"Another landslide in San Clemente stops trains just days after resuming service"
https://www.foxla.com/news/second-landslide-in-san-clemente-halts-rail-service
https://www.foxla.com/news/second-landslide-in-san-clemente-halts-rail-service
I looked online and through the app and it looks like all services south of San Juan Capistrano is canceled until further notice.I had a reservation from LA to San Diego next Monday. Just got a call from Amtrak saying all Surfliner as are canceled, at least for the next two we
two weeks. No alternate transportation so I changed my San Diego reservation for Ventura for my two days in SoCal. Arriving and departing on the Texas/Sunset from Chicago. Couldn’t pass up a 40% points sale last fall when I booked.
I looked online and through the app and it looks like all services south of San Juan Capistrano is canceled until further notice.
Apparently this schedule is running up until the 11th. On Twitter pacific surfliner stated that they are looking at several options in service after the 11th. This is why if you try to buy a ticket after the 11th to San Diego it shows all services are canceled.
Do you think, if the progress of fixing slopes along the track closer take a long time, they would consider canceling service in all? I'm really worried because I depend on this service to see familyService plans have been announced for after June 12:
http://pac.surf/trackadvisories
This is reduced from the current/previous bus bridge schedule - only 3 trips in each direction between LA and San Diego. Also, there is no connection with the Coast Starlight in either direction at LAX, and no evening departures with a bus bridge from either LA or San Diego. Also, no cafe or Business Class from SAN-OSD, no baggage service, and ticket offices at SOL/SNA/ANA are closed.
This seems particularly brutal - essentially kills any San Diego-LA day trips as well as severing the Starlight connection (there may be some alternative involving the San Joaquins). Seems like the cost of running bus bridges is getting to be too much…
Short term " Fixes" are just Bandaids, I'd suspect you might be going up 101 via Bus and Car for awhile.Do you think, if the progress of fixing slopes along the track closer take a long time, they would consider canceling service in all? I'm really worried because I depend on this service to see family
yep your ticket will get updatedWe are now less than three weeks out from when we will depart for Ohio. The first leg of our trip is from San Diego to Los Angeles on the Pacific Surfliner, and we already have our tickets in hand.
According to the revised Pacific Surfliner schedule posted on the PSL Travel Advisories page, and which goes into effect on Monday, June 12th, our 777 train is operating with a bus bridge between Oceanside and Irvine.
It is our understanding that, if the bus bridge is still in effect on the date we plan to travel, Amtrak will e-mail us a new “bus bridge” ticket to replace our “train only” ticket.
they worked M-F 7AM-7PM last time, there is 0 rush by the city, county or OCTA to get this fixed soon they all don't careIt is ambiguous as to when the engineering firms are running the test bores. Just 8 - 5 week days? Does seem no real incentive to get results as soon as possible.
24th was the estimated date we got last week, City running the show does not say anything until its done.Do you think, if the progress of fixing slopes along the track closer take a long time, they would consider canceling service in all? I'm really worried because I depend on this service to see family
Basically back to where the line was on A-day in 1971!This is reduced from the current/previous bus bridge schedule - only 3 trips in each direction between LA and San Diego.
This has not been my experience. If you already have a ticket for a train that's been converted to a bus bridge, you must call to get your ticket changed. It is not automatic. The only thing you can do online is cancel. It takes manual intervention to issue the new ticket and then (I think) a supervisor override to to do it without a fare increase.It is our understanding that, if the bus bridge is still in effect on the date we plan to travel, Amtrak will e-mail us a new “bus bridge” ticket to replace our “train only” ticket.
caltrans doesn't really have flex money they could use to run more service without some sort of emergency declarationPeople are going to be furious if they were intending to come to SAN for Comic-Con if that schedule holds.
With that new schedule I'm going to have to look at Flixbus to get to Los Angeles if I need to. No evening departures either way is just brutal; the 7pm out of San Diego has been consistently packed. Surprised CalTrans hasn't forked over the money to continue service. Maybe I need to put in a letter to my state representatives....
A relevant scenario might be how they handled the Cascades service to Vancouver in the system during COVID. The resumption date was indeterminate. Yet the train was in the system for resumption after various placekeeper dates. I seem to recall the phantom dates were pushed back three times. Only after well over a year of make believe dates was the train dropped from the system entirely. That was actually something of a harbinger of its return. When it finally reappeared it was when they had a firm date for resumption and it only showed up about a month before it started back up.The Amtrak website shows direct train service between San Diego and Los Angeles as being available the last week in June. The Pacific Surfliner Travel Advisories page has no date when direct service will be reinstated. The fact that Amtrak is selling direct train service tickets needs to be taken with a grain of salt since, last year, they sold sleeping car accommodations for sleeping cars they didn’t have available. With a little over a week to go before we are to depart, we are monitoring this situation very closely and will submit updates as soon as we learn anything.
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