Chicago Sun-Times

PROPOSED METRA ELECTRIC CHANGES RAISE CONCERNS

- BY ELLA LEE, STAFF REPORTER elee@suntimes.com | @ByEllaLee

Metra Electric riders may soon have a longer commute.

As Metra begins implementi­ng Positive Train Control (PTC) safety systems on those trains, it plans to condense the current three groups of stations served to two during rush hour, leading to more stops at some stations, fewer at others and longer rides for everyone.

For many residents off the line, the biggest concern is a systemwide reduction of stops at the 59th Street station, where the University of Chicago is located. The new schedule would cut the number of inbound stops there from 14 to three.

“Reducing so many trains inbound and outbound will cause a problem,” said Julie Clack, a graphic designer at UChicago. “I don’t want to take a train at 6 a.m. to get to work at 8 a.m.”

Some students who attend the university’s Laboratory Schools will be affected as well.

Vicki Stevenson’s two kids leave the house at 7:05 a.m. to make their train to Lab. They may have to leave nearly a half an hour earlier and transfer trains on the way.

“The train that would get them [to school] on time is being eliminated,” Stevenson said. “If they attempted a slightly later train or if the train at Kensington was even a minute late, they’d be late for school.”

Metra must have PTC on all trains by the end of 2020, as required by the Positive Train Control Enforcemen­t and Implementa­tion Act of 2015. PTC is designed to automatica­lly stop trains before specific accidents occur.

For it to work, train engineers must enter data about the train and its route before departing. That adds about five minutes to the time it already takes Metra to “flip” trains and send them out again, according to Metra spokesman Michael Gillis.

That’s time Metra can’t afford to waste. “The trains come in and out so fast, and they do turn around and in less than 10 minutes, but that can no longer happen because of PTC,” Gillis said. “That change just snowballs throughout the system.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States