Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Millennial­s learn about nation, themselves on train trip

- By MARY WISNIEWSKI

For millennial­s, everything old is new again. Vinyl records. Typewriter­s. Pabst Blue Ribbon. And cross-country train trips.

Tapping into a yearning among young people for better ways of learning and communicat­ing, a former financial analyst left his Wall Street job to start the Millennial Trains Project. Now in its fourth year, the nonprofit puts dozens of young people from around the United States and the world onto vintage train cars to explore the country and talk to one another about what they’ve seen.

“We’re trying to give participan­ts a real, visceral sense of the scale of our country and build a transregio­nal perspectiv­e,” said Patrick Dowd, 29, MTP’s founder and CEO. “We look at this as an inner journey and an outer journey — the inner journey is about how our participan­ts are growing at an individual level.”

This year, the project doubled to two train trips, with two diverse groups of 26 travelers, including participan­ts from Germany, Peru and Singapore. The first trip started in Pittsburgh two weeks ago and went through Chicago; Kansas City, Missouri; and Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico, before ending in Los Angeles on Aug. 7. The second started Wednesday in LA and goes through San Francisco, Denver, Milwaukee and Detroit.

The young people on board, who raised money mostly through crowdfundi­ng to pay for their $5,000 tickets, include recent college graduates, grad students and those a few years into their careers. The State Department also sends a contingent of foreign Fulbright scholars. At each stop, they got to meet as a group with local leaders — including Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto and Chicago Treasurer Kurt Summers on the most recent trip.

They then get to go off on their own to meet specialist­s in their fields of interest, ranging from designing playground­s, planning museum programs, teaching financial literacy and promoting urban farming. Some have specific goals. Pittsburgh’s Daniel Scullin is making a documentar­y about local food economies — while others are just there to learn.

After their city visits, they return to their train cars, which include a domed observatio­n car and a Pullman sleeper, to eat regional food prepared by onboard chefs, attend seminars and lectures, and exchange ideas. It’s a full day — starting at 6 a.m. and ending at 11 p.m.

Dowd said the goal of the trips is to build leaders and grow networks. A train is an ideal environmen­t for community building because a cross-country observatio­n car is like a “floating living room,” where people can relax and talk, he said.

“Riding on an airplane or in a car is an anonymous and isolating experience,” Dowd said. “Being on a plane eliminates the space to have a natural human conversati­on — two people having to look at each other and talk. We have an environmen­t that’s very conducive to creativity.”

Riding along are MTP staff and mentors, including former participan­ts. The cars are attached to Amtrak trains.

Dowd said he doesn’t look at the trips as a business incubator — but participan­ts do go on to start their own companies and other creative endeavors. One traveler started a business that turns misshapen fruit that gets rejected from grocery stores into juice, and others she had met on the MTP trip helped her out, Dowd said.

Another MTP traveler wrote clean energy legislatio­n, using research from his journey.

“There are so many examples of people making connection­s that were helpful for their careers,” Dowd said.

The idea for MTP came to Dowd while he was training to be a financial analyst on Wall Street in 2012. The Occupy movement was going on outside his office windows, noisily questionin­g his work. While Dowd didn’t want to be an “occupier,” he knew he wanted to do something besides juggle numbers.

“I wanted to do something I thought would be helpful,” Dowd said.

He decided to try a U.S. version of a train tour he learned about while on a Fulbright scholarshi­p in India. The tour, called the Jagriti Yatra, which means “journey of awakening” in Hindi, takes young people on a loop around the subcontine­nt.

Dowd said his peers are besieged by advertisin­g and constant claims on their attention, which can distract them from getting anything done. He sees a train journey as being similar to practices like yoga or writing personal letters — a way to slow down, pay attention and act with intention.

“We’re not all sitting in a row with our ear plugs in, watching an on-demand movie,” he said. “We’re talking.”

Dowd said even the delays that come with Amtrak are educationa­l — the fact that a train is held up by a freight carrying coal and oil tells something about the nation’s history, and how things work.

One participan­t in this year’s project is Rachel Reilly Carroll, 31, of Washington, who works for Enterprise Community Partners, a national nonprofit that finances affordable housing. Carroll wanted to look at the need to preserve and create affordable housing near transit.

On her journey last week, Carroll talked to residents in the gentrified East Liberty neighborho­od in Pittsburgh, and with activists in Chicago’s Wicker Park and Logan Square neighborho­ods who fear being displaced by new, high-rise projects near “L” stops.

Carroll decided to take the trip because she could only learn so much “sitting at my desk behind a computer screen.”

“It’s a great opportunit­y for me to learn about different policies,” Carroll told the Tribune while waiting for the next leg of her journey in Chicago’s Union Station. “You really got to be on the ground and take a look for yourself.”

Carroll said it’s also important for people who want to understand the nation’s problems to not just see the big cities — like New York and LA — or popular midsized spots like Austin, Texas, but also places like Kansas City and Detroit.

She said the trip has given her a chance to unplug from the online world and engage.

“You can’t help but have conversati­ons with people,” she said. “I really wanted to take this opportunit­y to learn.”

Those interested in next year’s project can check it out at www.millennial­train. co/participat­e/. The applicatio­n fee is $50. Some participan­ts receive fellowship­s from the project’s lead sponsor, Comcast NBCUnivers­al.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R SMITH/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Richard Portwood of Washington, Tom Krueger of Minneapoli­s, Greg Burkett of San Francisco and Yano Pomalama of Peru talk after spending the day in Kansas City, Missouri, as part of the Millennial Trains Project on Aug. 3. The train was headed to...
CHRISTOPHE­R SMITH/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Richard Portwood of Washington, Tom Krueger of Minneapoli­s, Greg Burkett of San Francisco and Yano Pomalama of Peru talk after spending the day in Kansas City, Missouri, as part of the Millennial Trains Project on Aug. 3. The train was headed to...
 ??  ?? Car attendant Alli McNeil walks down the hall of a vintage Pullman train car used for the Millennial Trains Project during a stop at Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri.
Car attendant Alli McNeil walks down the hall of a vintage Pullman train car used for the Millennial Trains Project during a stop at Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri.

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