amamba
Engineer
I agree that it would be helpful for us to k ow of the specific complaint. You don't even have to use real names or dates or destinations if you want to keep some anonymity.
As said before, it really has nothing to do with her one complaint. It is a cumulation of many, many complaints. The problem does exist, whether it's my neighbor's complaint, my complaint, or any of the many other complaints. The neighbor's one complaint is not what I'm referring to.Yes, but coming on here and just saying someone told you they had a bad experience is on par with the people who post topics like “Amtrak sucks” and never explain what the problem is.I had replied with what the situation was and then backspaced to delete it because it really doesn't matter what the "complaint" was. Rude employees are rude employees, whether it is to my neighbor or yours. Just read the discussions and the travelogues, there are plenty of examples. My neighbor's experience probably isn't the same as someone else's and it wouldn't serve any useful purpose for you (or anyone else) to pick apart her experience. The fact remains that rudeness exists now and has existed for too long.
It does, indeed, matter what the complaint was. Your second, third, and fourth sentence all refer to “bad experiences”, but never say what they are. I’m not asking for pages of explanation, but if you bring it up, you should at least describe it to some extent. Just a sentence or two. I can read travel reports from other people until the cows come home. It doesn’t explain your situation any more than someone else’s trip report explains my last trip.
I've been riding Amtrak since 1981, and my experiences agree with yours, though more as regards conductors. I find on-board staff to get ruder the closer I approach New York City, but that may just be my luck.I've been riding AMTRAK since 1994. From time to time I have run into some rude employees (quite a few of them at Chicago Union Station in fact). Usually conductors.
Unless the mistake was realized within a few hundred feet at most, the train will never go back. You would become a carry-by and Amtrak would have to make arrangements to get you back to the correct station....lucky we opened the door or else the train would have had to go back...at least I hope it would
That seems to be a pretty common theme if you ask me. Chicago as a city is lots of fun, but as an Amtrak crew base it leaves much to be desired. Maybe the problem isn't that none of the management is riding the trains. Maybe the problem is that Chicago managers have no concept of quality customer service to begin with. Thus, no matter how often they ride they don't see the problem.I've been riding AMTRAK since 1994. From time to time I have run into some rude employees (quite a few of them at Chicago Union Station in fact).
The problem I have, is that way too many times, people label an employee (Amtrak or otherwise) as being "rude", if they attempt a power-play and loose. Such a label is inappropriate and undeserved.I just can't understand why Amtrak continues to put up with rude personnel.
Last night my neighbor was over and told me about a bad experience she had. This was on top of having heard another comment from another acquaintence.
I don't recall one being rude to me either.I have been riding Amtrak since 1972 (when I was in college) and I do not recall an employee being rude to me.
I guess I was too terse in my initial reply. I don't doubt that some managers do get out there and ride the trains. Maybe I'm just old school, but a manager is responsible for knowing their people and is responsible for the performance of those people at all times - whether the manager is present or not. Someone that only performs when the boss is around can't fly under the radar of a good manager indefinitely. Complaints to Amtrak (which I also mentioned as valuable) help, but unless there's a receptive manager on the other end that (1)actually receives those complaints and (2)is interested in using them to help get rid of the dead weight, all the complaining in the world isn't going to do a bit of good.Now, turning to one of the underlying themes currently running through this topic, let me once again repeat something that I have said many, many times before.
Amtrak Management Does Ride the Trains!
We currently have one now retired member who did that for a good portion of his career at Amtrak and we have one member who currently does it. Is there a manager on every train every day? No. But they are out riding the trains.
The problem isn't that management isn't riding the trains! The problem is that the employees know who the managers are. So when there is a manager around, the bad employees do their jobs. When there is no manager around, they don't. It's that simple.
So management has to rely, at least in part, on reports from the passengers. If you get bad service, report it! Take names and call Amtrak's Customer Service to be sure that it gets documented. The more times an employee gets reported, the more likely it is that they'll be sent for retraining, given greater scrutiny, and eventually terminated if they don't improve.
Well it's a good thing that none of the stories in this thread have anything to do with that. Are passengers perfect and right in every complaint? Absolutely not, and I've been the first one to defend Amtrak against foolish stories. But in general, blaming the passenger is not the answer. The fact that you haven't been treated rudely doesn't mean that those employees don't exist.The problem I have, is that way too many times, people label an employee (Amtrak or otherwise) as being "rude", if they attempt a power-play and loose. Such a label is inappropriate and undeserved.
For example, your coffee is merely warm, and not hot, and you demand a free upgrade from coach to a bedroom sleeper because of it. The Amtrak employee who doesn't give in, is labeled as being "rude" (plus I few other things too) by the story teller.
The conductor is in charge of the train. Accept it. If the conductor tells you where to sit in coach, or to move your seat, and you flatly refuse, the conductor isn't being "rude", he/she is merely doing their job.
