At the NARP meeting, Mr. Anderson also said something a little more concrete.
He rode the Capitol Limited from DC to Chicago, in a sleeper, to get there.
He said that it would be an excellent way to do business travel if the train arrived on time, explaining the "go to sleep, wake up well-rested at your destination, get a full day's work done, go to sleep, wake up well-rested at your destination" model which we all know.
And then started talking about the importance of having the reading lights in the roomettes working.
(Later, he was talking about forcing the freight railroads to run the trains on time.)
I think, from this, that he is certainly not going to neglect the single-overnight markets, at any rate. The viable business travel model for an *on-time* Capitol Limited applies just as well to the Lake Shore Limited, Crescent, Silver Star, Silver Meteor, City of New Orleans, (for certain city pairs) the Cardinal, (for Denver to Chicago) the Calfornia Zephyr, and the Coast Starlight, at the very least. That's most of the so-called long-distance trains.
(Despite Amtrak's awful accounting, I'm pretty sure all of these are marginal cash generators.)