Rail commuters on Metro-North got a Spring Surprise
recently: a new timetable with slower
running times. Rush hour trains now
leave earlier and arrive later than before, adding anywhere from one to ten
minutes to published running times, depending on the length of the trip.
But hey! What
happened to that 30-30-30
plan for faster trains? Why are the
trains running slower, not faster? In a
word: repairs.
There is so much track work to be done this summer
there’s no way that Metro-North can maintain its old schedule. In fact, the
on-time performance stats from last summer’s construction hit a record low,
sometimes hitting just 82%. Put another
way… the new Spring timetable more accurately reflects the speed of service the
railroad can actually deliver, not the service it would like to deliver.
So instead of trains running late, they’ll be on time and
the schedule will be more reliable, if slower.
All of this timetable adjusting has been in the works
since last fall, though the railroad clearly could have done a better job
explaining the whys and hows of the changes.
Big projects like the Atlantic Street bridge replacement in Stamford and
the Walk Bridge project in Norwalk are taking one, and in some cases, two
tracks out of service.
Necessary “undercutting”, removing years of accumulated
rock ballast under rail ties, can take out a track for weeks at a time. And all four running tracks will eventually need
that undercutting work.
That leaves the railroad trying to run a four-track
service with a 25 – 50% reduction in resources.
And that, as their computer simulations have shown, means slower
service. And all of this assumes nothing else goes wrong.
If there’s an unexpected broken rail, a signal problem or
power issue, the railroad will jump on repairs immediately - causing other delays on top of the planned
work. In other words, it’s going to be a
long summer, folks.
And this is just the beginning. One industry insider tells me these mega-repair
projects will continue for about five years, meaning these slower running times
will be the new normal.
And the farther east you live on the New Haven line, the
greater the impact of the slower trains.
Take Bridgeport, for example.
The current best running time from Bridgeport to Grand
Central is one hour and 22 minutes.
Under the new timetable it will be one hour and 29 minutes. But in 1963 the old New Haven RR could make
the run in one hour and 14 minutes.
Why? Because the original
New Haven RR was well maintained. Today
the railroad is 56 years older and not aging well. The signal system is well past its life
expectancy (and can handle speeds no faster than 70 mph). The overhead power lines (catenary) still
dates from the times of Woodrow Wilson in some areas. And the tracks, as we know are prone to
cracking and expansion in the summer heat.
Safety should always be the top priority. Remember the Bridgeport derailment and Spuyten
Duyvil crash? So if your trains take a
few more minutes to get you to work, be grateful: at least you got there safely. I’d always prefer to arrive alive, wouldn’t
you?
Things will get better.
Maybe not 30-30-30, but better… eventually.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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