There’s a feud brewing between Metro-North and Amtrak and it’s getting nasty. Worse yet, this tiff is already hurting our train service in Connecticut.
Since 2021 construction has
been underway to bring some Metro-North trains into New York’s Penn
Station, rather than Grand Central. At New Rochelle, select Metro-North trains
headed to NYC will “hang a left” and go over the Hell’s Gate Bridge, just as
Amtrak trains now do, with new station stops in the Bronx.
This is significant not only
for getting Connecticut and Westchester commuters to Manhattan’s west side, but
more importantly, to harvest the labor of Bronx residents for jobs in
Connecticut via a speedy, reverse-commuter train ride.
But now Amtrak is dragging its
feet, slowing
construction.
Why? Because Amtrak is angry with
Metro-North for not allowing high-speed tests of its new Acela NextGen train while
running in Connecticut. And that’s because
Metro-North says the new Acelas have been losing
their pantographs on Metro-North’s overhead power lines. Not once, but five
times.
Amtrak's NextGen Acela
Amtrak sued MTA (parent of
Metro-North) to regain access to our tracks to test their flagship train and they
lost. Now they’re appealing their claim.
Perhaps in revenge, Amtrak is slowing MTA
contractors’ access to the new Bronx stations, pushing back their opening from
2027 to 2030. That means lost employment
(and taxes) in Connecticut.
Meanwhile, Amtrak has also
throttled the already diminished Shore Line East rail service as CDOT has
decided to replace the electric M8 cars running there since 2022. Why?
Because CDOT says that Amtrak (which owns those tracks and wires east of
New Haven) is charging too much money to use its overhead catenary electrical
lines to power those electric trains.
So, forget about speed and clean-running electric trains and it’s back
to the slower diesels. Still, CDOT claims
this will save them $8.8 million. I
guess that’s the price of clean air?
On top of all this CDOT’s next
fare hike (5%) kicks in July 1st on all Connecticut commuter
lines. Fares are going up because CDOT
says its costs are increasing and the only alternative would be service
cuts. That’s not altogether true.
The better alternative
would have been for the legislature to adequately fund CDOT operations in the
first place by giving them the $11 million needed (and requested by CDOT) this
year to run trains at current fares and schedules. But lawmakers didn’t, so we really have those
pols to thank for the
fare hike.
Remember that in November.
And forget about the
highly-touted revival of trains on the Waterbury branch where ridership is up almost
150% in recent years. Commuters there
are looking not only at that same fare hike but
bus substitutes for ten months due to construction. But when the work is
done CDOT will open four
station upgrades on the branch, so that’s something.
So here's the scorecard:
Amtrak and Metro-North are feuding, Shore Line East is going backwards,
Waterbury riders will be riding buses, fares are going up, and your legislators
didn't lift a finger to stop any of it. Connecticut
commuters aren't just being taken for a ride… they're being taken for granted.



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