We are all familiar with
Amtrak’s local operations in the Northeast… the sleek Acela zooming along to
Boston at up to 145 mph and the slower “traditional” trains making the local
stops along the CT coast.
But Amtrak is a national
railroad and its long distance trains to points west face some challenges our
speedy service in the east does not:
delays that can run into many hours, not just a few minutes.
The problem is that Amtrak
owns and operates the trains, but not the tracks they ride on.
From Washington to Boston,
the Northeast Corridor is all owned, maintained, dispatched and operated by
Amtrak. The one small exception is here
in Connecticut, from Greenwich to New Haven, where the track is owned by the
state but run, under contract, by Metro-North.
But in the rest of the
country, Amtrak operates on what it euphemistically calls “host railroads”, all
of them freight operators. Think Norfolk
Southern, CSX, Burlington Northern Santa Fe (owned by Warren Buffet) and the
Canadian railroads, CN and CP. Those
railroads charge Amtrak for riding over its tracks and don’t always give the passenger
trains priority over their more profitable freight traffic.
In 1979 Amtrak was ready to
take Southern Pacific to court with evidence that The Sunset Limited running
between Houston and New Orleans was regularly “sidetracked” in favor of freight
runs. Though there was no trial, the
courts ordered SP to give Amtrak trains first dibs to improve on-time performance.
The railroads said “no way”,
arguing that federal agencies had no right to tell them how to run their
railroads. And the freight operators
won, twice, with courts slapping the wrists of both the Federal Railroad
Authority and the Surface Transportation Board.
Environmental and advocacy
groups appealed to the US Supreme Court, arguing that it was in the national
interest to have an efficient, reliable, on-time national passenger
railroad. But the high court declined to
hear the case.
Today Amtrak uses both a
carrot and a stick to deal with its freight railroad “hosts”, offering
financial incentives to keep its trains on time and public shaming if they
don’t. On the Amtrak website the best (Canadian Pacific) and worst (Norfolk Southern
& Canadian National) freight
railroads are graded from A to F.
On long distance passenger
runs, Amtrak trains like The Texas Eagle
(Chicago to LA) now run up to five hours late, requiring Amtrak to bring in
substitute buses and accommodate passengers who miss their connections.
Freight railroads say they
have their own problems without being burdened by Amtrak. In a booming economy, the freight operators
can barely keep up with customer demand on a track network saturated with
mile-long oil trains (“pipelines on wheels”) and double-stack container trains
moving east from California.
But all of these Amtrak
complaints may be moot as the days of long-distance trains seem numbered. While fast trains like Acela can actually
turn a small profit, multi-day “land cruises” on celebrated trains like the California Zephyr and
The Empire Builder
just hemorrhage money. Their days are
limited, so ride them while you can.
We’ll always have Acela, but
the glory days of long-distance rail travel in the US are nearing an end,
probably to the delight of the freight operators.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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