That's a good point Desert Rat. ComicCon would also be able to provide more accurate numbers than gestimates based on previous years. I feel like for something like this the organisers should reach out to amtrak, it's not like a holiday like thanksgiving that most everyone is celebrating.
Also, and i guess this will mean I get called an apologist but I wanted to given the perspective of someone who loves riding amtrak, who has ridden trains on a regular basis in the UK, Germany and Australia and who is a non-US resident -what's wrong with trying to look on the positive side when things go wrong? Why everyone's experience have to be perfect? I am genuinely curious because I read so many hissy fits where something goes wrong and people say 'never again' and flounce straight back to their cars. The world doesn't revolve around any of us and things can go wrong but public transportation is so much more environmentally friendly so i think a bit of inconvenience is worth it. It also helps develop a sense of community. I have met so many people on trains I would never meet in the bubble of a car. If things go wrong, well, it can be annoying but so what? I can well imagine the situation described by the OP and it sounds sucky and could've been handled better but people got there and surely werent scarred for life, frankly, it sounds no worse than an ordinary London workday morning commute.
In most of the bad experiences people describe, passengers are still comfortable and safe. Being inconvenienced isn't the end of the world. In all my journeys I've had plenty go wrong, a mix of acts if god, accidents, bad planning, over overcrowding etc. It doesn't keep me up at night now
. I remember a trip in the UK where I had to zig zag across the country in a journey 3 times longer than it shouldve been because an accident messed everything up. I had to work those out self - no one boarded my train to give me hotel and cab vouchers! Paying full price (way more expensive than the cost of a ticket between LA and San Diego) to sit on the vestibule floor in both the uk and germany. I used to be crammed in so tight on my london commuter journey I could faint and not fall down. I think Amtrak is super cushy, lots of space, checked bags, food, guaranteed connections. The staff coddle passengers like nothing I've seen anywhere else ( we don't even have to work out which platform we have to board from!) and the refund policies and guaranteed connections are really generous.
I dont mean to offend anyone,i just have a lot of trouble understanding why people feel it necessary to let a bad experience be the be all and end and stop them doing something that I think really benefits society overall (and is pretty darn fun!). Sometimes things don't go perfectly and I'm all for ranting about it, it sure makes me feel better too. Might help too, with suggestions about how things could be improved, But when I hear the 'i cannot believe I was so inconvenienced, I shall never go near a train again' type rants I can't help but think, really, you're that precious?
ETA sorry about the formatting, I can't get the paragraph spaces to show.