Forget about flex dining and whether Amtrak will replace the Superliners with Bilevels or not, this is I think a more pressing problem for Amtrak riders:
I saw this is a Facebook discussion. Guy gets on the Acela in Boston, but the conductor doesn't come by to scan the tickets until well after Providence. Meanwhile someone gets on in Providence and claims he's sitting in the assigned seat for the first guy. The guy who gets on in Boston checks his ticket on the app and finds it's gone. He manages to pull up the barcode from an email when the conductor comes by, and things get sorted out, but apparently, he was listed as a "no-show," his reservation got cancelled, and the other person was able to buy the seat. I have wondered about this, because I have been on a lot of NEC trains where the conductors don't come by and scan tickets in a timely manner. I've boarded in Washington and have needed to search out the conductor on the platform in Baltimore as I'm getting off just to ensure that my ticket gets scanned. Other times, my ticket gets scanned without my knowing about it. If they're going to have all-reserved seating with a no-show cancellation "feature," they should at least find some way to ensure that people who board a train actually get their tickets scanned in a timely matter.
Fortunately in this case, the conductor was being reasonable, but I could imagine some conductors ejecting the poor person off the train for not having a reservation.
I saw this is a Facebook discussion. Guy gets on the Acela in Boston, but the conductor doesn't come by to scan the tickets until well after Providence. Meanwhile someone gets on in Providence and claims he's sitting in the assigned seat for the first guy. The guy who gets on in Boston checks his ticket on the app and finds it's gone. He manages to pull up the barcode from an email when the conductor comes by, and things get sorted out, but apparently, he was listed as a "no-show," his reservation got cancelled, and the other person was able to buy the seat. I have wondered about this, because I have been on a lot of NEC trains where the conductors don't come by and scan tickets in a timely manner. I've boarded in Washington and have needed to search out the conductor on the platform in Baltimore as I'm getting off just to ensure that my ticket gets scanned. Other times, my ticket gets scanned without my knowing about it. If they're going to have all-reserved seating with a no-show cancellation "feature," they should at least find some way to ensure that people who board a train actually get their tickets scanned in a timely matter.
Fortunately in this case, the conductor was being reasonable, but I could imagine some conductors ejecting the poor person off the train for not having a reservation.