“I thought I lived in a progressive state,” said Luther.
“My wife and kids live in New
London and my three hour rail trip to see them will now take four or five
hours.”
Luther was just one of dozens
of rail passengers who spoke at public hearings last week on CDOT’s planned
service cuts and fare hikes, explaining how policy decisions will impact the
lives of real people.
Kelly told how she moved from
Phoenix and chose a new home in Madison because of the train service. “What will these rail cuts mean to the value
of our home?” she asked.
Deborah, a disabled rider,
said the CDOT “will be sued” because they didn’t survey the impact of their
plans on the disabled.
Theater worker Molly said she
moved to Bridgeport because of its train service. But she said service cuts will hurt those in
the NYC entertainment business because shows don’t end until 10:30 pm. “Public transit is a public good,” and should
be properly funded, she told the hearing.
Several of those who spoke
said their kids rely on trains to get them to school, including Marybeth whose
son commutes on Shore Line East in
his wheelchair. Now he must be driven to New Haven to make his classes.Maclean Saar commutes in his wheelchair
Nurse Kristen from Clinton works
at Yale New Haven hospital. She has colleagues
who also work in Stamford who may now have to quit their jobs because of the
rail cuts.
The proposed cuts on Shore
Line East (from 23 to 16 trains per day) will “kill this railroad” said several
riders. “It will lead to a death spiral,”
said others, noting that reduced train service will discourage ridership,
leading to even lower numbers and prompting further cuts.
Jim Gildea of the Commuter Council
said that Shore Line East was never given a chance to rebuild post-COVID. While Metro-North and the Hartford Line saw
service restored to 100% of pre-COVID levels, Shore Line East was only brought
back to 66%, so no wonder ridership was down.
He added that the state’s push
for greater transit oriented development (TOD) in SE Connecticut will fail
without the trains. “What developer
wants to build next to a train station with no trains?” he asked.
Almost everyone who testified
noted how terrible traffic has become on I-95.
Less train service will only worsen that, especially on Fridays, while
also adding to pollution.
Several of those who spoke in
the virtual hearings bemoaned the lack of in-person hearings in the towns and
cities most affected by the plans. Still
others asked what is being done to attract riders back to the trains… or what
CDOT will do if riders do return en masse.
Not that any of what was said
will make a difference.
While the hearing leader from
CDOT said that all testimony would be “carefully reviewed”, these hearings are
only a formality. This is a done deal. Blame lawmakers who approved Lamont’s budget
cuts to CDOT.
“CDOT wants to run trains,”
said Gildea. “Let’s give them the
funding to do it”.
No comments:
Post a Comment