After
19 years, I
have resigned from the CT Commuter Rail Council. But I can promise you I am not quitting my
advocacy for my fellow commuters or the writing of this column. And I have an
even better idea of how commuters can be heard.
The
old Commuter Council accomplished many things since its founding in 1985, including
the ordering of the new
M8 cars. The Council also fought for
Quiet
Cars, the Passenger
Bill of Rights, expanded parking
at rail stations, changes in the expiration
date on tickets and ticket
refunds when service was cancelled.
On
an annual basis I would testify in Hartford for better rail service at affordable
fares, and while lawmakers would nod in agreement, little changed. The tensions
between upstate legislators and those from downstate, where rail service is
a crucial utility, have always stymied investment in our rails.
And
on visiting the capitol I was always struck by the fact that the corridors there
are filled with paid lobbyists, arm-twisting on behalf of truckers, for
building more highways or opposing tolls. Yet there was nobody there speaking
on behalf of commuters, except me.
The
thousands of daily riders of Metro-North in Connecticut are hardly a “special
interest group” nor can they afford a full-time lobbyist. But they are taxpayers and voters who
can move out of state when conditions make commuting unreliable or unsafe.
Metro-North
is facing big problems. Despite new
cars, service is slower than it has been in years and we haven’t even faced winter
with its usual cancellations and service outages. Trains run late, are still over-crowded, and
communications with riders is inconsistent and unreliable.
So
why did I resign from the Commuter Council now?
Because the railroad and CDOT, which hires Metro-North to run our
trains, aren’t listening - let alone communicating
with customers.
Review
the old minutes and annual reports from Commuter Council over the past decade
and you’ll see that nothing has changed.
The complaints are the same, but the lip-service from Metro-North and
CDOT is always a consistent “we’ll get back to you”, though they never do. Commuter complaints fall into some black hole
at MTA headquarters.
If
Metro-North were a private, for-profit business there would have been massive
changes in management after the debacles of deferred maintenance leading to last
May’s derailment / collision and the Con Ed meltdown. But Metro-North is a monopoly in a conspiracy
of silence and obfuscation with the CDOT. The little that is communicated to
riders lacks candor and transparency.
What
we need to do is give greater voice to commuters’ anger. We need a “Commuter Action Group” that can
directly connect commuters with lawmakers, the railroad and the CDOT, showing
them the true level of frustration of daily riders. That’s what I hope to build and if you’re
interested in helping, please e-mail me (Jim@MediaTrainer.TV) and add your Comments below.
We
deserve a world-class railroad and together we can still make it happen.