Published
7 years agoon
By
Joe MathewsIf California’s train deniers are right—that no one ever rides trains here, that Californians prefer to drive or fly, and that high-speed rail is a boondoggle that won’t attract riders — then how do you explain my wife’s public humiliation?
The Pacific Surfliner that day was mobbed: with every seat taken and passengers standing in the aisles and stairwells. So when I took those two hungry boys in the direction of the café car, the crowds were so thick I couldn’t squeeze through. The boys, now nine and seven, are very skinny and insisted on continuing on, despite my pleas, beginning a memorable adventure.
Our story may be singular, but the situation is not. Crammed Amtrak trains are commonplace in California. California is now home to three of the busiest intercity train lines outside the Northeast Corridor of the United States. The Pacific Surfliner has three million riders annually on trains from San Luis Obispo to San Diego, America’s second busiest passenger rail corridor.
Two others are in the top ten: Capitol Corridor, from San Jose to Sacramento, has 1.6 million yearly riders, and the San Joaquins, serving Central Valley cities that train deniers claim have no taste for rail, tops 1.1 million annually.
All told, Amtrak carries 12 million riders in California each year. Amtrak would like to accommodate more of us, but service is limited by the lack of tracks and the fact that Amtrak must share tracks with commuter rail and freight. Amtrak even publishes guidance on its website on how to avoid overcrowding. Among the advice issued on the Pacific Surfliner: avoid riding on Fridays and Sundays, when trains are especially crowded.
The sardine-like state of Amtrak California suggests that, contrary to claims of train deniers, high-speed rail would be popular. Studies in other countries suggest high-speed rail draws people from driving and flying, and inspires people to take trips they otherwise wouldn’t. And why not, given California’s scenery? Take the Capitol Corridor across the Delta, or peer up to the Sierra from the San Joaquins. Over the holidays, I was on a Pacific Surfliner along the Ventura County coast as the sun set over the Channel Islands. Even the off-shore oil platforms looked beautiful.
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Irish Rover
February 23, 2018 at 1:03 pm
Allow me to say this, you are a member of the unfortunately clueless group due to a politically driven legacy reward
CAHSR has been modified by the progressive liberal bastion located in Sacramento who is wasting seriously depleted, taxpayer funds on a severely flawed LEGACY / UNION reward debacle.
The negatives far outweigh the rational to keep going. Remember, the salient point, 7-years into this project and nothing is attached to another section. Fiscal imbalances abound with penalty payments in excess of 110 million taxpayers, nowhere to be found, dollars. Least we do not forget the mismanaged disaster is over 35% over budget in the first two construction area and not an inch of track has been put on the ground!
CA taxpayers need to pay attention to misguided sound bites because that what is keeping this generational Ponzi scheme alive using 19th-century steel on steel outdated technology on a massively convoluted alignment NEGATING HSR speeds.