The February Monthly Performance Report is out. Again these are monthly, not YTD figures.
The following four routes are between 95%-100% of February FY 2020 ridership:
Downeaster 98% (42,000) In line with previous months
- Silver Meteor 98% (20,800) Reclaiming a place
- California Zephyr 95% (31,000) Best percentage number since March 2020
- Southwest Chief 99% (17,400) Idem
The following ten are less
Acela Express 91% (240,600) In line with last month, and good considering equipment
- Keystone Service 80% (93,700) In line with the rest of the year, a significant improvement over last year
- Lincoln Service 87% (38,200) Chicago area corridors came back into line this month. Amazing what happens when you run the trains
- Hiawatha 78% (46,200)
- Wolverines 88% (29,200)
- IL Zephyr 77% (9,400)
- PacSurf 44% (91,600) Rockslides are again a problem.
- Capitol Corridor 57% (79,600) This corridor is a mess (again).
- Capitol Limited 86% (9,800) a stunning reversal
- Coast Starlight 91% (23,200) in line with the rest of the year
The system showed robust strength in February. Only fourteen trains did not best their February 2020 level, a record of the COVID era, but California still continues to sandbag nationwide ridership. The Surfliner is particularly troubled due to rockslides. The Cascades beat the 2020 number despite rockslides. Chicago area corridors improved with weather. The NER continues to surge (124% Feb 2020 ridership, the best percentage gain of the year). Acela held steady. The Southeast is still surging. The Acela, NER, Vermonter, Maple Leaf/Empire West, Downeaster, Springfield Service, Keystone Service, Empire South, Lincoln Service, Hiawatha, Wolverine, Illini/Saluki, Il Zephyr/Carl Sandburg, Heartland Flyer, Cascades, Capitol Corridor, San Joaquin, Adirondack, Blue Water, Roanoke Regionals, Newport News Regionals, Norfolk Regionals, Richmond Regionals, Missouri River Runner, Pere Marquette, Carolinian, Piedmont, and every long haul train save the Capitol Limited (which is really benefiting from the extra sleeper) and Palmetto (which is doing very well) all showed percentage gains over last month. Only the Pacific Surliner and Coast Starlight carried a fewer number of passengers in February 2024 than February 2023 in absolute terms. (I have no desire to compensate for the leap year.) Particular praise is due to the long haulers, which have shown remarkable recoveries despite “significant headwinds.” About half are reporting ridership more than 110% of February 2020.
Just as a program note, next month will compare March 2024 with March 2019, in keeping with the custom of tracking the twelve months prior to COVID. I think we can look forward to further expansion on the NER, and hopefully, some recovery in California.