So
often this column is a screed of complaints about Metro-North. This time, the good news, because I really
think in the last year we have turned the corner in everyone’s goals and hopes
for making Metro-North service better.
MORE SEATS: The
latest monthly reports reviewed by the CT
Rail Commuter Council show that 99% of all trains have enough cars. That’s a major improvement compared to a few
years ago when “consist compliance” was in the 85% range (i.e. 15% of all
trains didn’t have enough cars for the passenger load they usually carried). Why the improvement? The new M8 cars.
NEW CARS: The
new M8 cars continue to arrive at the rate of about ten new cars a month, an
aggressive delivery schedule few thought Kawasaki could ever achieve. On average, each car is going 139,000 miles before
it has a problem. That’s an MDBF (mean
distance between failure) twice as good as the M4 and M6 cars. So far 128 new M8’s are in service, meaning
you have about a 30% chance of riding in a new-car train at rush hour and a 50%
chance on weekends.
RIDERSHIP: Despite
the economy, ridership continues to climb about 5% annually. The biggest increase? Weekend day trippers.
ON TIME: This
has always been a justifiable point of pride with Metro-North, as 97% of the
trains arrive “on time” (within 6 minutes of the timetable).
NEW SIGNALS: The
signalization system being installed on the Danbury branch continues apace with
one of the first sections to be activated within a month. When it’s completed this will mean more
trains, in both directions, on this one-track railroad.
NEW SERVICE: With
the new October timetable there will be added service on
weekends… eight more trains on Saturdays and 20 more trains on Sundays.
MORE STOPS: Thanks
to years of persuasion by The CT Rail Commuter Council to the CDOT, that new timetable will
also eliminate the old “skip stops” at less used stations like Rowayton, East
Norwalk, Greens Farms and Southport.
Now, instead of trains every two hours, those stations… in fact, all stations…
will have train service every hour. The brief
added time for these stops will hardly be noticed but will offer vastly
improved service to hundreds of daily riders.
QUIET CARS: It
took about a
decade of lobbying by the CT Rail Commuter Council, but since Metro-North
initiated the “Quiet CALMute” cars a few months ago, they’ve been a big
success.
BETTER
COMMUNICATIONS: By cell phone, e-mail, PA system and
‘seat-drops’, the railroad is doing a much better job of communicating with its
passengers on the rare occasions when things go wrong.
THE PASSENGER PLEDGE: Though
not quite the “Passenger
Bill of Rights” that the CT Rail Commuter Council had crafted, this
first-time-ever written pledge to passengers about the kind of service they
deserve and can expect was a major step by Metro-North.
But
wait, there’s more! There are further
enhancements being considered by the railroad:
WI-FI: Testing
continues, but we could be seeing on-train Wi-Fi accessibility in a matter of
months, not years.
SMARTPHONE TICKETS: Yes,
you’ll soon be able to buy a ticket on your phone, show it to the conductor,
and never have to handle paper.
So,
for those of you who think that all I do is moan and complain, re-read
everything above and let’s both give credit where it is due. Good job Metro-North!