Seems to have been a hit-and-run poster.
Seems to have been a hit-and-run poster.
Perhaps there was a nicer way to let the guy know he was mistaken. I'm shocked* that after that opening line you were treated with the same respect you showed.He told me, "I don't have anyone getting on here." We had booked two or three weeks earlier. I told him, "Then you can't read your manifest. We booked weeks ago and you should have known once you got it in San Antonio. That was over 24 hours ago."
Because of course we all know the manifest is always right and the reservation system could not possibly omit a name or have them in another car......I got on a Lake Shore one night where the SCA had gone out of his way to make things pleasant, had welcome stickers with everyone's names on the doors, and a glitch moved a bunch of folks around the sleepers, our tickets didn't match the manifest, and it took the conductor and both SCA quite a while to sort out. I was lucky, I was just across the hall, but some were in opposite cars.Perhaps there was a nicer way to let the guy know he was mistaken. I'm shocked* that after that opening line you were treated with the same respect you showed.
*I'm not actually shocked in the least.
I’m siding with Steve4031, having had a similar SCA.Perhaps there was a nicer way to let the guy know he was mistaken. I'm shocked* that after that opening line you were treated with the same respect you showed.
*I'm not actually shocked in the least.
You know, it's possible for both people to be wrong in a situation, right?I’m siding with Steve4031, having had a similar SCA.
The SCA should have smiled and said “Welcome aboard” when Steve4031 walked up. When Steve4031 didn’t show up on the manifest, the SCA should have said, “I don’t see you listed; could you please show me your ticket so that we can get this straightened out?”
But no, it sounds like the SCA just informed Steve4031 that he wasn’t listed and indicated that the case was closed. No smile, no welcome, no effort to fix the situation.
As shown by the SCA later informing Steve4031 that Steve4031 had started off on the wrong foot, and making up a rule, the SCA clearly was one who sees customers as an inconvenience and people who are to be bossed around, since they are simply an inconvenience.
Unacceptable.
That sounds like a made-up rule. If refueling the engines was really a hazard (hard to understand since I can stand next to my car and refuel it with much more flammable gasoline but can't be 100 or so feet away from a refueling with a less flammable Diesel fuel?) then why did he have the door open? That was apparently his fallback once the "you are not on my manifest" gambit failed."You can't board here because they are refueling the engines. Go back to the other sleeper and board."
Absolutely!That sounds like a made-up rule. If refueling the engines was really a hazard (hard to understand since I can stand next to my car and refuel it with much more flammable gasoline but can't be 100 or so feet away from a refueling with a less flammable Diesel fuel?) then why did he have the door open? That was apparently his fallback once the "you are not on my manifest" gambit failed.
I think the prevalence of rules made up on the spot by various crews is one of the most annoying aspects of Amtrak travel.
I'm sure that you won't read this. But, trust me.. You have no idea on the hours that Conductors and Assistant Conductors put in these days. I just worked 7 days straight. Those on the extra board such as myself can get called back to work after 6 hours of being off. It happens too. As long as we get 8 hours off, they can call us back to work as soon as 6 hours. Some people live further away from their crew base. So they may only get 3-4 hours of sleep. I'm not saying that you haven't had a bad expereiance. But please understand that being a Conductor and Assistant Conductor can be extremely stressful at times.As far as the excuse of the conductors being overworked, I am a surgeon traveling at 4:25 AM from DC to NY and getting back home at 9 PM at night, round trip. I am overworked, far more than these conductors, and in a high stress position.
You're incorrect.If I am correct, these are Amtrak employees posting responses?
I definetly laughed about this. How couldn't I? LOL!!I dunno, he's kind of creepy, running around trying to give people hugs and stuff.
I have worked 72 hours straight, without leaving the office, and without sleeping. Plenty of jobs have long hours and stress.I'm sure that you won't read this. But, trust me.. You have no idea on the hours that Conductors and Assistant Conductors put in these days. I just worked 7 days straight. Those on the extra board such as myself can get called back to work after 6 hours of being off. It happens too. As long as we get 8 hours off, they can call us back to work as soon as 6 hours. Some people live further away from their crew base. So they may only get 3-4 hours of sleep. I'm not saying that you haven't had a bad expereiance. But please understand that being a Conductor and Assistant Conductor can be extremely stressful at times.
You're incorrect.
I definetly laughed about this. How couldn't I? LOL!!
MSM said:
One surgical assistant was not allowed on a train last year by a conductor even through she had a ticket, complained in Newark, and was sent back home on an upgraded Acela.
I wonder if she had a ticket for Newark, DE instead of Newark, NJ.I'd love to hear the details of this story.
Most likely when people are told to reboard OBS simply are trying to keep aisles and passageways as clear as possible.That sounds like a made-up rule. If refueling the engines was really a hazard (hard to understand since I can stand next to my car and refuel it with much more flammable gasoline but can't be 100 or so feet away from a refueling with a less flammable Diesel fuel?) then why did he have the door open? That was apparently his fallback once the "you are not on my manifest" gambit failed.
