It’s going to be a rough
summer for commuters from New Canaan and Darien as they cope with the
repercussions of Metro-North’s coming shutdown of all trains on the New Canaan
branch from May 30th to September 1st. Parking will be tight and travel times
lengthened.
TRACK WORK: CDOT says it’s doing major
track work on the branch, including replacement of 8000 ties, 1600
feet of rail and needed bridge work. Because the New Canaan branch is a
one-track railroad, trains cannot operate while the work is being done.
BUSING ALTERNATIVES: In lieu of the trains, Metro-North
will run bus
service from New Canaan to Stamford but the running time will be
44 minutes at best (compared to 17 minutes by train).
There will be three bus
routes: one bus from New Canaan will stop
at Talmadge Hill, then run express to Stamford.
Another bus will leave New Canaan and stop at all the intermediate
stations (Talmadge Hill, Springdale and Glenbrook) before heading to Stamford.
And a third bus will run from Springdale and Glenbrook to Stamford. The buses will run 30 minutes earlier than
the old train schedule just to make the mainline train connection in Stamford
to journey on the GCT.
However, because each bus can
carry about 50 passengers and some New Canaan rush hour trains now have 200+
passengers, this will not be enough.
The Town of New Canaan is
considering running a private charter bus from Talmadge Hill to Noroton Heights. Roundtrip fare is reported to be about $10 -
$15 with four departures each in AM and PM peak hours, but details are
uncertain.
PARKING OPTIONS: Given the limited bus options it’s
expected that many New Canaan commuters will drive to Darien or Noroton
Heights train stations on the main line. But day-parking is already at near capacity
at both stations and Darien officials have declined New Canaan’s requests to
set aside special spaces for commuters from the north.
Day-parking ($4 per day, $65
per month) is also allowed in both of Darien stations’ annual permit lots but
not until after 9:30 am. The Town does issue tickets for offenders. Parking
fees can be paid either on an app or at
kiosks at both stations.
At Noroton Heights the day-parking
nearest The Depot teen center (on the NY-bound side) is usually full by 7:30
am. But the day-parking lot directly across
the tracks, next to the Post 53 EMS building, is almost always the last to be
filled all day.
KOONS LOT: Your best chance for parking will be near the Darien train station at the privately-run Koons lot on the NY-bound side, across from Tilley Pond Park. Day parking there is $8 or $120 monthly. Owner Kip Koons tells me he has declined New Canaan’s “request” to set-aside half of his lot for New Canaan commuters, insisting that “it’s always been (our policy that) our spaces are available first-come, first-served.”
The Koons lot can hold 300
cars and has been averaging about 150 – 200 spaces occupied (on the busiest
day, Wednesdays). Koons says he was not
interested in working with New Canaan or its vendor (Boxcar) to “reserve”
spaces for new customers. “We’ve run the
business the same way since 1949,” Koons told me.
Koons, a former Selectman in
Darien, says he has not raised his parking rates since 2011 and doesn’t intend
to now (day-parking in 1951 was ten cents).
But one wonders what the free market price might be for a parking space
with demand so high and supply so inadequate.
BOXCAR: New Canaan has been working with “commuter
concierge” and entrepreneur Joe Colangelo from New Jersey who, pre-pandemic,
had an interesting business renting out private day-parking spaces near train
stations using his Boxcar
app.
Colangelo has been tasked by
New Canaan officials with surveying available private parking near Darien’s two
stations but tells me “It’s hard to make this happen with such a short time
left”. When COVID hit and commuter
parking became overly abundant. his Boxcar company pivoted into chartering of
“luxury motor coaches” to serve bedroom communities in New Jersey, so it seems
likely it may be one of his buses (“luxury motor coaches”) that will be used to
shuttle New Canaan riders to the main line.
(Interestingly, Colangelo is
experimenting with sleeper seats on one of his NJ runs. Previously he tried launching direct bus
service from Darien to midtown Manhattan but couldn’t find the ridership as his
coach ran slower than the train.)
BUT… ARE THERE ENOUGH SEATS ON
THE TRAIN?: Ridership
has been coming back quickly on Metro-North with some rush hour trains showing
standing room only conditions on the busiest days, Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday. Metro-North has warned New
Canaan town hall that existing trains stopping at Darien and Noroton Heights may
not have enough seats already and trying to cram on hundreds of New Canaan
passengers won’t be possible.
SERVICE REDUCTIONS: Compounding the commuter woes,
Metro-North has just told the CT Commuter Rail Council it is
planning service reductions on the main line “starting in the fall”. Service would be cut from 309 trains daily to
260 runs, going from the current 100% of pre-COVID service to 86%.
The railroad says it will
“probably leave rush hour (schedules) alone” but that off-peak service would go
from hourly to every 90 minutes. The
reason? Budget cuts.
FULL DISCLOSURE: I am a resident of Darien but not prone
to the rivalry between our neighboring towns.
I was asked by New Canaan officials to review their plans and offered my
candid assessments. So while I’m a journalist I’ve also been asked to consult (unpaid,
as a volunteer) on planning underway. I hope I can do both roles objectively
and serve my fellow commuters.
COMMENTARY: I’ve been writing about and advocating for
rail commuters statewide for 25+ years, so very little surprises me: I’ve seen this all before. But when one local government official
predicted this New Canaan branch shutdown will be a “cluster {expletive}”, I
thought “Oh yeah”. They’re right and
there’s plenty of blame to go around.
We’ve all known since March
that the New Canaan branch would be shut down.
Train conductors were sharing rumors with riders months earlier. Everyone has had ample time to plan
alternatives. The last minute scramble
underway now, days before the trains stop, wasn’t necessary.
Darien town officials gave
their New Canaan counterparts full details on the limited parking at its train
stations months ago. And Boxcar’s last
minute appeals to local Darien merchants to sublet a few parking spaces near
the stations will, I predict, come up short.
As for Metro-North and CDOT,
they have been, true to form, slow to communicate important news their
customers need to understand. As for
potential over-crowding, that’s what the railroad has actually been hoping, if
not praying, for since the pandemic: they want commuters to come back. But commuters expect on-time service and available
seats. The railroad has plenty of extra
train cars sitting idle, so why not put them to use? There is no reason anyone should have to
stand.
As for what individual
commuters can do… well, working from home has never looked so good!
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