Imagine taking a train… a one-seat ride… all the way from Grand Central Terminal to the sandy shores of Mystic CT. Or connecting there for a quick run up to the Indian casinos.
Such a thing should be possible and may yet happen… if Shore Line East gets its act together.
Shore
Line East is the state-owned commuter line from New
Haven to Old Saybrook opened in 1990 in anticipation of heavy traffic delays on
I-95 during reconstruction of the Q Bridge.
Initially it was only rush-hour service… west to New Haven in the
morning and back east in the evening.
But gradually service expanded
with a couple of trains going as far as New London. Service became two way and extended outside
of rush hours. Even weekend trains were
added.
But the service has always
operated at a loss, a huge loss compared to the main line of Metro-North. Initially the per-passenger, per trip subsidy
on Shore Line East was over $18.
Pre-COVID it had soared to almost $50.
Why so expensive?
For one, CDOT owns but doesn’t
operate the trains. That’s done under
contract by Amtrak, which also owns the tracks east of New Haven.
But most of all, the huge
fixed costs of running a railroad are spread over a much too small
ridership. While pre-COVID the main line
of Metro-North would carry over three million passengers a month, Shore Line
East might have 65,000.
Mind you, there are only
125,000 people living in all seven towns served my Shore Line East… Branford,
Guilford, Madison, Clinton, Westbrook, Old Saybrook and New London. Contrast that with mainline cities like
Stamford (population 135,000), Bridgeport (148,000) and New Haven (134,000),
the three largest cities in the state.
But which comes first, the
chicken or the egg?
Did those “big three” cities
grow so large because they had great train service… or did they get great train
service because they were so big?
Advocates suggest that if more
intermediate stations were added on Shore Line East, maybe East Haven, Old Lyme
and Niantic, ridership would increase.
But what might help even more is extending Shore Line East as far east as
Providence RI.
That would also mean stops in Mystic, Stonington and Westerly RI, currently “fly over country” for most Amtrak service offering very infrequent stops. Mystic, in particular, holds great promise as a tourist town just a quick ride from the casinos.
Service today on Shore Line East
is still less than pre-COVID and operates on a hodgepodge timetable, hardly
attractive to new riders. But they do
have those new (to them) all-electric M8 cars, replacing their slow and dirty
old diesels, so some steps are in the right direction.
Kudos have to go to my friends
on the CT
Commuter Rail Council who have galvanized local
residents and politicians pushing for better service.
But something must be done
about the operating losses, initially by improving service which would justify raising
fares which are much lower than on the mainline. A railroad cannot operate viably with such
losses without proving that it can attract more passengers.
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