jis
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OK time for a bit of history lesson
I actually lived through and participated actively in the real conversation that happened before the introduction of the Portland section of the Builder. Generally it was thought as very feasible. There was not a huge worry about servicing and turning the train since Portland did have some mechanical staff. It was not extending the running time of the equipment significantly from what it would do any way if it went to Seattle.
There was also not a huge worry about Diner as long as there was food service equivalent to what was on the Pioneer. Remember Pioneer mostly never had a Diner in its original Amtrak incarnation. No one had any doubt how the Sleeping Car passengers would get their food - they would do so exactly as the Sleeping Car passengers on the Pioneer got their food.
Back then there were no Cascades trains really. It was the Coast Starlight, the Pioneer and Mt. Raineer (Portland - Seattle). The Pacific International ran from Seattle to Vancouver BC and was inconsequential for the purposes of travel between Portland and Seattle.
The way that the Portland Section came about was the result of three events - 1. The cancellation of the North Coast Hiawatha, 2. moving of the Empire Builder off the Stampede Pass route to the Stevens pass route (which lost the North Coast Hiawatha., and 3 - BN's desire to downgrade Stampede Pass (thus making it impossible to keep the Spokane to Seattle service via Stampede Pass going with a section off of the Builder). This potentially ended service to Pasco (and actually ended service to Yakima and Ellensburg.. There was much hue and cry, and when discussing how to retain service to Pasco it occurred to a bunch of people that we could get a win - win by keeping service to Pasco by splitting the Builder at Seattle and sending one section down SP&S to Portland.
The route tradeoff was that BN got to downgrade Stampede Pass in exchange for letting the Portland section run on the SP&S. So they had an incentive to allow this to get themselves out of the business of keeping Stampede Pass fully maintained.
That is how the discussion went down. Nothing at all like your contrived example. There is no loss of service compulsion with the extension to LA thing. it is pure random what if. Granted it is not at all stupid to imagine anything. It would be at least inappropriate and expensive with cost recovery extremely unlikely, if not stupid, to act on said imagination for reasons articulated by Thirdrail.
I actually lived through and participated actively in the real conversation that happened before the introduction of the Portland section of the Builder. Generally it was thought as very feasible. There was not a huge worry about servicing and turning the train since Portland did have some mechanical staff. It was not extending the running time of the equipment significantly from what it would do any way if it went to Seattle.
There was also not a huge worry about Diner as long as there was food service equivalent to what was on the Pioneer. Remember Pioneer mostly never had a Diner in its original Amtrak incarnation. No one had any doubt how the Sleeping Car passengers would get their food - they would do so exactly as the Sleeping Car passengers on the Pioneer got their food.
Back then there were no Cascades trains really. It was the Coast Starlight, the Pioneer and Mt. Raineer (Portland - Seattle). The Pacific International ran from Seattle to Vancouver BC and was inconsequential for the purposes of travel between Portland and Seattle.
The way that the Portland Section came about was the result of three events - 1. The cancellation of the North Coast Hiawatha, 2. moving of the Empire Builder off the Stampede Pass route to the Stevens pass route (which lost the North Coast Hiawatha., and 3 - BN's desire to downgrade Stampede Pass (thus making it impossible to keep the Spokane to Seattle service via Stampede Pass going with a section off of the Builder). This potentially ended service to Pasco (and actually ended service to Yakima and Ellensburg.. There was much hue and cry, and when discussing how to retain service to Pasco it occurred to a bunch of people that we could get a win - win by keeping service to Pasco by splitting the Builder at Seattle and sending one section down SP&S to Portland.
The route tradeoff was that BN got to downgrade Stampede Pass in exchange for letting the Portland section run on the SP&S. So they had an incentive to allow this to get themselves out of the business of keeping Stampede Pass fully maintained.
That is how the discussion went down. Nothing at all like your contrived example. There is no loss of service compulsion with the extension to LA thing. it is pure random what if. Granted it is not at all stupid to imagine anything. It would be at least inappropriate and expensive with cost recovery extremely unlikely, if not stupid, to act on said imagination for reasons articulated by Thirdrail.