Don't look now, but we're making history. The changing forces now at work in our society, including our transportation network, will have a profound effect on our lives for decades to come.
THE BIG QUIT: According to federal
statistics, 4 million people quit their jobs in July of
this year, with almost 11 million jobs nationwide now unfilled. As a result, our ports are jammed, the supply
chain broken and holiday purchases seem in peril. Don’t expect any bargains for Christmas.
Why the huge turnover in
jobs? I think a lot of it has been
soul-searching amid the pandemic as people try to seek that illusory work-life
balance. But it’s clearly a seller’s market for talent.
THE END OF COMMUTING ?: Transportation used to equal
communications. Now you don’t need to go
to work to do your job. As I
predicted last December, I don’t think passenger levels
on Metro-North will return to pre-COVID levels for many years. Some think it may
take a decade. To
date, Metro-North
ridership is only back to about 50% and not increasing.
CROWDING & COMPLAINTS: Even at these reduced ridership levels,
many trains are jammed, especially at rush hour. (So much for social
distancing.) That’s because full service has not been restored and may
not be until next year. Rush hour trains are not running express,
lengthening commuting times and not attracting riders back to the rails. The
once popular but seldom-enforced Quiet Cars are on hold. I doubt they’ll be coming back.
Many of those who are heading
back to the office are driving instead of taking the train, exacerbating our
traffic. When driving is faster and, in
some cases, cheaper than taking the train, the perception of personal safety
trumps slow traffic. (Mind you, I do
think riding Metro-North is safe… as long as you remain fully masked.)
As Metro-North is slow to
react to commuter demands for better service, savvy entrepreneurs are jumping
in to offer
commuting alternatives, skimming the creamy 1% off
of the top of railroad’s ridership with a one-seat ride to Wall Street.
FARES: Off-peak fares remain in effect, all
day, for now. But even pre-COVID with standing-room-only conditions,
the railroad was still losing money. In
2019 mainline trains subsidized every ticket by $3. Branch line trains’
subsidies were much higher… $17 per ride on the Danbury branch, $49 per ride on
Shore Line East.
With ridership now only at
50%, just double those subsidy numbers and you can see how much the railroad is
losing. Who will make up the difference?
UNCLE SAM: Yes, the federal government has kept
mass transit rolling, but unless ridership returns those subsidies cannot last
forever. Metro-North’s parent. the MTA,
has promised no service cuts, no layoffs and no fare increase… for now.
The historic federal infrastructure
bill may pump more money into those subsidies.
But that money was supposed to “build back better”, repairing and
renewing. If your house has a leaky roof,
you don’t take out a second mortgage to buy tarps and buckets when you should
be repairing the roof.
THE BRAIN DRAIN: Before Connecticut DOT can start
spending the billions of dollars coming
our way in the infrastructure
bill it has to deal with its own staffing
problem. CDOT Commissioner Joe Guilietti
says his agency has 1100 highly skilled, well-paying jobs to fill, many of them
due to a long-anticipated 30 – 40% retirement rate of senior staffers cashing
out for their fat state pensions.
So, this Thanksgiving we have
much to be grateful for… but so much to still worry about.
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