Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1
blue streak 1Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1
The caption to the lead picture seems to be wrong - 'Travelers taking a smoke break' - I don't see anyone smoking. Secondly from their dress it would appear to be a group of Menonites stretching their legs duing a station stop.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Please re-read the caption--it is "Travelers during a smoke break aboard the Empire Builder in Stanley, North Dakota. " Yes, they look like Mennonites; the smokers are probably a proper distance away from the door.
I have stepped off during the smoke break in Ottumwa--and avoided the smoke from the smokers.
Johnny
I think the title of this post is misleading. The NY Times doesn't believe Amtrak dining cars have merit, the writer of the article seems to think so.
BaltACD blue streak 1 Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1 The caption to the lead picture seems to be wrong - 'Travelers taking a smoke break' - I don't see anyone smoking. Secondly from their dress it would appear to be a group of Menonites stretching their legs duing a station stop.
blue streak 1 Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1
Do you really think the NYT is going to identify them as Mennonites?
blue streak 1 Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1 https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1
I wonder what he considers up-to-date-track to be.
BLS53 BaltACD blue streak 1 Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1 The caption to the lead picture seems to be wrong - 'Travelers taking a smoke break' - I don't see anyone smoking. Secondly from their dress it would appear to be a group of Menonites stretching their legs duing a station stop. Do you really think the NYT is going to identify them as Mennonites?
I suspect the NYT caption writers could probably identify all the Jewish sects from their attire, however, they most likely have never seen the Amish or Mennonites.
BaltACD BLS53 BaltACD blue streak 1 Article seems to support dining cars as a way to bring the country closer. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/28/arts/gabriel-kahane-amtrak-8980-brooklyn-academy-of-music.html?emc=eta1 The caption to the lead picture seems to be wrong - 'Travelers taking a smoke break' - I don't see anyone smoking. Secondly from their dress it would appear to be a group of Menonites stretching their legs duing a station stop. Do you really think the NYT is going to identify them as Mennonites? I suspect the NYT caption writers could probably identify all the Jewish sects from their attire, however, they most likely have never seen the Amish or Mennonites.
At times they have asked me if I, also, was taking a tour up to Alaska.
They certainly do not travel in the state of undress that is becoming quite common among coach passengers.
I wonder if the author knows that Amtrak loses $70 million to $85 million per year on its food and beverage services and roughly 85 percent of the losses are incurred by the long distance trains.
Amtrak's long distance trains carry less than one percent of intercity travelers in the United States. How socializing in the dining car or lounge car of a long distance train brings the country closer together escapes me. It strikes me as wishful thinking.
Rio Grande Valley, CFI,CFII
JPS1 I wonder if the author knows that Amtrak loses $70 million to $85 million per year on its food and beverage services and roughly 85 percent of the losses are incurred by the long distance trains. Amtrak's long distance trains carry less than one percent of intercity travelers in the United States. How socializing in the dining car or lounge car of a long distance train brings the country closer together escapes me. It strikes me as wishful thinking.
And, I have also had conversations with reasonable people.
Deggesty JPS1 I wonder if the author knows that Amtrak loses $70 million to $85 million per year on its food and beverage services and roughly 85 percent of the losses are incurred by the long distance trains. Amtrak's long distance trains carry less than one percent of intercity travelers in the United States. How socializing in the dining car or lounge car of a long distance train brings the country closer together escapes me. It strikes me as wishful thinking. I have had some conversatins in diners with people who, I believe, are certifiable for a change of residence and cannot see reason in views that collide with theirs. And, I have also had conversations with reasonable people.
I have had some conversatins in diners with people who, I believe, are certifiable for a change of residence and cannot see reason in views that collide with theirs.
I guess you save your snarkiness for people who take exception with your sense of entitlement to subsidized conversations for the benefit less than 1% of intercity travelers.
JPS1 Amtrak's long distance trains carry less than one percent of intercity travelers in the United States. How socializing in the dining car or lounge car of a long distance train brings the country closer together escapes me.
Amtrak's long distance trains carry less than one percent of intercity travelers in the United States. How socializing in the dining car or lounge car of a long distance train brings the country closer together escapes me.
blue streak 1 JPS1 Amtrak's long distance trains carry less than one percent of intercity travelers in the United States. How socializing in the dining car or lounge car of a long distance train brings the country closer together escapes me. Wrong statistic. LD trains receive what in revenue ? ~ 40% ?
If the LD trains handle 40% of the passenger-miles and incur 38% of operating costs, it sounds like their costs are in line with the service rendered.
MidlandMike If the LD trains handle 40% of the passenger-miles and incur 38% of operating costs, it sounds like their costs are in line with the service rendered.
Problem being that 'cost in line with service rendered' is still the wrong metric for service that is at least politically tasked with showing a nominal profit. The 'income' from that 40% is inadequate to cover that ~38% ... until that fact is fixed (e.g. by charging rates that cover actual costs, not unthinkable for at least the parts of LD service now typically booked to 100% capacity) it does not matter that cost per mile happens to near-coincide with long-distance mileage run -- that is an important thing to recognize, but not enough to justify retention outside of accepted and perpetual subsidy.
Overmod MidlandMike If the LD trains handle 40% of the passenger-miles and incur 38% of operating costs, it sounds like their costs are in line with the service rendered. Problem being that 'cost in line with service rendered' is still the wrong metric for service that is at least politically tasked with showing a nominal profit. The 'income' from that 40% is inadequate to cover that ~38% ... until that fact is fixed (e.g. by charging rates that cover actual costs, not unthinkable for at least the parts of LD service now typically booked to 100% capacity) it does not matter that cost per mile happens to near-coincide with long-distance mileage run -- that is an important thing to recognize, but not enough to justify retention outside of accepted and perpetual subsidy.
Not sure where "service that is at least politically tasked with showing a nominal profit." comes from. Is this a concept evolved from the original Amtrak creation, or something from PRIIA? The concept has never measured up to what actually happens. Amtrak's political task is to maintain legislative support for its continued existance, which it does by serving 46 of the continous 48 states. Amtrak might be compared to the proverbial 3 legged stool. One leg is the NEC which serves the populous (read voter rich) Northeast; The LD trains serve rural America (electoral rich); and the state supported corridor trains fill in the center. If you remove one of the legs, the political stool will fall over. And as implied, the state supported corridors get additional public money from the states, and the NEC (while it shows an operating profit) needs tens of $billions of capital monies to get it in a state of good repair and replace aging infrastructure.
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