Monday, February 4, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013
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Pittsburgh-Harrisburg Amtrak route imperiled

Unless the service can be shown to benefit many, it could be shut down.

PITTSBURGH - One of Pittsburgh's two remaining Amtrak routes, the one serving Harrisburg, Philadelphia, New York, and points in between, may be on the chopping block in October.

That's the deadline for Pennsylvania to decide whether to foot the estimated $5.7 million bill for subsidizing the service, a cost Amtrak now pays.

No decision has been made, but remarks from Pennsylvania Department of Transportation officials suggest the route is in trouble unless it can be shown to benefit large numbers of passengers connecting at Pittsburgh to or from cities other than Harrisburg.

"If you look purely at that [Pittsburgh-to-Harrisburg] segment, it is hard to justify," PennDot spokeswoman Erin Waters-Trasatt said. She noted that driving between the two cities is faster than the 51/2-hour train trip.

Eliminating the route would end Amtrak service to Greensburg, Latrobe, Johnstown, Altoona, Tyrone, Huntingdon, and Lewistown. It would leave Pittsburgh with no direct passenger train connections to Philadelphia and New York. Only one Amtrak route, the Capitol Limited from Chicago to Washington, would still stop there.

The funding change is called for in the federal Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008, which required Amtrak to develop and implement a consistent formula for sharing costs with states on corridor routes of 750 miles or less.

PennDot spends about $9 million to subsidize the much faster and healthier Amtrak service connecting Harrisburg and Philadelphia, which has 14 daily trips operating at speeds up to 110 m.p.h. on electrified track that has received more than $150 million in upgrades.

The state does not subsidize Pittsburgh-to-Harrisburg service, which has one daily trip in each direction and slower-moving diesel locomotives that go no faster than 70 m.p.h. and that average 45 m.p.h.

PennDot estimates the annual cost to subsidize both segments of what is known as the Pennsylvanian route starting Oct. 1 would be $19.2 million, with $5.7 million of that allocated to the Pittsburgh-to-Harrisburg leg.

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Though Amtrak has been on a roll, with record ridership in nine of the last 10 years, traffic in and out of Pittsburgh has been in decline. Some 142,800 people boarded or got off there in the year ended Oct. 1, 2008; that number fell to about 129,400 in the year ended last Oct. 1.

Systemwide, Amtrak ridership rose 3.5 percent last year; Pittsburgh ridership was down 3.3 percent.

Amtrak could not provide separate figures for Pittsburgh-to-Harrisburg ridership. If half of the Pittsburgh riders use that service, the proposed subsidy amounts to $88 per rider, well above the current $40 ticket price.

In a recent Wall Street Journal article, PennDot deputy secretary Toby Fauver said of the Pittsburgh-to-Harrisburg segment, "It is a struggle for me to want to pay for that service."

Waters said significant investment in track and equipment upgrades would be required to make the service more attractive. A $1.5 million study of possible improvements, funded with federal and state money, is under way but not yet complete.

She said a decision whether to keep the service would not factor into Gov. Corbett's budget proposal this week but would be made later. "It's a constantly evolving discussion," she said.

The service could be saved if it is shown to benefit large numbers of riders connecting in Pittsburgh to trains bound for Chicago or Washington, she said. That could lead to Amtrak's absorbing more of the cost, reducing the state's contribution.

Passenger rail advocates said they had begun a campaign to save the service.

"We're very concerned about this issue," said Michael Alexander, president of Western Pennsylvanians for Passenger Rail. "We're trying to mobilize people to write to their state legislators and Gov. Corbett to put whatever funds are necessary . . . to pay the bill that will be coming.

"We think this train is very important. It's a link to the rest of the Amtrak system. It provides very important service for many communities," some of which have no other form of public transportation, he said.

A better idea to reduce per-passenger costs would be to add service, he said. And though the state might save money by eliminating it, the traveling public will pay more.

"The less competition there is, the higher the prices on other modes of transportation. We need more options, not less," Alexander said.

