Yes, the POINT bus gets into Klamath around 7:30 PM. The CS gets to Klamath at 10:00 PM.
The primary responsibility is with the state government. Amtrak will work with them, but ODOT is supposed to take the lead on it. Give them a call and ask if you can sit down with someone who works on this issue. (I recall that they have an intern working on Amtrak service.)My own opinion is that Amtrak should at least think about getting shuttle buses that directly serve areas like this.
That is some interesting history, and puts things in perspective. It is also interesting that 40 or 50 years ago, when the region was much less populated, and wasn't a tourist center, that it had more options than it has today.The primary responsibility is with the state government. Amtrak will work with them, but ODOT is supposed to take the lead on it. Give them a call and ask if you can sit down with someone who works on this issue. (I recall that they have an intern working on Amtrak service.)
In the case of Yamhill County, it was orphaned when Tri-Met took over in the 1970's. The law setting up transit districts did not allow for operation outside of their Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas, so the Portland<>Newberg<>McMinnville route which was a direct descendant of the Red Electric was cut back to Rex Hill and then Sherwood. This left them with Greyhound on the PDX<>SFO run and Hamman Stage Lines running SLM<>McMinnville. As these crumbled away, Yamhill County eventually took on starting a transit system from scratch. That makes a four-decade gap with feeble efforts. Right now they are struggling with the driver shortage.
This is Yachats, Oregon. This is in many ways the "last town" on the Northern Oregon Coast, before a 20 mile stretch of rocky, almost uninhabited coastline before Florence. This is also the last town in Lincoln County, Oregon, which parallels most of the Willamette Valley. I got here by taking the Albany->Newport bus, which is a cross-ticketed Amtrak route, and functions like one, and then by taking the south Lincoln County bus, which functions more as a social service bus, making frequent stops for locals who might not have a lot of mobility. It takes an hour to get from Newport to Yachats, and there are only four trips a day. The bus actually does coordinate with another bus that goes to Florence, but it is quite a number of trips.
The Oregon Coast is a really nice region to visit, and it is possible to visit it only on transit (incidentally, it would probably be possible, if not plausible, to get to this region coming from the south on the Coast Starlight, getting off in Eugene, going through Florence, and then rejoining the Amtrak Cascades in Albany...but not very possible), but it is also really isolated, and the discontinuation of long-distance transit service along the coast has made these communities more fragmented.
The time lost getting on or off of a limited access highway was one of the issues that led instead to the development of the Cascades. Modest improvements can provide a service as fast between major cities as a non-stop bus, while providing stops in smaller cities.I took a trip to Portland the other day (I made a video, which I will put in my thread for the Portland MAX), and I took an Amtrak Thruway bus to get there. The Amtrak Cascades goes up the East side of the valley, while the Thruway goes up I-5. It stops in Woodburn and at the Tualatin Park and Ride.
The Tualatin Park and Ride is about 15 miles south of downtown Portland, so an outer-ring exurb. The Park and Ride is right off the freeway, so it seems easy enough to exit, pickup/dropoff, and then get right back on the freeway. But this is interchange land, so there was a lot of waiting for left turn signals just for that simple trip. I actually timed it: between exiting and entering, it was 10 minutes. And I think it was one or two passengers.
I think this can be a problem with a lot of train routes, that "just one stop" seems like an easy enough thing to add, but then when you add more and more, it can be "death by a thousand cuts", making the entire experience less viable for everyone. It also shows how much better trains are: the process of getting a bus into a transit center is much harder than stopping a train at a major station.
Yesterday, I took an Amtrak Cascades bus to Woodburn, Oregon. This is about the least epic trip imaginable, since it is just two bus hops up the I-5 corridor, from Albany, to Salem, to Woodburn (a small town/exurb about 15 miles between the Salem and Portland areas). I was the only person getting off/getting on at the transit center (even though the Amtrak Cascades bus was packed).
Woodburn actually has two transit centers: one along the freeway, and one in downtown. This has to do with the history of the city, where it was originally built around railroad tracks in the 19th century, and then different parts of the town developed when Highway 99E and Interstate 5 were built later. So I don't know what the intended clientele for the I-5 stop was, or whether it was made at the request of a state legislator.
On the way back, I rode a regional transit bus, between Woodburn and Salem, and then used another Amtrak Cascades bus between Salem and Albany. My bus was an hour late, and I spent some time worrying whether I could make my final bus connection back between Albany and Corvallis.
As is often the case with these trips, even though I could do it as a hobbyist, the entire thing was held together by chewing gum and bailing wire, and it would be hard to use these transit methods for someone who had to get somewhere in a hurry.
The I-5 stop is closer to Woodburn Senior Estates and originally bore that name. Greyhound started it in response to complaints in the days when many seniors did not drive. Local Greyhound trips on US99E were a long way from the I-5 stop.
