"It arrived on time just 22 percent of the time in August, the most recent month for which data are available. Each trip on the Cardinal (in Gazette photo) was more than four hours late, on average. Even when the Cardinal is on time, it takes far longer than driving. Traveling by rail from Charleston to Washington takes nine hours and 40 minutes when there are no delays; driving tends to be about three hours shorter."
The news peg for Morris's story was Senate passage of $11.4 billion in new money for Amtrak over the next six years, which West Virginia Sen. Robert Byrd, The Cardinal's chief patron, called "a great day for rail passengers in West Virginia." Morris notes, however, that "Much of the new proposed funding would come only after states start spending on Amtrak improvements," and ridership is "down significantly in West Virginia — and the new legislation hints that sparsely traveled, money-losing routes will be held to account before long." The House is expected to act on the legislation next year. (Read more)
No comments:
Post a Comment