TALKING TRANSPORTATION: Peak Fares to Return on Metro-North, Ridership Flat, New Interim President

By Jim Cameron

This week, updates on a few interesting developments in transportation:

PEAK FARES: On March 1 Metro-North will again start charging peak fares during rush hours. But the railroad will also offer new discounts: 10% off a monthly pass and discounted 20-trip tickets. On the subways and buses they’ll give passengers free rides for the week after they pay 12 one-way fares via the new OMNY scanners. They’re calling it “fare capping”, giving frequent riders free rides after paying $33.

ADDED SERVICE?: The railroad says it’s evaluating adding more service, speeding up express trains etc. But no plans have been announced. Bottom line: rush hour passengers will pay more but get no faster nor more frequent trains.

RIDERSHIP FLAT: Many NYC businesses have finally called their employees back to the office at least a few days each week. Station parking lots are filling up again, but weekday ridership is still only about 40-45% of pre-pandemic numbers, far below the railroad consultant’s expectations, thanks to Omicron.

CATHERINE RINALDI: With this past week’s surprise retirement of LIRR President Philip Eng, Metro-North’s CEO Catherine Rinaldi has been named interim-President of the Long Island Railroad. Rinaldi’s career started on the LIRR and she is widely respected in the industry, if now spread a bit thin.

FREE TRANSIT: We should closely watch Boston’s experiment with free bus fares on its three most heavily traveled routes. Something like 100,000 daily riders will see faster service as they can now board by all doors, speeding up dwell time at stops. The experiment furthers Boston Mayor Michele Wu’s dreams of free transit city-wide and is being paid for with $8 million in COVID relief money from DC. (NYC already offers 50% discount on MetroCards for low income residents.)

CRUMBLING CONCRETE: Darien’s train station saw 200 feet of the NY-bound platform closed for safety reasons this week when inspections found the decades-old concrete structure was crumbling. The station was already planned for a $34 million platform replacement program, apparently not implemented in time to avoid this situation.

WI-FI ON METRO-NORTH: You can “surf” on planes, many buses and even Amtrak. But you can’t find Wi-Fi on Metro-North as the railroad seems uninterested in investing in the tech, and probably with good reason. But now Governor Lamont is offering to invest $30 million in onboard Wi-Fi, just as 5G cellphone technology is being rolled out, possibly making Wi-Fi obsolete. No response yet from the railroad on the Governor’s plan.

LAMONT’S BUDGET: Given that it’s an election year and the state is enjoying a record surplus, the Governor kicked off the short legislative session with a number of big spending ideas. Backed by $1 billion in federal infrastructure spending for the state, Lamont has doubled-down on expanding service on the Danbury and Waterbury branch lines. And yes, he’s still pretending it’s feasible to cut 30 minutes running time each way between New Haven and NYC.

IS COVID DONE?: Masks are coming off (but not yet on transit, per the Feds) and things seem to be reopening. Still, Connecticut is averaging about 19 deaths a week from COVID. Half of those hospitalized with COVID are vaccinated break-thru cases. So is COVID done or are we just done with it?

Jim Cameron will present his talk “Off the rails: CT’s transportation future” on Fri 2/18 speaking to the New Canaan Mens Assoc, 10 AM at St Mark’s Church.

JIM CAMERON has lived in Darien for over 25 years. He serves on the Darien RTM and is Program Director of Darien TV79. He served 19 years on the CT Metro-North Rail Commuter Council, four as its Chairman. In 2014 he founded a new advocacy group, The Commuter Action Group which speaks on behalf of Metro-North riders. His newspaper column “Talking Transportation” archives can be found at http://talkingtransportation.blogspot.com/