The Delaware Valley Rail Passenger Electronic Edition March 1994 Vol. XII, No. 3 ISSN 1073-6859 Published by the Delaware Valley Association of Railroad Passengers in the interest of continued, improved, and expanded rail service for the present and potential railroad and rail transit passengers of southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and nearby areas. For more information about DVARP and good rail service, please contact us: P.O. Box 7505, Philadelphia, PA 19101 215-222-3373 <73243.1224@compuserve.com> or **Schedule change alert: Daylight time ends April 10. New timetables will take effect then on Amtrak and SEPTA and NJ Transit commuter trains, and SEPTA suburban transit. **NARP Region III Meeting: Sat., Apr. 16, in Wilmington call 302-995-6419 for information Inside the Delaware Valley Rail Passenger... @@A SEPTA Mum on Threat to Cynwyd Trains: We (Still) Await Your Reply @@B From the Editor's Seat: Dear Congresswoman-- @@C DVARP Resolution on Fed Budget @@D Election Time is Coming: Get Involved @@E Still More Snow! @@F Storms Hit Transit in the Wallet @@G On the Railroad Lines... Old Breaker Blues You Have Been Warned... 30th St. Work Underway New RRD Customer Center @@R1 Downed Wire Brings Ire @@R2 Put to Sleep by Slow Train? LumberWorks Latest @@R5 Bryn Mawr Rebuild OKed Man Arrested in Lansdale Assaults: Hey Fort Washington: Got a Light? Lansdale Trans. Center Proposed @@R6 SEPTA Sues to Stop Floods @@R7 Platforms Curtailed @@R8 Trespasser Struck @@H SEPTA RRD Notes Snow Brakes? How About Leaf Brakes? Order, Order! Focus on 'Snowbirds' Rails Help 'the Competition' @@I SEPTA Suburban Transit Division N5 Lease to Net $1.3 M New 'Pans' for Trolleys @@J SEPTA City Transit/Subway-Elevated Division Concourse Much Improved Alternative for DelCo Homeless Stalled Risky Business, Those Stairs New Frankford Terminal in Design Stage El Redecking Continues Single Tracking Between 30th and 52nd The Team that Rides Together...? @@K SEPTA City Transit/Light Rail Division Confusion in the Subway Trolley Coalition Tours Elmwood @@L SEPTA City Transit Schedule Change Highlights @@M SEPTA City Transit/Surface Division Snow Solutions Coming? Meritorious Service Medals 'Biodiesel' Demonstration @@N Where's Route 202? @@O Wayne Junction: The Story That Didn't Happen @@P Norristown-Reading Opportunity? @@Q 422 "Town Center" Dead, Kulpsville Plan Alive @@R MontCo Grants for Community Service? @@S SEPTA Coalition Reawakens? @@T Phone Changes @@U Employer Trip Reduction Upheld Again @@V Mediator Sought in Trackage Issues @@W Another Term for Board Honchos @@X $1.7 Billion California Road Subsidy @@Y Grade Crosssing Crash in DelCo: 4 Dead @@Z Trailways Teams with Amtrak @@AA 30th Street in a Pickle! @@BB Diamond State Notes Snow Hits Evening Service @@CC South Jersey Update PATCO Celebrates 25th DVARP Committee Meets with Senator DVARP Ad Seeks Moorestown Support NJ Study: Transit is Part of the Job Plan NJT Ridership Stats @@DD How a Cynwyd Closure Would Affect 400,000 Residents @@EE Railroads, People Take 2nd Place in Foreign Affairs @@FF Countrywide 'Highway Revolt' @@GG Think Spring! Get Out Your Bicycle! @@HH Green Time- a Great Idea @@II Architectural and Engineering Marvel Reborn @@JJ GAO Says Transit Shortchanged @@KK Computer Corner: DVRP Now on Fidonet @@LL Site Set for NARP Region III Meeting @@MM Evening DVARP Meeting @@NN DVARP to Host '95 Meeting? @@OO Dates of Interest @@PP DVARP Membership/Renewal Coupon @@QQ Up and Down the Corridor Snow Cripples LIRR More Park in Metropark WMATA to Lose its 'Edge?' @@RR DVARP Phone & Voice-mail Directory @@SS Upcoming DVARP Meetings: Saturday, March 19, 1:00 to 4:00 Collingswood Public Library Thursday, April 14, 6:00 to 9:00 pm Temple University Center City Saturday, April 16, 10:00 am NARP Region III Meeting, Wilmington @@TT Agenda for the March meeting: @@UU Committee Meetings: DVARP President: Chuck Bode Newsletter Editor: Matthew Mitchell Production Manager: Tom Borawski for other officers and committee chairs, see page 19 entire contents copyright (C) 1994 DVARP Opinions expressed in The Delaware Valley Rail Passenger are not necessarily those of DVARP or its members. We welcome your comments: call 215-222-3373 News