Wow. Bad news. I don’t understand your nomenclature. Is it the Amtrak that derailed?Amtrak 7 at MINOT has canceled.
Z-PTLCHC7-29 has derailed on the GLASGOW subdivision. Both mains blocked. Train on fire.
Thx.No, that's a freight train service number.
I'm guessing they can't find buses in the middle of Montana and North Dakota to bus the passengers, so they might be refunding passengers and sending them off. That's only a guess, I'm not sure what they do int these situations.So it looks like they have “cancelled“ both directions of the already-underway Empire Builders (at Shelby and Minot). So what does Amtrak do with all the passengers on those trains now in Shelby and Minot? Do they bus them somewhere? If so, where?
I would assume they would bus them to the other “stopped“ location and then reverse the trains beck to their origin. But ”cancelled” seems to mean otherwise. And I would think they would first move the trains as close as possible if they did this.
If Amtrak would transfer passengers from the stopped westbound train to the stopped eastbound train and vice versa, sleeping car passengers would be moving into recently vacated bedrooms and roomettes which, more than likely, will not have been cleaned first. Is this allowable, even if the passengers concerned don’t object to moving into previously used accommodations in order to complete their journey?So it looks like they have “cancelled“ both directions of the already-underway Empire Builders (at Shelby and Minot). So what does Amtrak do with all the passengers on those trains now in Shelby and Minot? Do they bus them somewhere? If so, where?
I would assume they would bus them to the other “stopped“ location and then reverse the trains beck to their origin. But ”cancelled” seems to mean otherwise. And I would think they would first move the trains as close as possible if they did this.
Yes, it happens/ed fairly frequently whenever their was a blockage of the track.Is this allowable, even if the passengers concerned don’t object to moving into previously used accommodations in order to complete their journey?
If Amtrak would transfer passengers from the stopped westbound train to the stopped eastbound train and vice versa, sleeping car passengers would be moving into recently vacated bedrooms and roomettes which, more than likely, will not have been cleaned first.
What makes you think the SCAs won’t clean the rooms? Either they clean the rooms before they depart on the buses to the other train or they clean the rooms on the train they transferred to. Anyone boarding a train mid route is likely to be getting a previously occupied room - that the SCA prepares for the new passenger.If Amtrak would transfer passengers from the stopped westbound train to the stopped eastbound train and vice versa, sleeping car passengers would be moving into recently vacated bedrooms and roomettes which, more than likely, will not have been cleaned first. Is this allowable, even if the passengers concerned don’t object to moving into previously used accommodations in order to complete their journey?
Understood. The “hot bunking” of sleeping car passengers can and does happen. If a passenger in a Bedroom E and gets transferred to another train, will that passenger also be assigned a Bedroom E?Yes, it happens/ed fairly frequently whenever their was a blockage of the track.
Greyhound doesn't serve Minot. There's a tri-weekly bus line between Minot and Bismarck. Jefferson Lines serves Bismarck on the lone transcon bus schedule between the Twin Cities and Seattle/Portland. It's not a through bus, but it's a through schedule pattern.I hope they bus them to the other train. It would be brutal to just strand someone in Minot. The airport has two flights a day in small planes; there are virtually no other options for travel aside from Greyhound.
Greyhound doesn’t go any where near Minot anymore, either…I hope they bus them to the other train. It would be brutal to just strand someone in Minot. The airport has two flights a day in small planes; there are virtually no other options for travel aside from Greyhound.
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