Anderson wasn't hired so "hundreds of people" could tell him "how to run a railroad".
Actually, he was. You see, he works for the public and their representatives. That amounts to hundreds of people (namely, Congress) telling him how to run a railroad....which is why most railroaders shy away from the position.
He was hired to tell hundreds of railroaders how to run a passenger transportation business. Emphasis on "business". He seems to be doing a good job of it.
I'm always interested in hearing why people think he is doing a good job or a bad job. What have you seen that makes you say he is doing a good job? Is ridership up or down? Is revenue up or down? Is safety up or down? Has any equipment been released for service? Any new routes added? How are costs doing? Has OTP improved? How is our Congressional credibility?
While I know the answers to most of these questions, I STILL think it is entirely too early to say if Mr. Anderson is doing a good or bad job.
If congress had given more money for "creating more corridors" or "restructuring LD trains" this would make sense. But they gave money specificaly to "long distance" trains.
No, congress appropriated money for the "National Network". Redirecting resources and capacity to the parts of the network where traffic is highest, where the most people will be served, and the most revenue is generated for the least expense, is what his job is about. He seems to be going about it by focusing on fundamentals that are common to any passenger transportation business: safety, reliability and demand driven asset management.
However, Congress also enacted PRIIA and updated it in 2015. Nothing in PRIIA indicates that Amtrak one part of the network should be sacrificed for another part. That is why it deals with future high speed service, existing high speed service/NEC, state supported services as well as LD service. Indeed, it even offers to fund LD service on behalf of an outside operator. ( Shouldn't we have heard something about that by now?)
If what you described "is what the job is all about," very few people outside the Chicago hub, state supported/commuter service and the NEC would have operations....and the NEC is questionable since the states along the route would need to finance the route themselves...and with its 40+BILLION dollar backlog in repairs, it is the most expensive piece of territory.
Good luck finding the funding.