compiled by Matthew Mitchell and correspondents: Chuck Bode, Howard Bender, Tom Borawski, Betsey Clarke, John Dawson, Aron Eisenpress, Lucia Esther, Mimi Halpern, John Hay, Bob Machler, Don Nigro, John Pawson, Raymond Straub. Additional news from BITNET, Bicycle Coalition of the Delaware Valley, Delaware County Daily Times, KYW-AM, Lansdale Reporter, Newark Star- Ledger, the News-Gleaner, Norristown Times-Herald, Passenger Transport, Philadelphia Daily News, Philadelphia Inquirer, Pottstown Mercury, USENET, Washington Post. The Delaware Valley Rail Passenger is a charter member of the Rail Online Newswire. @@A SEPTA Mum on Threat to Cynwyd Trains: We (Still) Await Your Reply by John Pawson Indications are that the remnant of service to Cynwyd is to become SEPTA's next commuter rail abandonment because of a decaying Amtrak- owned bridge, the condition of which is known by Amtrak but apparently is being ignored by SEPTA. The bridge now carries the outbound R6 Cynwyd trains. It crosses the abandoned freight yard near the abandoned 52nd Street Station in West Philadelphia, and is known as the "52nd Street Jumpover." This through- truss bridge formerly carried westbound SEPTA R5 Paoli-Parkesburg trains and Amtrak trains to Harrisburg and beyond, but those trains now use a new ground-level track. An Amtrak official told DVARP that rumors concerning the bridge's condition are true; Amtrak expects to take the span out of service: probably in 1994. DVARP therefore sent registered letters on December 6 to appropriate top SEPTA officials, outlining the problem and asking what action SEPTA is taking to maintain a suitable outbound route for the R6 Cynwyd trains. The obvious alternatives are repair of the bridge or construction of a 1500 foot ground-level track on existing grade from the new westbound R5/Amtrak track to the present R6 track beyond the jumpover. As of press time [February 26], no reply has been received by DVARP. We can only assume the following scenario will play out sometime this year: 1. Amtrak notifies SEPTA that the 52nd Street Jumpover will shortly (or immediately) be taken out of service. 2. Amtrak also tells SEPTA that the operation of both outbound and inbound R6 Cynwyd trains via the duckunder track at 52nd Street designed for inbound trains was previously tried and found to be infeasible because of the volume of peak train traffic in the 52nd Street area. 3. SEPTA blames Amtrak for "forcing" it to discontinue R6 Cynwyd service. If the Amtrak notice is urgent (recall the 1984 closure of the Columbia Avenue bridge), passengers may arrive at their stations unaware of what is happening. 4. SEPTA officials trot out a scheme for replacing the Cynwyd commuter rail service with a branch of the City Transit Division's light rail system "at some future date." SEPTA tells commuters and on-line civic associations that commuter rail service cannot be restored. SEPTA asks their support for "fast-tracking" the trolley scheme despite the fact that it has been rejected in the past by the commuters and the communities in which they live. Inside: A Better Idea for R6--search for @@DD @@B From the Editor's Seat: Dear Congresswoman-- I am writing this editorial to explain why the present plan to phase out (or substantially reduce) Federal operating support for mass transit is a bad idea. As long as there are young, elderly, and disabled people in America, America is going to need public transportation. To eliminate it or cut it back so far as to make it unusable is to say to these people that their contribution to society is not necessary. But while the people who cannot drive a car are the first reason transit exists, public transit cannot be economically viable unless it attracts discretionary ridership-people who choose (and let me stress the word "choose") to ride a train because it's convenient and they know it's good for their community. Every time someone chooses to leave the car at home, every other citizen benefits in many ways: Those who still drive will waste less time stuck in traffic-one less car will threaten the lives of our children-we all will have cleaner air to breathe-a little bit less of Montgomery County will get paved over-and we will have one less driver