Rail Travel News
News posting April 24, 2006

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AMTRAK DINING CAR PRICES RISING 

   Trains 21, 22, 58, 59, 421 and 422 now have a different menu than the rest of the long-distance trains. These trains use preplated meals prepared off the train and the prices appear substantially higher than rail travelers are accustomed to paying. This change is no doubt part of the DOT effort to increase Amtrak income, but could have the effect of reducing train patronage.

   On one of the two rotating menus, breakfast items consist of three choices with meat, each priced at $10, and one cereal choice at $6.75.

   At lunch, a cheeseburger is $7, a sandwich (type varies) is $7.25, barbecue chicken with potato wedges, corn and salad is $12, and soup (minestrone or chicken noodle) is $4.

   At dinner, a beef entree (braised or tenderloin) is $18; a chicken entree is $17.50; cod fillets are $16.50; cheese tortellini is $11; and an "evening special" is $12.50.

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Amtrak approaches its 35th anniversary

   On Monday, May 1, Amtrak becomes 35 years old. On May 1, 1971 the rail corporation began operating its first trains on a skeletal system. There are no doubt many who are surprised that the system has survived this long. 

   Today the system remains skeletal in the views of some. In fact, in the late 1970s there were more Amtrak routes than there are today. A number of new routes were started and later discontinued despite good patronage and a demonstrated need for travel options in fuel crisis times.

   The 35 years have seen a constant struggle to persuade Congress to provide Amtrak with adequate funding. Rail advocates often cannot understand why the feds pour so much money into the other modes, which are clearly less efficient in fuel usage and less safe. 

   The answer is that Amtrak lacks lobbyists on the order of those backing highway and airline interests. The National Association of Railroad Passengers, for example, has done a herculean job of helping keep the passenger trains in existence, but there is no way NARP or any other rail passenger lobbying group can come up with the massive sums that lobbyists from private industry pour into the coffers of Senators and Congressmen to protect and advance their interests.

   Today, one week before its anniversary, Amtrak's latest timetable change takes place, and a new system timetable has been issued. The changes shown in it are few, and mainly relate to the inauguration of several new Thruway buses in California. 

   On its Website (www.amtrak.com) Amtrak has added an interactive route map, which draws routes across the country.

   Congress has now returned from its spring break and will take up Amtrak funding in May. 



Refuting some myths about long-distance train travel

   Long distance trains simply do not function in the imaginary ways that government train-haters claim they do. If these train-despising politicians and government lackeys would honestly examine the trains, ride them themselves and take note of who uses them and how, they might realize the falsity of their declarations.

   For example, in the matter of connectivity among trains, consider the following data collected by a correspondent this month on the westbound CAPITOL LIMITED, train 29:

   Of the 140 passengers boarding in Washington DC on March 14, 44% had taken another train to connect to No. 29. 
And of the 130 passengers detraining in Chicago, 52% were then connecting to another train. What's more, 25% of the passengers riding train 29 of the 14th had connections on both ends of the route: they had ridden another train to connect to No. 29 and were connecting to yet another train at the end of 29's route.

   Obviously, the connectivity among these trains was important to the ridership of all of them.

   Where were these people traveling? Listed here are the endpoints of the trips of those connecting to and/or from the CAPITOL: 

 Winter Haven-Los Angeles
 Petersburg-Kansas City (2 people)
 Charlotte-Milwaukee (2 people)
 Newport News-Newton (2 people)
 Charlotte-St Cloud (2 people)
 Charlotte-Sacramento
 Atlanta-Portland
 Charlotte-Madison
 Baltimore-Dwight
 New Carrolton-St Louis
 Florence-Holland
 New York-Mt Pleasant
 Philadelphia-Mt Pleasant
 Philadelphia-Temple (2 people)
 Jacksonville-Denver
 Miami-Fargo
 Winter Haven-Flint (2 people)
 Jacksonville-Martinez (2 people)
 Palatka-Topeka
 Miami-Madison
 Orlando-Alton
 Ft Lauderdale-Denver

  Note the great diversity of locations comprising the endpoints of these people's trips.  And these travel patterns are not exclusive to Train 29-30. All the long distance
 trains depend on connections, some more than others, but it is the  total system we need
 to focus on.  Every new or improved connection is a plus; every  lost connection is a dagger  in the heart of the entire system.

  When a train-opposing bureaucrat says that 
 people on long distance trains are only going a few hundred miles, and they could easily travel on a series of day trains, take another look at the list above.

  And when  they claim that people on long distance trains have an option of taking low-fare airlines, take another look at
the communities listed above.  Newton, St Cloud, Holland, Florence,  Mt Pleasant, Madison, Temple, Flint, Petersburg, Fargo, 
Palatka..... What low-fare airlines?



Tunnel work is disrupting Coast Starlight service in Southern California

VIA's CANADIAN is back partially on Canadian Pacific rails

 Amtrak funding action in the Senate

Spring-summer schedule changes for St. Louis-Kansas City coming

Killing Amtrak slowly from within


 

 Links to other recent news articles


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