norfolkwesternhenry
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Commuters are not the only ones feeling stranded at Penn Station — several businesses inside the transit hub said their bottom lines are suffering because customers skip shopping stops when their trains are delayed.
Penn Wine & Spirits sees a roughly 40 percent dip in business when commuters contend with train delays, as Long Island Rail Road passengers did Tuesday, according to the store’s sales consultant José Vilchis.
He said interruptions to rail service are significant enough to cut into the shop’s clientele about once or twice a week.
“People just stand out there for hours and hours,” Vilchis said. “A lot of people are more worried about where they want to head to instead of buying a bottle of wine.”
Nearby, Carlton Cards loses 20 to 30 percent of its business when trains run behind schedule, according to its manager, Vijay Sampat.
The sales slump grows most severe when the waiting area near the LIRR grows crowded and officials have to seal off the area, Sampat said.
“Nobody could come in,” he said. “We were dead here: no customers at all.”
I would think that if Amtrak shut down the NEC they would try to get as much work done while boycotting. I think with enough money and men, every bit of track on the whole NEC could be replaced in 24 hours. I think that Amtrak could perform some serious work, especially with high traffic areas that often can't be maintained because there is a train going through every three minutes.I can imagine that number being somewhat reasonable if you count lost productivity for time spent in traffic. Goods will be delayed as people turn to the roads and planes.
Even delays have an impact on certain groups. While bars and restaurants may thrive during delays, most other stores take a bath. Please allow a brief "fair use" quote from Penn Station delays leave shops struggling
Commuters are not the only ones feeling stranded at Penn Station — several businesses inside the transit hub said their bottom lines are suffering because customers skip shopping stops when their trains are delayed.
Penn Wine & Spirits sees a roughly 40 percent dip in business when commuters contend with train delays, as Long Island Rail Road passengers did Tuesday, according to the store’s sales consultant José Vilchis.
He said interruptions to rail service are significant enough to cut into the shop’s clientele about once or twice a week.
“People just stand out there for hours and hours,” Vilchis said. “A lot of people are more worried about where they want to head to instead of buying a bottle of wine.”
Nearby, Carlton Cards loses 20 to 30 percent of its business when trains run behind schedule, according to its manager, Vijay Sampat.
The sales slump grows most severe when the waiting area near the LIRR grows crowded and officials have to seal off the area, Sampat said.
“Nobody could come in,” he said. “We were dead here: no customers at all.”
That is just delays. Imagine the trickle down effect if the corridor shut down completely. That's a huge loss of purchasing power from the impacted workers from Amtrak, NJT, MARC, VRE, SEPTA, Metro-North, CDOT, MBTA, NS, Conrail, CSX and the suppliers of equipment/parts to those railroads. As examples, what happens to the people that make the railroad ties and signals? The parts for the catenary? How would a loss of the NEC impact the various electrical suppliers that feed the NEC? How many jobs are created because of them?
This is more than the commuters. This is everything from the dispatchers, to the IT personnel that support their systems, to people that mop the floors in the now closed stations, to the FRA inspectors that patrol Amtrak facilities.
Except for a multi billion dollar project going off exactly as smoothly as planned. This is just fantasy, there's a better chance of someone inventing the transporter from Star Trek and making every train on earth obsolete.Anything is possible.
Don't under estimate the possibility of you becoming President! There's plenty of examples of this "Impossible Dream" coming True in the Land of the Free and the Home of the Terminally Dumb!I said possible. Not likely. The chance that everything goes smoothly and works out just as planned IS as likely as someone inventing the transporter from Star Trek, or me becoming president.
This does make me wonder, though. Even accounting for things like concrete doing its thing, there's still a hypothetical cadence you could meet.Even money and manpower have to give way to physics. There are certain things (like installing concrete anchored catenary poles ) that would take time. You still would have to allow the concrete to set before you can attach the poles to the base. Then,. you have to install the poles and string the wires. That is a time consuming process.
And you've already been told it is impossible, the sequence of work is longer than 24 hours.I said possible. Not likely. The chance that everything goes smoothly and works out just as planned IS as likely as someone inventing the transporter from Star Trek, or me becoming president.
Yep. Ten miles. By a literal army of construction workers who had been at that task for five years with a management pushing them to maximum speed. With the roadbed graded in advance, supplies staged, and extra horses and workers available for all of the critical jobs. Ten miles.Speaking of "impossible"....there was this.... http://cprr.org/Museum/Southern_Pacific_Bulletin/Ten_Mile_Day.html
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