Rail Freak
Engineer
Does any one have a rundown on what Amtrak spent a couple of years ago on the program to have chefs come up with different items to offer in the Diners? From a customer's view, I wasnt too impressed!
Let's hope the statisticians are smarter than that. Any time a change A is made and then B goes up or down, you really can't conclude much from that information alone.it'll just be a ridership and revenue killer. They might not notice given the overall upward trend in ridership and revenue, though.
The SWC dining car appeared to have a fair turnout of coach passengers throughout the route. Passengers occupying the sleeping cars were close to capacity. The LSL dining car crowd for the lunch meal was sparse. The sleeping car capacity was extremely low due to a mass exodus of a foreign tour group departing in Buffalo.Just wondering though - were the diners busy when they ran out of the menu items, or does it appear that they inadequately stocked the larder for the trip? The good side of a good/bad situation like that would be that the shortages were caused by an unexpectedly large turnout from the coaches.I just completed a cross country trip on the Southwest Chief (SWC) and Lake Shore Limited (LSL). The trip started on May 4 and the "old" menu was furnished. The selections, with the exception of the panko crusted chicken, were offered. On May 6 on the LSL, the "old" menu was still furnished but the selections offered were from the "new" menu.
One pattern I did notice was the diner running out of selections. For example on the SWC for the second lunch the selections were limited to Caesar Salad and Angus Burger. Patrons were given the option of Macaroni & Cheese and Hot Dog from the Children's Menu. Pepsi and Bottled Water were not available. On the LSL, the chicken panko special was sold out as well as the ice cream selection.
This is my first Amtrak long distance trip in nearly two years. I hope this dining car experience is not the norm but I am afraid it is!
The SWC dining car appeared to have a fair turnout of coach passengers throughout the route. That is very encouraging!
Passengers occupying the sleeping cars were close to capacity. That too is good news.
The LSL dining car crowd for the lunch meal was sparse. The sleeping car capacity was extremely low due to a mass exodus of a foreign tour group departing in Buffalo.
I should add that I was in the second seating on the LSL and third seating on the SWC. It certainly appeared to me that Amtrak's food provision policy is to stock less in lieu of stocking more. Well, that is discouraging. Hopefully it was a fluke of the onboard staff not ordering enough - vice a new corporate policy.
There was a couple on the LSL that also experienced the same food shortage on their trip on the Texas Eagle from Tuscon. Sure hope our experience in three weeks ( round trip CBR-TUS) is much different!
https://www.restaurantmealprices.com/. Sorry I didn't get a link but if you google "restaurant meal prices" you should find it. Most all the casual dining places across the US are listed.
A handy inflation calculator can be found here: http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.plIt is interesting to note that inflation from 1950 to today is about 10x.
I feel confident the Amtrak whiners would claim the 1950-era chicken was simply 10X better than that served today. Some folks would complain even if you tried hanging them with a new rope!Its also interesting to look at the Southern Crescent lunch menu from 1950 which listed a chicken salad on toast at $2.10, which would be $21.00 in todays money. I wonder what the Amtrak whiners would have to say about that price!!
Well, I think there are three things to be said here. One is that the food then probably was better in at least some sense (better prep and presentation; it would have all been freshly cooked instead of being a little more than microwaved, as is the case with any cafe offerings now). The second is that those costs would have been aggravated by not having as much pre-packaged stuff to work with as well as eating a bit more spoilage than Amtrak is willing/able to. The third, and probably most important in many senses, is that the price of a coach ticket was such that there were a lot of trips simply not happening then which happen now (if you compare Amtrak's fares from now with c. 1970 fares, from what I can tell the coach fare from the 1970s is on par with the highest buckets on most routes now).I feel confident the Amtrak whiners would claim the 1950-era chicken was simply 10X better than that served today. Some folks would complain even if you tried hanging them with a new rope!Its also interesting to look at the Southern Crescent lunch menu from 1950 which listed a chicken salad on toast at $2.10, which would be $21.00 in todays money. I wonder what the Amtrak whiners would have to say about that price!!
And how much has the cost of living gone up in 60 years?And the minimum wage and the average workers salary has gone up by more than multiple of 10 in these 60+ years!
More or less the same up to 2008!And how much has the cost of living gone up in 60 years?And the minimum wage and the average workers salary has gone up by more than multiple of 10 in these 60+ years!
True, though IIRC this was also in an era when both Pepsi and Coke were suppressing their prices...led by Coke, who was so stuck on their vending machine situation (the "just a nickel" bit) that they actually lobbied the Eisenhower administration to consider a 7.5 cent coin so they could raise prices. By 1950, the price of a Coke had been stable for about 60 years...so the soda front is probably not the best comparison. With that said, I'd love to go back and run numbers on some Santa Fe menus from the 50s and from the 60s.FYI, a 6oz coke cost $.15 in a railroad diner in 1960, that's equivalent to $1.20 today. A 12oz pepsi costs $2.25 on Amtrak. I don't see much difference.
Of course. This does not include the *ticket* revenues brought in by dining car service, which were always considered to cover the costs. The dining cars were a marketing tool, a loss leader which brought in high-priced ticket revenue. And there was a lot of that ticket revenue back then, enough to make the dining cars a clear success. And they still should be such a tool....So, at a period of time when virtually all LD trains had been equipped with modern rolling stock, when train travel was still very widely used and staff for dining cars were not paid terribly well all railroads lost money on it. All of that despite the leverage that an operation like the Santa Fe, NYC or PRR could bring based upon the scale of their food services.
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