty amstew. I was getting the "hangries" on the train (hungry + angry = hangry).20 extra hours on the train? I'd enjoy that, as long as I didn't have anything pressing on the other end of it.
20 unexpected hours with no extra food? Or 20 hours waiting for the train at St. Paul Midway? Wouldn't enjoy either. If I were going from Chicago to Seattle at this point, I'd go via Sacramento, which is longer, but has food and is more reliable. Predictability is critical.20 extra hours on the train? I'd enjoy that, as long as I didn't have anything pressing on the other end of it.
Yeah, the unpredictability is the worst.My problem wouldn't be the 20+ hours - it's the not knowing whether it's going to be 5 hours, 15 hours, 25 hours, or 35 hours...
Unfortunately, no.My problem is I am going Seattle to Milwaukee. Have flight the following morning home. 20+ hours I miss it. Does amtrak cover something like that?
But to be fair, no carrier of any kind covers something like that. Nobody - air carriers, Amtrak, cruise lines, etc. - covers any kind of loss created due to delays.Unfortunately, no.My problem is I am going Seattle to Milwaukee. Have flight the following morning home. 20+ hours I miss it. Does amtrak cover something like that?
Oh, I did. Apart from my motion-sickness, which makes long bus rides quite unpleasant (I'm OK with short bus rides).... Megabus hires extremely inexperienced drivers and has killed people in my area fairly recently due to gross incompetence. I'm sufficiently risk-averse I won't ride Megabus ever.Neroden...if you don't mind a bus ride, MegaBus departs from SPUD also. They have about 6 trips a day to Chicago.
Not sure if you knew that.
I have yet to hear anyone say that the Empire Builder will be able to make schedule. All the talk is about try to catch up on routine care, and add a few extra tracks here and there. There seem to be no plans to fix the real issues of the route.The fantasy of sticking to a schedule that no train has met for many months, and will not likely meet for perhaps a couple more years just make no sense......
And 48 hours later:A friend from Minnesota says :
We drove on US10 from Anoka to Motley yesterday, paralleling the BNSF main line through Minnesota. We saw eight or nine stopped trains (I lost count) and exactly one moving train. A crew was arriving at one of the stopped trains just west of Little Falls as we passed by. No wonder the Builder has a hard time getting through.
We made the return trip today; this time I counted more carefully. We saw a total of twenty trains in the roughly 110 miles between Motley and Anoka. Fifteen were stopped, five were moving. Four of the moving trains were a group of unit tanker trains, travelling westbound with about 1-2 miles of separation between them. The other was an eastbound mixed freight. Everything else was stopped.
At least one of the trains was there all weekend. It was headed by NS Heritage unit 1067 -- Reading Lines 'Bee Line Service.' We saw it on Friday and Sunday.
The Amtrak site says. When I go there to book a ticket on Empire Builder, it shows me CHI departure 2.15pm, SEA arrival 10.25am. We all know, and Amtrak knows too, that this is just "on paper" these days, so they should put up a permanent sticky note there cautioning potential passengers that "this train is subject to long delays due to problems on the Hi-Line". This can help Amtrak save its back too in a way. If disgruntled passengers call asking for refunds or vouchers for the delay, Amtrak can tell them "We told you so!"I have yet to hear anyone say that the Empire Builder will be able to make schedule.The fantasy of sticking to a schedule that no train has met for many months, and will not likely meet for perhaps a couple more years just make no sense......
BNSF Railway is hiring about 25 new train conductors at each crew location. Can we say Melt Down?And 48 hours later:A friend from Minnesota says :
We drove on US10 from Anoka to Motley yesterday, paralleling the BNSF main line through Minnesota. We saw eight or nine stopped trains (I lost count) and exactly one moving train. A crew was arriving at one of the stopped trains just west of Little Falls as we passed by. No wonder the Builder has a hard time getting through.We made the return trip today; this time I counted more carefully. We saw a total of twenty trains in the roughly 110 miles between Motley and Anoka. Fifteen were stopped, five were moving. Four of the moving trains were a group of unit tanker trains, travelling westbound with about 1-2 miles of separation between them. The other was an eastbound mixed freight. Everything else was stopped.
At least one of the trains was there all weekend. It was headed by NS Heritage unit 1067 -- Reading Lines 'Bee Line Service.' We saw it on Friday and Sunday.
Good.Well, BNSF has indeed upped the ante by doubling the amount of money they will spend over the next 12 months compared to what they had originally planned.
The way B.H. normally works, this shouldn't need approval from anyone above Carl Ice. BNSF execs can just decide to plow all income back into investment (pass none of it back to BH), or indeed to issue BNSF's own bonds. Buffett's policy traditionally has been only to interfere personally with insurance companies (that's his actual area of expertise), and with companies which got themselves tangled up in criminal activity or lost money for years on end.But as the BNSF folks here locally have told me in order to make a long term and permanent difference BNSF will be required to spend perhaps 4 or 5 times that amount on the Hi-Line over the next 3+ years. The "suits" at Berkshire Hathaway have yet to approve the big "Grand Plan" that would make this happen.
Bleah.Perhaps they will, but as of this month the folks in the trenches have been told no final decisions have been made on spending what is necessary for the long term fix.
Really, really, really stupid. I can't express how stupid this is. They're being grilled by the *state legislature* and they don't think there's a crisis? That is stupid.I believe, after talking with MT BNSF folks, that there is not a crisis and they sense from the top management that they do not need to act with great urgency.
Two responses come to mind1) Customers switch to UP or CP.btw-BNSF keeps reminding its freight customers that their goods will arrive anywhere from 24-48 hours past the "posted" schedules for the foreseeable future, so at least they have alerted these clients about the the issues effecting their deliveries.....
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