USA TODAY US Edition

What to know as Amtrak train service comes back

- Curtis Tate

Amtrak is starting to emerge from the coronaviru­s crisis.

It received $1 billion from Congress through the CARES Act. On Monday, its flagship Acela service will resume in the Northeast, as will other trains that were canceled. It’s in the process of testing the Acela’s replacemen­t, which is scheduled to begin service next year.

At the same time, the national passenger railroad is projecting that ridership and ticket revenue next year will be half what it was in 2019. It plans to lay off 20% of its workforce and is asking Congress for nearly $1.5 billion more, and yet it still may have to cut train service next year.

Amtrak turns 50 in 2021, but it could take years for the railroad to recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic. Here’s what riders can expect for now.

Acela, other trains return

The Amtrak’s Acela trains will return to the Northeast Corridor from Boston to New York to Washington on Monday for the first time since March.

Amtrak will operate three weekday round trips. The slower Northeast Regional service will increase to 10 weekday round trips from eight.

Also Monday, Amtrak will resume operating its Keystone trains between Philadelph­ia and Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia, with nine weekday round trips and six weekend round trips. The Pennsylvan­ian train will resume operating adaily round trip Monday from New York to Philadelph­ia to Pittsburgh.

And Amtrak will bring back the Hiawatha train between Chicago and Milwaukee, with one daily round trip. Four more round trips will resume June 29.

In California, Amtrak’s Pacific Surfliner will return north of Santa Barbara on the Los Angeles-San Luis Obispo route, with one round trip daily. An additional two round trips will operate between Santa Barbara and Los Angeles.

Amtrak is in the process of testing its new Acela fleet in Colorado and the Northeast. The trains, which will begin service next year, have a top speed of 160 mph, 10 mph faster than the current fleet.

What’s different on board

Much like airlines, Amtrak has made adjustment­s. The railroad is waiving change and cancellati­on fees for reservatio­ns made by Aug. 31. It’s also limiting ticket sales to 50% of each train’s capacity to maintain social distance between passengers.

Amtrak has enhanced the cleaning and disinfecti­ng of surfaces and hightouch areas on trains and in stations. It has installed clear protective barriers at stations. Passengers are required to wear face coverings on trains and in stations, except in private rooms or when seated alone.

Food service is carry-out only, and cafe car seating is closed. Sneeze guards have been installed at cafe counters, and physical distancing markers and signs have been added. Amtrak is only accepting cashless payments.

Fewer employees, fewer trains

Amtrak carried a record 32.5 million passengers in 2019. In 2021, the railroad anticipate­s only half as many will board.

CEO Bill Flynn told employees in a memo this week that the railroad would cut up to 20% of its workforce by October in what he called “an adjustment we must make.” Flynn said Amtrak would try to offer as many voluntary separation­s and retirement­s as possible before it turns to layoffs. In a letter to Congress, Flynn said Amtrak was struggling to get its routes to 10% of the number of passengers it carried before the pandemic.

And Flynn asked lawmakers to give the railroad another $1.475 billion in addition to the $1 billion in emergency funding it already received.

Even with the extra funding, Amtrak would need to cut service across its more than 21,000-mile system. Longdistan­ce trains that operate daily could be cut back to three days a week.

 ?? AMTRAK ?? The Amtrak Acela Express will travel at speeds of up to 160 mph.
AMTRAK The Amtrak Acela Express will travel at speeds of up to 160 mph.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States