In 1955 a New Haven Railroad commuter train could run non-stop for the 36-mile distance from Stamford to Grand Central in 48 minutes. Today that Stamford to NYC run takes 59 minutes at best, despite Governor Lamont’s long-promised dream of a 30 minute trip time.
But now there’s a new effort
to speed up the New Haven line: CDOT’s ambitious “Time for CT”
$8-10 billion plan. It promises 10-minute
faster running times from New Haven to NY by next year and a 25-minute quicker
run by 2035.
While some dream of a new
high speed rail system running from Washington to
Boston at 200+ mph speeds, CDOT and Metro-North are taking, in my view, a much
more realistic approach to fixing our existing system. “Higher” speeds will be
fine.
Reading the consultant-driven 138-page plan,
years in the making, one gets a sobering picture of how badly our railroad has
deteriorated.
For safety reasons, “slow
orders” all along the line have cut speeds to 37 mph, both for commuter trains
and Amtrak.
As one trouble spot gets
fixed, another pops up as Metro-North plays whack-a-mole with decaying
infrastructure. Layer on top of this permanent slow orders implemented by the
FRA in 2013 and you can understand commuters’ frustrations.
There are 57,000 track-ties
that must be replaced. Of the 134
bridges between New Haven and the NY state line, 34 are rated as poor or in
serious conditions. The open deck timber
bridges are in most need of attention.
And of the five movable
bridges, only one has been replaced while the others are each more than a
century old. The South Norwalk swing
bridge project alone will cost about one
billion dollars.
The catenary (overhead power)
system is in better shape, but some of its trackside support structures are
also in the century-plus club. There’s a
lot of work to be done. And trying to do
it while still running the railroad will be like changing the fan belt on a car
running 60 mph.
At the Stratford
event unveiling the CDOT plan, the construction
unions photo-bombed the press conference unveiling a huge banner reading “Jobs
Jobs Jobs”. And every speaker pandered to
them promising “45,000 good paying union jobs” on this project.
But it’s not like CDOT or
Metro-North will be hiring 45,000 new plumbers, electricians and
carpenters. That number is a
hypothetical projection based on the cost and time involved in the work.
The Metro-North unions have jurisdiction over all track work and you
can’t join that union until you get hired by the railroad. Then you need training which can only be done
on the job. And you need track equipment,
some of which on the New Haven line is 30 years old.
Hopefully we’ll have enough
money to make all this happen thanks to Senator Blumenthal and the Congressional
compromise on infrastructure achieved recently.
But then we still need leadership.
CDOT has been suffering a
brain drain in recent years, losing its best and brightest planners and
engineers to retirement, those fat state pensions or lucrative consultant jobs. With so much Federal money being thrown at
transportation, Connecticut will be in serious competition for a limited pool
of expertise.
There’s so much to be done. But
it’s all achievable given enough money and patience.
Posted with permission of
Hearst CT Media
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