There must be something in the water. How else can we explain Bridgeport, our state’s largest city, and what goes on there?
Bridgeport politics are infamous. The fact that they keep re-electing convicted
felons to high office should tell you a lot.
But on the transportation front the locals’ behavior is equally hard to understand.
Case in point: the city’s latest dreams of a high speed
ferry.
Actually, more than
dreams. Because money is being spent,
yet again, and this time not just on a study but a new dock…. without a ferry.
As Brian Lockhart writes
in the CT Post, the city started back in October building a new dock on
Water Street (near the existing slow-speed ferry terminal). The $11.2 million dock is being paid for with
$10.5 million federal money and $700,000 kicked in by the local Bridgeport Port
Authority, just as goodwill.
Normally such a project would
be announced with fanfares, but not in Bridgeport. Why the stealth? Well, they may be building a dock but they
don’t have a ferry to operate there.
After the dock is built the
city will then issue an RFP for a company to run a ferry service. Usually such projects are done by seeking expressions
of interest from vendors, then doing the construction… but not in Bridgeport.
I have written any number of
times why ferry service makes no sense: ferries
can’t offer the frequency of trips, the fares will easily be double the train
fare, they can’t operate in all weather, they’re fuel inefficient and may end
up being slower than Metro-North.
A Bridgeport ferry would
probably stop in Stamford on its way to NYC, maybe even in Glen Cove NY too. That Long Island bedroom community built a beautiful
$17 million high speed ferry dock, but it has sat empty for the last six months
because the ferry couldn’t get enough passengers.
There are successful high
speed ferries in the NYC area but they’re all heavily subsidized and don’t
operate in direct competition with rail service. And the operators of those ferry could very
easily start service from Connecticut… if they thought there was a demand. But they haven’t, because there isn’t.
Bridgeport is no stranger to
water transport experiments. You might
remember back in 1976 the city hosted a private
hovercraft service operating from that same Water Street location.Hovercraft "Excalibur"
Bridgeport native Robert
Weldon hoped to bring gamblers to the city’s new jai alai fronton on a 60-passenger,
50-foot-long craft. In addition he would
whisk fat cats to Wall Street in as little as 35 minutes.
But cutting travel times
(compared with Metro-North) came with hefty fares: $125 a month compared to the railroad’s $80 commuter
pass. The noisy craft first departed
Bridgeport at 6:45 am on June 26th, stopping in Huntington LI on its
way to the city. By November the service
was stopped, having never achieved better than a 30% load factor.
Ah, Bridgeport! The city where expensive dreams never die…
especially when they’re spending other peoples’ money.
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