I have had multiple instances of rude Amtrak employees, and those who know me here know that I never instigate anything. I am about as low maintenance a passenger as there is. Those who say it does not happen, or that if it does it is the passenger's fault, either have a very high tolerance for abuse or have their heads in the sand.The problem I have, is that way too many times, people label an employee (Amtrak or otherwise) as being "rude", if they attempt a power-play and loose. Such a label is inappropriate and undeserved.I just can't understand why Amtrak continues to put up with rude personnel.
Last night my neighbor was over and told me about a bad experience she had. This was on top of having heard another comment from another acquaintence.
For example, your coffee is merely warm, and not hot, and you demand a free upgrade from coach to a bedroom sleeper because of it. The Amtrak employee who doesn't give in, is labeled as being "rude" (plus I few other things too) by the story teller.
The conductor is in charge of the train. Accept it. If the conductor tells you where to sit in coach, or to move your seat, and you flatly refuse, the conductor isn't being "rude", he/she is merely doing their job.
I don't recall one being rude to me either.I have been riding Amtrak since 1972 (when I was in college) and I do not recall an employee being rude to me.
Can you link to a single solitary example of anyone witnessing a coach passenger actually trying to turn a cup of warm coffee into bedroom upgrade? Because I've never seen or even heard of anything like that. Ever. If I didn't know better I'd say you're inadvertently showing us the exact sort of broad-brush prejudice you're pretending to decry.The problem I have, is that way too many times, people label an employee (Amtrak or otherwise) as being "rude", if they attempt a power-play and loose. Such a label is inappropriate and undeserved. For example, your coffee is merely warm, and not hot, and you demand a free upgrade from coach to a bedroom sleeper because of it. The Amtrak employee who doesn't give in, is labeled as being "rude" (plus I few other things too) by the story teller.
Most of the time I can count on poor service in the dining car among other things. For some reason the dining car doesn't understand the concept of checking on people to see if they need anything without having to be flagged down.
I wouldn't put SWA at the top of the customer service pile after the Kevin Smith incident last year.I have had multiple instances of rude Amtrak employees, and those who know me here know that I never instigate anything. I am about as low maintenance a passenger as there is. Those who say it does not happen, or that if it does it is the passenger's fault, either have a very high tolerance for abuse or have their heads in the sand.The problem I have, is that way too many times, people label an employee (Amtrak or otherwise) as being "rude", if they attempt a power-play and loose. Such a label is inappropriate and undeserved.I just can't understand why Amtrak continues to put up with rude personnel.
Last night my neighbor was over and told me about a bad experience she had. This was on top of having heard another comment from another acquaintence.
For example, your coffee is merely warm, and not hot, and you demand a free upgrade from coach to a bedroom sleeper because of it. The Amtrak employee who doesn't give in, is labeled as being "rude" (plus I few other things too) by the story teller.
The conductor is in charge of the train. Accept it. If the conductor tells you where to sit in coach, or to move your seat, and you flatly refuse, the conductor isn't being "rude", he/she is merely doing their job.
I don't recall one being rude to me either.I have been riding Amtrak since 1972 (when I was in college) and I do not recall an employee being rude to me.
To be clear, it is not a union thing or a generational thing. Southwest Airlines is a union company, has a relatively young workforce, and I have never had an Amtrak-type experience on SWA. I have never been barked at or insulted on SWA. I have been on Amtrak.
The problem is the Amtrak work culture. Amtrak has had the problem since they inherited the passenger rail workforce from the railroads (which had the same problem for many years prior to Amtrak). It has been passed down from generation to generation and seems to be incurable.
I've had to work with Amtrak employees who shouted at us or who talked down to us or made derisive remarks at our expense and in those cases I do consider it to be rude. However I do agree with you that in the case of many employees it appears to be more a matter of simple indifference than overt maliciousness. Nonetheless I do not enjoy having to jump through hoops in order to "bring out the best" in someone I'm already paying to take care of me. That's the whole point of money changing hands in the first place. This isn't a favor they're doing for me, it's a job they're being paid to do. A good paying job in a very tough market. But they don't seem to have any fear of losing it. Somewhere along the line these employees apparently got the message that how they treat the customer is not likely to get them in serious trouble.THIS. On my recent trip on four different trains, the dining car staff were far and away the least accommodating. Were they rude, perhaps not. But they were neither friendly, helpful, patient, nor attentive.Most of the time I can count on poor service in the dining car among other things. For some reason the dining car doesn't understand the concept of checking on people to see if they need anything without having to be flagged down.
Well, then who would you put at the top of the "customer service pile?"I wouldn't put SWA at the top of the customer service pile after the Kevin Smith incident last year.
Enter your email address to join: