Why is Metro-North the only major commuter railroad in the US that doesn’t offer its riders Wi-Fi? That’s a question I’ve been asking for many years and I still can’t get a straight answer.
Four years ago the Connecticut legislature gave CDOT $23 million to get Wi-Fi onboard, but it is still not there. Governor Lamont promised us 5G Wi-Fi, but there’s still zilch. Why?
A little history of this technology
quest might help us to understand.
Ten years ago New Jersey
Transit successfully
demonstrated Wi-Fi on its new double-decker cars under the leadership of
Jim Redeker, then that railroad’s Assistant Executive Director for Technology. When Redeker came to CDOT he wanted the same tech
for Connecticut commuters and told then-Metro-North President Joe Guilietti as
much.
Guilietti was reluctant, given
the railroad’s bad experience of trying to bring tech to its riders when they
introduced pay-cellphones on the trains.
Months after they were installed the tech had advanced so much that everyone
had a cellphone in their pocket and those pay-phones sat idle. Burned by trying to be an “early adopter”,
Guilietti hired the consultants at McKinsey to prove why you can’t put Wi-Fi
on trains. Being a good consultant, McKinsey
took the pricey contract and told their client, Metro-North, what they wanted
to hear.
Never mind that Amtrak has
offered free Wi-Fi since 2011, admittedly with some problems, since
resolved (too many people and not enough bandwidth). European railroads have been offering
connectivity since
2008, so the tech does exist and it works.
Fast forward to the Lamont
administration and guess who’s the new Commissioner of the DOT… that’s right,
Joe Guilietti from Metro-North. Once
again, no progress on Wi-Fi… until 2019 when then-State Senator Will Haskell (D
– Westport) introduced a bill requiring the railroad to get wired and
allocating $23 million to make it happen.
The bill passed and became law
and CDOT was given the money. But we
still don’t have Wi-Fi.
Struggling to recover from
COVID and still trying to persuade commuters to get back onboard, you’d think
that CDOT and Metro-North would embrace Wi-Fi as an enhancement to taking the
train. Imagine how much more productive
you’d be on your way to your job.
Even the CDOT’s own “Customer
Experience Action Plan” mentions “enhanced wireless connectivity” as item
#26 on its long list of initiatives. Its
status? “In progress”.
The problem is that Wi-Fi on
the trains is only as good as the cell signals along the tracks. Train Wi-Fi doesn’t work with satellites, as
airplanes do, but with good old cell signals.
So CDOT seems to be blaming
AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile for dragging their feet on installing new cell towers
to cover the “dead spots”. But Amtrak’s Wi-Fi,
running on the same tracks, seems to operate just fine. So what’s the problem?
While CDOT says it remains committed
to Wi-Fi and is “evaluating various options” to make it happen, Connecticut
commuters are the real losers. Wi-Fi is
everywhere, even in the NYC subways, but not on Metro-North.
Our commuters deserve better.
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