Yes, there are new trains on
the Waterbury branch… and three new express trains from New Haven, but overall
our rail service in Connecticut is still too slow. Why?
Governor Lamont and CDOT
Commissioner Guilietti ballyhooed their new train PR last week as if they’d
solved the commuting problem. They have
not.
Still, kudos to Commuter Council Chair and Waterbury
branch rider Jim Gildea for his tireless efforts to build
up service on that branch line. Seven new trains have been added to the line,
four southbound and three northbound.
But ridership is still miniscule: just 57,500 a month as of this spring. And per-passenger subsidies are still way too
high: almost $25 per ride.
That ridership is less than
2000 a day, equivalent to two full rush hour trains on the mainline. Now that service has expanded, the question
is… will more people ride the train?
On the mainline they’ve added
three express trains from New Haven to Grand Central, stopping only in
Bridgeport and Stamford. The service is
targeted at uber-early morning commuters with trains leaving New Haven starting
at 5:09 am and making the run in 99 minutes (1:39).
That’s impressive compared to
the 2+ hours required for the rest of the trains on that run. But most commuters on the mainline are not
traveling from New Haven but from busy stations like Fairfield, Darien and
Greenwich. Three new early-morning
expresses don’t help them at all.
It was 13 months ago that
Governor Lamont made his “Time
for CT” promise, pledging to shave 10 minutes off
commuting time this year and 25 minutes by 2035. The promise was for all commuters, not
just early AM New Haven express riders.
So why do our trains still run
so slow? Blame the past… and
Washington.
You’ll remember the 2013 derailment of a Metro-North train in Fairfield, which injured 65 passengers. And a few months later a deadly crash of a Hudson line train at Spuyten Duyvil killed four and injured 61.
That’s when the Feds leapt into action, embedding their Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) inspectors deep into the Metro-North organization to find out what had happened.
Bottom line: they blamed the railroad’s culture of
emphasizing on-time performance while neglecting safety. The FRA imposed speed restrictions on all
Metro-North trains, especially on bridges and curves… of which there are many.
And those speed restrictions are still in effect.
That means that a commute from
New Haven to NYC suddenly became 15 – 20 minutes longer than before… but,
hopefully, safer.
Also adding to safety was
installation of Positive Train Control (PTC) designed to overcome human
error. That system is now fully
operational, yet the FRA speed restrictions are still in effect. Why?
I’ve asked CDOT and Senator
Blumenthal to persuade the FRA to give us back our usual speeds on Metro-North,
so far to no avail. So while a few
trains, like the New Haven expresses, may be running at better speeds, for most
commuters it’s still a slow ride to NYC.
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