All any of them know is what ARROW tells them. If it isn't in ARROW, it doesn't exist. They don't have access to any more information than you do, looking at ARROW as filtered through the website.We called Guest Rewards this morning and were told that Pacific Surfliner Train 777 will have direct service from San Diego to Los Angeles during the last week of June on the date we plan to travel. When I mentioned the temporary Pacific Surfliner Timetable that went into effect last Monday, and which shows train 777 as departing San Diego as 1777 at 11:03 a.m. instead of the 12:01 p.m. shown in our ticket, this came as a surprise to the woman I talked with! She checked with her “support desk” and was told that direct service would be available on the date we plan to travel. All she could advise us to do was to keep checking our e-mails to see if Amtrak has contacted us with an update (and, hopefully, a new e-ticket.) She also said it would be OK for us to call back again (not that it would do much good if the system hasn’t been updated.) So, there you have it. Less than two weeks before we are to depart, there is still a major disconnect within the system that won’t allow us to update our tickets. (We’re assuming that all of the other people who plan to travel on the Pacific Surfliner on the same date we do are in the same position.) If and when we learn anything new, we’ll post an update.
They also cannot change a ticket to something that isn't in ARROW. There is no physical means to ticket you on a train/bus combination that is not in it.
However, ARROW does not always represent ground truth and that is likely the case here. The stuff on the Pacific Surfliner website is posted by the agency closest to the action and almost certainly the more accurate. LOSSAN, the Joint Powers Board that funds the service and operates the website, has reduced service and closed agencies, a move that would seem to reflect it expects a long closure. Probably, since they haven't given Amtrak a restart date which they themselves do not have (and they control restart, not Amtrak), Amtrak just put a date in ARROW a few weeks out and called it good. That's what you're seeing. They'll put in another, farther out phantom date as we get a bit closer, my guess is they'll probably do that sometime early next week.
As I said before, your best and quickest method of finding out is to keep checking online. Preferably through the app, which I know from experience reflects changes quickly. Not saying the website doesn't, only that I know the app does. An email will not be as timely, it'll likely be a day or two after the ARROW update if history is a guide, and there remains a possibility that they might not send one at all.
I would say the chances of you having the earlier departure that includes a bus bridge is upwards of 85%.
The only scenario that puts your trip in danger is if they do not revise your itinerary and cancel the SAN-LAX segment for some reason. That'll appear in the app as not having a QR code (it also seems to be the scenario when not sending an email is most likely). If the QR code disappears, call immediately.
Finally, as long as they revise your itinerary once ARROW is updated, your revised itinerary will be the one attached to your e-ticket. It really doesn't matter if the old itinerary shown on the PDF is remains accurate or not, that PDF will still validly scan. Just be at the station for the earlier departure.
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