If
you had a contract with someone and paid them in advance to do a job, only to
find they never provided that service, you should get your money back,
right? Otherwise, by keeping the money
and not delivering on the bargain, that person would be committing fraud.
Well,
that’s exactly what Metro-North does to weekly and monthly ticket holders when
it sells those tickets but cancels train service. The railroad refuses to give those riders a
refund. That’s wrong.
For
years the CT Rail Commuter Council has asked Metro-North (and its boss, CDOT)
to rethink that policy, but they have refused.
We even approached Attorney General Jepsen, making a consumerist’s
argument, but he wasn’t interested in helping.
Clearly,
it’s not Metro-North’s fault when tropical storm Sandy or winter storm Nemo
leave the tracks buried. In some cases
they can attempt substitute bus service, in which case refunds shouldn’t be
required.
When
the Commuter Council last year pushed for a “Passenger Bill of Rights” we
asked for refunds when service was out, but the railroad said “impossible”, though they did allow refunds on one-way
tickets, which is not the problem at all.
One-way
tickets are good for sixty days. If the
train’s not running, you can use them next week. But weekly tickets are only good
for seven specific days, Saturday through Friday. If the train doesn’t run, you’re out of luck.
Look
at the Waterbury line during storm Nemo.
Train service was halted Friday night and wasn’t resumed until the
following Wednesday… four days. A
commuter who’d bought a weekly ticket from Waterbury to GCT paid $125 but lost
4/7ths of the ticket’s value and was denied a refund.
This
year we’re pleading our case for fairness to the state legislature with the
help of State Representative Gail
Lavielle of Wilton. At our behest she
introduced HB
5127 which would require Metro-North and CDOT to offer credit for unusable
tickets when service is cancelled for more than 48 hours. That credit could be made by extending the
validity of a ticket, offering replacement tickets or maybe even a refund.
Fifteen
commuters submitted
testimony in support of the bill, making a very simple argument: if the railroad can’t provide train service
(or buses), ticket holders should be made whole.
When
the airlines cancelled thousands of flights due to the blizzard, they honored
passengers’ tickets on later flights.
When Metro-North cancelled trains, they just kept the money.
In
his testimony on the bill, the Commissioner of the Connecticut Dept of
Transportation said the refund plan wasn’t feasible. And weekly / monthly commuters already get a discount,
so why are they complaining?
And
Metro-North, in one of its more arrogant moves of late, thumbed its nose at the
Connecticut Legislature saying that as a NY State agency it was immune from
Connecticut law. That, in New York, is what
they call chutzpah.
It’snot too late for commuters to support this bill by calling their elected officials. Because while Metro-North
deserves credit for much improved, usually on-time service, it should not be
allowed to pick our pockets by selling us tickets when it cannot run trains,
for whatever reason, but then keeps our money.
That’s just unfair.