First of
all, despite what some commuters may recently be thinking, the folks who manage
and operate Metro-North are not stupid.
Inconsiderate and uncommunicative sometimes, but not stupid.
Metro-North
managers and employees are railroad professionals, justifiably proud of the 96+% on-time performance they achieve on one of the busiest
commuter line in the US. They want to
run a world class railroad. But they can
only achieve as much as the states of NY and Connecticut fund them to do.
In recent
years our legislature gave MNRR $1+ billion to buy badly needed new railcars, a very visible manifestation to
commuters that the state was investing in the railroad. But sufficient funding for inspection and
repair of the tracks, the catenary and our 100- year-old bridges is still
lacking.
New cars are
sexy. Giving them safe tracks to run on
and wires to power them, not so sexy.
What
happened when Con Ed’s back-up feeder cable failed at 5:30 am on Wednesday Sept
25th was not an act of God, but human error.
The two agencies knew the main power cable was going to be out of
service and calculated, very wrongly, that the single back-up cable would be
sufficient.
This raises
a number of questions: Did Con Ed
monitor that back-up cable for signs it might fail? Was it wise to save $1 million by not
constructing a back-up for the back-up?
Does Homeland Security know or care that the entire Metro-North and
Amtrak Northeast Corridor were depending on this calculation? How many other
power sub-stations are in similar danger?
The effects
of this outage are many: the
inconvenience to 125,000 daily riders, the economic impact on those commuters’businesses, and longer-term, the economic recovery of our state and nation.
Governor
Malloy quickly called this outage just the latest black eye for our state in
his efforts to attract businesses to set up shop in the Nutmeg State. Even if they can tolerate our high taxes, do relocating
CEO’s really want to rely on Metro-North to get their employees to and from
work or fight the perpetual rush-hour crawl on I-95?
I fear some
individual commuters may be reaching the tipping point. There are plenty of other New York suburbs
with good schools and more reliable transportation. If fed-up Connecticut commuters decide to
vote with their feet and move to Westchester or Long Island, they will take
their taxes with them. Remember that
Fairfield County pays 40% of all state taxes in Connecticut, so anything that
makes our neighborhoods less attractive, hurts the entire state.
And it hurts
our house values too. People live in the
towns served by Metro-North because they need to rely on those trains to get to
high-paying jobs in NYC. When that trust
is broken, those towns and their houses become less attractive.
If housing
values sag, town taxes will have to go up.
The schools will suffer making our towns even less desirable for those
leaving the city for the good life in the ‘burbs.
Reliable
train service at an affordable price is what makes Fairfield County
thrive. When you begin to doubt the
ability of the railroad to keep operating, let alone be on time, it may be time
to rethink where you live.
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