Midland: You can remember ONCE an Empire Builder getting stuck in a blizzard? Not bad for a train operating for 88 consecutive winters. Actually, it's happened more than once, and how many times has granny frozen to death? These storms happen multiple times every winter season, and instances of catastophe are so rare that reality of passenger trains being established as dependable all-weather transportation (until now, evidently) had been established. As for other laughable points in the post:
If the CP was the main concern (and there is no information to suggest that it was), why not operate the service between the West Coast and Twin Cities? As for granny being left off at a station without heat or a way to get anywhere: This has actually happened, and if all these worst-case scenarios occur simultaneously, the person stays on the train to the next stop, or the train is held until transportation is available (this happened several years ago when Amtrak couldn't find anyone to work the ticket agent's job at a location, but also didn't bother to have anyone open the station. They "fixed" the problem by destaffing it.) With regard to signals and the like: Depends on the type they are. Some can operate by battery power for days. Switch heaters often use propane. Again it depends. With regard towns like Red Wing, Winona, La Crosse, Tomah, and Wisconsin Dells, the stations (all with heated waiting areas) are right in town where emergency transportation and access to emergency services are accessible should (under your worst case scenario) the power and natural gas to these stations go out. Growing up in Northern Montana, I can't recall a time when the streets were not kept in a condition that main arteries were not usuable. Sometimes school buses didn't go out of town, but school is rarely canceled for those livinig in town.
Also, the "4 day storm" was not forecast to be in this area for four days. Proof: If it was Amtrak would have annulled the trains for four days instead of two! (It's basically a two-day event in the Twin Cities.) The signal system going dark is inconsequential compared to radios being operable. You don't need signals to operate, even in CTC, if you can talk to the control operator. Under this armageddonish scenario, I'm sure you could contend that all radios everywhere would be out of service for weeks, but depending on the railroad, they also have backup power, and the reality is that most radios can broadcast many miles and overlap, so indeed it is more likely that all radio communication would not be lost. This is another historical fact, much like the fact that the Empire Builder has been dependable for 88 winters until now: Railroads by initial design tend to be relatively self sufficient with regard to things like power and communication.
It's easy to do the "what if" scenario stated by Midland Mike, but of course if railroading was really like that, not a wheel would turn. But there is another side to this twisted way of thought. I recall my Little League coach's son who was diagnosed with a rare condition that paralyzed him from the neck down. Doctors in Montana immediately referred him to Mayo in Rochester. It was right before Christmas, so the last minute airfare was astronomical. They chose the Empire Builder instead, which turned out to be a wise choice, because the day they were supposed to travel, the planes were grounded (due to a blizzard like this), and he couldn't have made the trip. The Empire Builder reached St. Paul hours late, but he got to Rochester where the wizards of Mayo did their magic, and he returned to work less than a month later. The bigger question here has to be: How many similar situations are NOT occurring out there because the Empire Builder did NOT operate?
I can recall as a train dispatcher along the Empire Builder route when freight power was dispatched to rescue an Empire Builder that was getting stuck in the snow due to a blizzard. The freight power ferried a fresh section crew, fresh operating crew, and signal people to the passenger train whose crew couldn't get a line and lock on a dual control switch. This is typical. The host railroads just don't let Amtrak sit....there are options and again, owing to their historic status as being self-sufficient. It's all part of the established operating procedures that they manage their own right of way, regardless of the status of utilities and public-maintained infrastructure.
And lastly, I recall one time the crew on the westbound Empire Builder contacted me (as the dispatcher) and advised that their stop at Browning, Montana might be a bit long because they first had to make sure that the snowmobile entourage was on hand for detraining passengers. All the roads were closed in the area, and the depot in Browning is two miles south of town, yet the passengers had arranged for friends to snowmobiles to meet the train. This was tricky since the train could get delayed and the wind chill was in the -40F range. This was in the days of no cell phones, but the snowmobilers had somehow gotten the word that the train had departed the previous stop of Cut Bank, and they arranged to be at the Browning station about 30 minutes later. The Amtrak crew called me back and advised that there would be no delay as the snowmobile patrol was waiting on the platform. The purpose of these stories is to also interject that not everyone is as helpless in the unlikely scenario you portray. People who live in these areas know what to do and how to deal with a lot of these situations, which are all the more manageable because passenger trains do relatively well traveling in adverse weather and are on a fixed right of way. Living in Northern Michigan, an area with lots of winter, I would have hoped that you, too, would understand this.
Mark Meyer
Don't know whether Weather (pun intended) stabbed the California Zepher but it lost 12 hours in Western Nebraska, Eastern Colorado this morning.
Anyone got any info?
I have been watching this storm intently as it is impacting where I live in the northern LP of Michigan. Initial predictions were for a total ice build-up of a inch over the 4 day storm. From what I could see, the worst part of the storm (along the EB Route) was south of Minneapolis, i.e. on the CP, not the BNSF. An inch of ice build-up on power lines, trees, and roads would bring normal activities to a stop, and also affect emergency services. Do you want granny to be left off the train at a station without heat, while her ride is stuck in a ditch? With expected power outages, how long would signals work? I seem to remember once an Amtrack Empire Builder stuck in a blizzard on the plains, only able to move back and forth a short distance to keep the wheels from freezing to the track.
Just what costs are being saved ? Is the BNSF track charges reduced ? Does the OBS and T&E crews get paid anyway ? Reservations will have to spend extra time rebooking the cancelled passengers. Station charges do not decrease. No fuel use charges but those locos still idle. Rail cars do not have any wear and tear. Rail cars can get some PM work but CHI's reputation ? ?
The thing that gets me is that, here in Minnesota anyway, the only CPRS and BNSF terminals that are going to be greatly impacted by this are Tracy (CPRS), Waseca (CPRS), Glenwood (CPRS) and Willmar (BNSF). None of these are on the Empire Builder route.