Eventually, Greyhound discontinued the US99E locals and ran some I-5 trips via Tigard and Woodburn. They showed an agent at "Woodburn" -- but I don't know if it was by the freeway or downtown or at US99E.
Poor Woodburn! Before WWI the Oregon Electric Railway bypassed it even further west than the much later alignment of I-5. The OE built a branch from West Woodburn to Woodburn and ran a one-car train into downtown. That disappeared pretty early. My dad can remember riding the OE, but not that little feeder line.
For many years Tigard was served by three Greyhound trips between Portland and Coos Bay. Two of those went on to San Francisco via US101. Tigard had an agent and had built up package express business after Tualatin Valley Stages was replaced by Tri-Met. When Greyhound began to fade away, they wanted to retain that package business, so deviated a couple of trips into Tigard off of I-5.I remember when Greyhound stopped in Tigard---which seemed silly to me, because Trimet took trips between downtown Portland and Tigard every 15 minutes. I can understand how it would be helpful for one or two people, but it didn't make sense to have such a detour. But a lot of that comes from Portland's suburbs and exurbs having dual transit service, one local, one intermediate distance.
I actually just checked, and Gervais is apparently bigger than I thought it would be: it is 3000 people, and I thought it was closer to 500 people. That might not seem like a lot, but Gervais is more populated than 8 of Oregon's 36 county seats.One other note: Gervais in Oregon is pronounced as if it is spelled 'Jervis'. Mr. Gervais was a pioneer settler who probably knew the French pronunciation as 'Jervae'. Some readers here will recognize that as a kind of cheese. Others who ride Train 14 will recognize it as the siding where their on-time train will ease to a spot in the middle of a field. Later, it will leave, now behind schedule.
My ex is French-Canadian and when we lived in Salem there were a lot of French names that were given local pronunciations that gave her the "fingernails on a blackboard" feeling.
Gervais is pretty obscure. Being only three rail miles from Woodburn it was over-shadowed by the stop there and by the stop at Chemawa south of it. Both those were served by the Klamath. Gervais lost rail passenger service in August 1955 when the SP Rogue River was discontinued.
That one trip had a schedule change effective October 25th.
They are disorganized in their own Greyhound way and sometimes make changes without even circulating a schedule bulletin, one of the negatives of deregulation.
Here's their internal site with schedules, archived schedules, bulletins:
http://extranet.greyhound.com/Revsup/
Some browsers warn that this is a dangerous site, probably because they've never upgraded it to https.
More GL strangeness:
EFFECTIVE: November 2, 2022
TABLE 600
Schedules 1446, 1436, 1449, 1431 – Salem, OR has been discontinued. Will stop at Woodburn, OR. The only time changes will be at Woodburn, OR.
I always wondered if it would have been possible for the Coast Starlight to follow Highway 5, south from Eugene, to Medford. Then take a route along either the present day highway 140 or 62 from Medford to Klamath Falls. It would make possible stops at Roseburg, Grants Pass, as well as Medford. Is the reason due to a lack of track or the steep grades that the train would probably encounter?That is certainly a curious decision, and it shows just how fragmented travel around the Willamette Valley, even around the larger cities, is.
I guess people in Salem can still take the Cascades or the POINT bus to Eugene, and then transfer on to a bus going to Medford? That seems like a lot of epicycles. And I guess that people going to Redding or Sacramento can also do that on the Coast Starlight. But using that logic, they can all of the stops on I-5, and just do a Eugene->Redding trip.
I forgot where we talked about this, but I do remember a thread talking about it. Counterintuitively, crossing the Cascades twice is actually easier than all the little ups and downs along I-5.I always wondered if it would have been possible for the Coast Starlight to follow Highway 5, south from Eugene, to Medford. Then take a route along either the present day highway 140 or 62 from Medford to Klamath Falls. It would make possible stops at Roseburg, Grants Pass, as well as Medford. Is the reason due to a lack of track or the steep grades that the train would probably encounter?
Thanks for posting the thread. Interesting. However, on the down side, it would eliminate my favorite segment of the Coast Starlight route, from Klamath through the lower Cascades to Eugene. Traveling in the early morning northbound and around sunset southbound.I forgot where we talked about this, but I do remember a thread talking about it. Counterintuitively, crossing the Cascades twice is actually easier than all the little ups and downs along I-5.
You can also see that by road---if you check Google maps, it is actually shorter, from the junction around Redding, to take Highway 97 and then cross the Cascades, than to go along I-5.
Yep, it looks like it was me who posted about it:
https://www.amtraktrains.com/threads/why-does-the-coast-starlight-go-east-of-the-cascades.76937/
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