I think the prevalence of rules made up on the spot by various crews is one of the most annoying aspects of Amtrak travel.
Once on the Chief I walked to the last car (coach) while we were on the Glorieta to grab a few pictures of the semaphore signals in that line. After about 3 minutes the attendant of that came over and said “Ok you can return to your place now.”That sounds like a made-up rule. If refueling the engines was really a hazard (hard to understand since I can stand next to my car and refuel it with much more flammable gasoline but can't be 100 or so feet away from a refueling with a less flammable Diesel fuel?) then why did he have the door open? That was apparently his fallback once the "you are not on my manifest" gambit failed.
I think the prevalence of rules made up on the spot by various crews is one of the most annoying aspects of Amtrak travel.
I hope you made eye contact with each of them and smiled.I agree with you completely. I certainly think that someone treating customers poorly deserves a bit of professional attention from managment.
But, I'm not always willing to be the one to do it - especially during the moment of service.
As you point out, these staff are empowered to deboard you from the train, with potential legal consequence.
In a perfect world, that would only happen if a passenger were behaving in a truly egregious manner.
Unfortunately, when you've already seen the staff member in question behave in an improper manner - that's a strong suggestion they'll continue to do so. That is, they'll use the power they have to simply eject you rather than live up to proper service standards. ("Give people a little power.." and all that).
As an aside, maybe a decade ago, I was on a TATL flight and one of the FAs was being.. really poorly.. moved a friend up from coach to business (not my concern), but then spent a good chunk of the flight ignoring all the other pax in favor of socializing with their friend and piling on the food and drinks.
While still on board, I reached out by email to the airline. I expected a reply later.. after landing, in any event.
Well.. the reply came more quickly. The lead purser, about 90 minutes later, came to my seat with my email on her tablet. Apologized profusely. Made sure me, and the people in the section were given appropriate service for the balance of the flight.
I def got the stink eye from the original FA and her friend, though.
I worked for Amtrak for 10years, I used to cringe at some of the staff how rude they are to passenger, but for some reason they never ever get fired for being rude, I am so sorry to hear this I worked in the cafe or diner and loved my job, even though I met some really mean people, please write a complaint letter sometimes it does help with a paper trail.I have been riding the NEC - Northeast Corridor - for about four years, 2 -3x per week. The conductors, for the most part, are not nice. They are rude, abrasive, condescending, and generally in a power mode for whatever reason. These are customer service representatives, and they do NOT act that way. As far as the excuse of the conductors being overworked, I am a surgeon traveling at 4:25 AM from DC to NY and getting back home at 9 PM at night, round trip. I am overworked, far more than these conductors, and in a high stress position. I have chosen to use Amtrak as a cost savings to my company vs other forms of travel. I put up with their behavior at my choice. There are definitely other forms of travel that are more pleasant, faster, and easier to deal with than Amtrak with these conductors involved.
Customer service lessons are necessary. Amtrak wants to increase ridership. One of the best ways to do this is to teach the conductors that riders on the train have a choice - they are not obligated to use Amtrak. Rather than being hostile and rude, maybe consider a smile once in a while or a nice greeting or two. That may create an environment that keeps people coming on back, and build a much better atmosphere for growth and development of the service Amtrak provides.
I’m sorry that you met some really mean people- you shouldn’t have to be subjected to that.I worked for Amtrak for 10years, I used to cringe at some of the staff how rude they are to passenger, but for some reason they never ever get fired for being rude, I am so sorry to hear this I worked in the cafe or diner and loved my job, even though I met some really mean people, please write a complaint letter sometimes it does help with a paper trail.
A big thank you for everyone you help.
Regards
Jane
Would you take someone seriously who said they had ridden for 58 years without a single positive employee? Because that's just as implausible as your post.I've been riding the NEC for 58 years, and cannot recall any employee negatives. Local trains, just one young jerk.
Except that these participants do not bear equal responsibility for resolving mistakes and misunderstandings. One side is a paying customer while the other is a paid on-duty employee. If benefit of the doubt is required it should be the employee who defers and deescalates (within reason of course).You know, it's possible for both people to be wrong in a situation, right?
At every non-Amtrak dining establishment during the pandemic, the rule was that you could take your mask off while consuming your food and drink. (And waitstaff didn't attempt to enforce a "put your mask back on between bites/sips" rule, as that would both have been impractical and would have spread even more germs, from having to finger one's mask constantly.)I went to the cafe car which was empty and was enjoying a coffee and a snack and a female Amtrak employee yelled at me for having my mask off.
And also on every Amtrak trip I took during the height of the pandemic, no one ever bothered me about having my mask off while I was eating. From my experience, I would think that the rude behavior cited was a one-off and not typical of most Amtrak OBS staff.At every non-Amtrak dining establishment during the pandemic, the rule was that you could take your mask off while consuming your food and drink. (And waitstaff didn't attempt to enforce a "put your mask back on between bites/sips" rule, as that would both have been impractical and would have spread even more germs, from having to finger one's mask constantley.)
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