If Metro-North was
a student and commuters were its teacher, the railroad’s winter report card
would be a D+ and the comment would be “needs to improve”.
As new Metro-North
President Joseph Giulietti finishes his second month on the job, he’s making
the rounds to meet and listen to commuters.
But his 100-Day Plan for bringing the railroad back won’t conclude until
mid-June, so I thought that now would be a great time to survey riders and get
a baseline of their sentiments against which we can measure any gains in the
months ahead.
Our unscientific
online survey ran for seven days and got 642 responses. Clearly, those who wanted to opine were
probably those with gripes, so take the results with a grain of salt.
Asked to give
Metro-North a letter grade based on the past months’ performance, the railroad
got an average D+.
Asked if service
was getting better, 22% said yes, 31% said it was getting worse and 47% said it
was “about the same”.
When asked what
their biggest complaints were (respondents could list multiple issues), 88% said it was late or delayed trains, 60%
said poor communications when things went wrong, and 59% said it was lack of
sufficient seating on trains. Another 30% complained about the train cars’ heating
/ cooling system (or lack thereof), while others (18%) said there was insufficient
station parking and 15% said the stations had poor upkeep.
The survey also
asked how commuters reported their gripes.
10% said they never had complaints, 46% said they didn’t complain
“because it seemed useless” but 61% said they did complain to conductors or to
Metro-North. Of those who did complained
almost half of respondents (45%) said their problem was never fixed.
We also asked who
commuters thought was to blame for the railroad’s problems. An overwhelming 90% blamed Metro-North
management, 48% said they were due to the Dept of Transportation, 35% said it
was their state legislature’s fault, 28% said it was because of Metro-North
employees, 12% blamed the Federal government, and 9% blamed their fellow
commuters.
Our last question
was most telling: “Do you feel safe
riding Metro-North?” 56% said yes, 15% said no and 29% said they weren’t sure.
We designed the
survey to be brief, taking maybe two minutes to answer. But we also gave space for commuters to
comment, and 267 of them did, some at great length. Here’s a sampling of their opinions:
Sorry to be so harsh...It is 2014, pseudo-modern,
wealthy society and the most laughable public transportation system in any
advanced country and metropolitan area.
This service is really shameful for the amount we pay. I've not been on a train in the last six months that arrived on time.
When I moved here 10 years ago you could set your watch by Metro-North. Now the timetable is just a suggestion.
The Danbury line is the orphaned stepchild of the system.
The lack of self control of "irate" commuters does not help the situation. Makes us look bad.
The full results of
the survey and all of the comments are available online via links from our
website, www.CommuterActionGroup.org
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