Dakguy201 The eastbound Cal Zephyr of the 12th has lost more than 7 hours between Denver and Hastings, NE. Conditions on Interstate 80 in western Nebraska were bad enough last night that the highway was closed. It's still winter on the plains, folks!
The eastbound Cal Zephyr of the 12th has lost more than 7 hours between Denver and Hastings, NE. Conditions on Interstate 80 in western Nebraska were bad enough last night that the highway was closed. It's still winter on the plains, folks!
Dakguy201 I'm not at all sure I understand what that means.
I'm not at all sure I understand what that means.
This is the last paragraph of the Newswire article:
"Other than a concern for passenger safety, contributing to the cancellation decision is likely a management structure that for the first time in decades fails to make any manager responsible for balancing a route’s revenue and growth potential against adverse affects of inconveniencing travelers, while many departments are charged with cutting costs."
VerMontanan,
You are right, I missed that. However, do you think I might be right that the Amtrak brass are saying “Oh my God, it’s going to snow 6 inches, shut everthing down” Where as the folks on the western plains would be making sure the plows and snow fighters are in place and that there is a good supply of switch brooms.
CPRcst The BNSF brass would agree with the nervous Nellies from Amtrak HQ because it gave them one less train to worry about.
The BNSF brass would agree with the nervous Nellies from Amtrak HQ because it gave them one less train to worry about.
Is it possible that this is a difference in perception of the severity of weather. Amtrak decision making folks on the east coast will view this storm differently than the railway ops folks in the west.
I live on the Canadian Prairies where the criteria for an official Blizzard Warning is as follows:When winds of 40 km/hr (25 mph) or greater are expected to cause widespread reductions in visibility to 400 metres or less, due to blowing snow, or blowing snow in combination with falling snow, for at least 4 hours.
A snowfall warning is issued if more than 4 inches are expected in 12 hours. However life continues as normal until roads are impassible. During big storms the main problem at the railway I worked at wasn’t getting trains through but employees getting in to work on snow clogged roads.
My brother in law in Kentucky tells me his grandkids had two days off school when it snowed an inch.
CMStPnP Amtrak's toilet retention systems as well as their onboard food storage are not built to withstand a large break between service intervals or even one skipped service interval stop. So if there is even a chance the train will be significantly delayed due to the snow they should cancel the train in advance just as a service to the traveling public. This is not the 1950's where we had a whole network of passenger trains as well as passenger train resupply and service points all over the country. Both are very limited now.
Amtrak's toilet retention systems as well as their onboard food storage are not built to withstand a large break between service intervals or even one skipped service interval stop. So if there is even a chance the train will be significantly delayed due to the snow they should cancel the train in advance just as a service to the traveling public. This is not the 1950's where we had a whole network of passenger trains as well as passenger train resupply and service points all over the country. Both are very limited now.
Bullshit. The Empire Builder has been operating with the same equipment (Superliners) since October of 1979 with basically the same servicing opportunities since 1971, and was/is the only train on most of its route for the past 47 years. Winter, being the seasonal event that it is, happens every year, often with a great degree of severity along the Empire Builder route. Using your logic, the Empire Builder should not run for six months of the year, because between the cold of the prairies, the snow of the mountains, and the mudslide threat along the coast, there's always something at COULD happen along the way. Yet while there have been isolated incidents during the winter, for the most part the train has fulfilled its role as all-weather transportation. No. "Chicken Little" railroading is not the way to go, and is not what is expected along the Empire Builder route, a route where people have always historically chosen the train when other forms of transportation (if there are any) are not available due to weather.
CMStP&P---" if there is even a chance the train will be significantly delayed due to the snow they should cancel the train in advance just as a service to the traveling public. This is not the 1950's where we had a whole network of passenger trains as well as passenger train resupply and service points all over the country. Both are very limited now."
I believe that is the sad sad truth. Thats progress!? Instead of stepping up and demonstrating through strength the inherent and one true advantage the railroads have, they retreat behind weakness. It is rather stunning. I suppose this is the ways its going to be henceforth.
The railroads of the past were not reckless or careless when it came to bad weather but rather were confident and responsive and could be totally relied upon.
Wow, someone actually, other than the Weather Channel itself, mentioned a storm by the Weather Channel name.
Probably less the mentality about the weather, but the mentality about the lawyers.
Jeff
Amtrak's toilet retention systems as well as their onboard food storage are not built to withstand a large break between service intervals or even one skipped service interval stop. I have observed this myself on the Texas Eagle on more than one trip where the service was not done in San Antonio after the train arrived from LA Eastbound. By Arkansas the Superliner starts to wreak of raw sewage. If your a railfan maybe you can tolerate that smell but most traveling passengers would rather do without. Likewise a skip of the food resupply in San Antonio resulted in only two food items being available for Dinner and Lunch North of Dallas.........Hot Dogs and Hamburgers. Again, if your paying for a First Class ticket you tend to expect better.
So if there is even a chance the train will be significantly delayed due to the snow they should cancel the train in advance just as a service to the traveling public. This is not the 1950's where we had a whole network of passenger trains as well as passenger train resupply and service points all over the country. Both are very limited now.
The current predicted path of the storm (The Weather Channel is calling it "Xanto") crosses the Empire Builder route around the Twin Cities of Minnesota and La Crosse, WI. Yet, Amtrak is cancelling service for the ENTIRE route. They also canceled one round trip in March. Given the route of this train and the current Amtrak mentality with weather, expect the train to be annulled most of next winter. It's important to remember that passenger trains didn't have a reputation of being an all-weather mode of transportation for no reason. Amtrak's policy is challenging a century of historical precedent.
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