Why do the folks who run our commuter railroads act like their customers are stupid? Though desperate for ridership to return (to fight huge post-COVID deficits), they ignore legitimate commuter feedback and do everything they can to hide their failures.
Case in point: the Commuter Rail Council, the
independent watchdog group created by the CT legislature almost 40 years ago,
on which I served for 19 years. During
the Malloy administration we were getting a bit too vocal in our complaints, so
a senior Democrat warned me (and another Council member) to cool it or “your
little Commuter Council will be written out of existence”.
Sure enough, they tried,
slipping a bill into the hopper to eliminate our group and its criticism. To his credit, State Senator Tony Hwang saved
the day, rewriting the Council’s mandate, though in a much watered-down
version.
Senator Hwang hosted members
of the Commuter Council at the Capitol this
week for an update on what riders are thinking, and Hwang’s colleagues on the Transportation Committee got
an earful.Jim Gildea - Commuter Council
The Council’s usually affable
Chairman Jim Gildea said the CT Dept of Transportation is, once again,
unresponsive to simple requests. Since
April the Council has asked for data on on-time performance by station, when
Shore Line East service would be fully restored, ridership numbers on the
much-touted 99 minute express trains from New Haven to GCT and, yes, the status
of Quiet
Cars.
But the agency didn’t reply
for months. Why? Because they’re obviously hiding their
failures behind a veil of bureaucracy. “We’ll have to get back to you,” seems their
constant refrain.
Governor Lamont promised 60
minute train service from New Haven to GCT and the best CDOT
could offer up were three very-limited-stop runs on weekdays, two of them
departing before 6 am. The fastest train still takes 99 minutes to make the
journey. But is anyone riding those trains?
CDOT knows but is embarrassed to tell us.
By the way, Chairman Gildea
also asked the Transportation Committee for a small budget as he has to pay out
of his own pocket for a website, email feed and Zoom account. That’s right, though the CDOT is awash with
money, the Commuter Council doesn’t get a dime to do its important advocacy work.
As for the possible return of
the Quiet Cars, after five requests the Commuter Council finally got an answer:
“No”. Metro-North blames “operational
issues” but wouldn’t explain what that means.
That phrase “operational
issues” is widely used by the railroad in explaining train delays and
cancellations, the latest in their growing dictionary of euphemisms to obscure
the truth.
Just look at Metro-North’s Twitter feed and
notice how often they avoid telling us what’s really happening, using words
like “mechanical issues” instead of telling us a train broke down. Why can’t they be honest with us? Because they can’t own up to their poor
performance, let alone correct it.
Incoming CDOT Commissioner
Garrett Eucalito can change all that, if he wants to. It’s time to be honest with commuters. We can handle the truth.
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