Jon Schmitz Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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Comments  (14)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:02 AM, 02/04/2013
    the service is slow, expensive, and poorly timed. going west it arrive at 8 pm, too late late for a sports game and after dinner. eastbound it leaves to early,7:20 am, which means you have to get up at the crack of dawn. greyhound runs three daily non-stop buses and megabus runs the same....those buses do well. it's a nice ride but Pittsburgh ridership is in decline because Amtrak service does a poor job of serving that city.
    dreinterests
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:47 AM, 02/04/2013
    "Eliminating the route would end Amtrak service to Greensburg, Latrobe, Johnstown, Altoona, Tyrone, Huntingdon, and Lewistown". It sure won't help the riders who are senior citizens and the disabled. I agree with dreinterests about poor service which is done deliberately to keep ridership at a minimum. This just reinforces Regan's dream of disemboweling smaller towns and rural America.
    gb
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:28 AM, 02/04/2013
    The ability to go west from Harrisburg should be a key goal of the state and Amtrak. Unfortunately, any real viable improvements will probably cost an arm, a leg, and a couple of firstborn.
    DeltaV
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:56 AM, 02/04/2013
    It's a system that's designed to fail. Running one daily train on tracks designed for freight, using outmoded equipment will never succeed. That's always the catch. It's not worth doing halfway, that $19 million a year would be much better spent improving Pittsburgh's local transit.

    If they want to make the Pittsburgh Harrisburg corridor worth the subsidy, it has to attract riders. That means they have to trim 90 minutes from the trip time, and offer multiple trains a day. Rail done right is always worth the cost, but unfortunately, Amtrak is saddled with too many half-measures like this, that make investing in rail look bad, and provide bad service, because they can't invest what it takes to do it right.
    Pelti
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:04 AM, 02/04/2013
    As much as I support the idea of rail travel, this union boondoggle called "Amtrak" manages to lose $6 for every $10 hamburger they sell. Should we be surprised they can't make a profit on the trains?
    MaggieL
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:06 AM, 02/04/2013
    Duration is 7 hours 23 min, get that down to 5:30 and I am taking this train 4 times a year. We should be expanding and expediting train service, not shutting down lines.
    kjc5008
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:38 AM, 02/04/2013
    good. the Pennsylvanian service should be eliminated. Amtrak itself is a socialistic relic, but at least some routes, like the Keystone and Northeast Corridor, are cost effective.
    oliver north
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:12 PM, 02/04/2013
    That "socialistic relic" was once the Pennsylvania Railroad, the largest publicly traded company in the world. The 100% government subsidised highway system killed it.
    Pelti
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:36 PM, 02/04/2013
    tell it to the dinosaurs. eastman kodak used to be one of the largest companies in the world, too. do you still take your film to be developed at fotomat?

    it's called "progress."
    hannibal barca
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:21 PM, 02/04/2013
    Progress would be looking to the future where oil prices will rise as supply dwindles and demand from China, India, and others rises. Having a viable rail system in place to move people when it is too expensive to fly or drive is better than waiting until it is too late.
    DeltaV
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:28 PM, 02/04/2013
    Way to completely miss the point.

    Was Kodak put out of business by massive government subsidy of their competitors? Was Kodak actively prevented from expanding into new markets by car-only planning and intentional sprawl? Was Kodak taxed to such extremes that they had to destroy their own property, like railroads had to tear up tracks, to save money?

    And yes, I do still take my film to get processed at a lab. I'm a fan of Kodak's Porta line, though for B&W, I prefer Ilford.
    Pelti
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:41 PM, 02/04/2013
    train travel is an absolute joke in this country. we are falling behind the rest of the world thanks to our right wing morons who view trains as a socialist nightmare. thanks a lot. conservatives have been holding this country back for years and I'm sick of it.
    Ryan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:14 PM, 02/04/2013
    @ryan. you're welcome. if it wasn't for conservatives we'd all be speaking russian
    hannibal barca
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:58 PM, 02/04/2013
    There are a few things you are not told. The ridership dropped because there is less train service since 2008. The three hour connection at Pittsburgh from the Capitol Limited about 4am!! to 7am with the Pennsylvania is not great for ridership.There also is short blocking on the train. How can you sell a Pittsburgh-Philly ticket when the seats sold east of Harrisburg? No cars added of course at Harrisburg! Times of travel could be cut by use of a Tilt Train like the two Wisconsin has and never used. Built just last year. Washington State also has this equipment. It's called Talgo. It doesn't have to take those hundreds of curves on the 1860 route at such slow speeds. Thereby reduceing travel times without expensive track projects. Really the train does well since you have such high fixed costs of stations and equipment. It would make sense to increase service to increase revenues. The foreign owned bus companys have a sweet deal. Not paying fuel taxes, getting grants to operate. From publicly owned terminals, on public roads. Oh, then there's the 9 million local government dollars for the Paris flights..how nice! But no money for trains. Oliver those services you discussed like the NEC do better because they don't have one train aday it's afleet of trains. Got it? The Pennsylvanian which can be sold out during popular travel times. Needs a Scranton Section and service run 3 times aday. Then on to Cleveland which is not far away. From Pittsburgh. Cleveland-Pittsburgh is a major corridor with one train aday in the middle of the night.
    amtrakpax