picking taxpayers pockets. I can't emphasize the last point enough: though uninformed people may think that because the states and the Federal government tax gasoline, there is no subsidy for cars and trucks; the facts are that every driver gets a huge subsidy: 40 percent by DOT figures. Our property and wage taxes pay for local roads, our state sales taxes pay for cleaning up after storms, while you just voted to spend nearly two billion Federal dollars on repairing 'free'ways in California, deficit spending which our children will be paying for in their income taxes. As long as we cut transit subsidies while ignoring road subsidies, the decisions made by both governments and by individuals will be skewed. The marginal cost of driving is artificially low when compared to riding a train, so people drive even though trains are more efficient. Local governments build roads instead of mass transit, because they can get up to nine times more Federal subsidy per local dollar by building roads. Does this make sense? I am also distressed by the proposed funding cuts because it is this same Federal government which has imposed numerous mandates upon transit operators, but not provided the means to implement them. The Americans with Disabilities Act was just one of the most obvious; take also the Clean Air Act, the recent expansion of mandatory drug and alcohol testing. In passing these bills, your colleagues said they would benefit the entire nation, but none of those purported savings found their way back to the transit operators who paid for your largesse. You in Congress also place an ever-growing burden of safety regulations on mass transit, adding to the costs transit operators bear; but you cave in on auto safety mandates even though driving is ten times more hazardous than taking a train. We are a long way from having the balanced transportation system which will help rather than harm our community. Ending public transit subsidies but not ending road subsidies is the wrong way to go. Your constituent, Matthew Mitchell (The editor lives in the 13th Congressional District, Pennsylvania, presently represented by Marjorie Margoles-Mezvinsky [D]) @@C DVARP Resolution on Fed Budget At the February General Meeting, DVARP members rejected a resolution opposing the proposed Balanced Budget Amendment, voting instead to go on record that cuts in Federal spending should not further the imbalance in our transportation system. The resolution was proposed by members who feared that if the amendment were adopted, resulting cuts in Federal spending would disproportionally affect Amtrak and the nation's public transit systems, who already face reductions in their Federal operating support. (see cover story, February DVRP) After that resolution failed, an overwhelming majority of the members in attendance approved the alternative statement. DVARP President Chuck Bode wrote letters informing area lawmakers of the DVARP position and recommending that cuts needed to balance the Federal budget should target the insisious subsidies for highways, aviation, and waterways as well as rail transportation. ED. NOTE: The Balanced Budget Amendment failed to gain the required two- thirds Senate majority. @@D Election Time is Coming: Get Involved All U.S. House and some Senate seats are up for election this year, while Pennsylvania elects a governor, the entire house, and half its senators. Fields are shaping up, and the primary election is little more than a month away. Now is the time for DVARP members to attend candidate forums or otherwise contact the candidates. Ask the candidates their position on local and inter-city public transportation. Impress upon the candidates the importance of public transportation to your quality of life. A few dollars spent to attend a fundraiser could be a useful investment. And of course be sure to vote! It is much easier to elect pro-transit officials than to convert pro-auto officials after the election is over.-CB @@E Still More Snow! Another snowstorm hit the Delaware Valley February 11th, causing delays or annullments to many trains. SEPTA R8 Fox Chase and R6 Cynwyd and R5 Parkesburg-Paoli service were all canceled. Amtrak once again picked up Coatesville and Parkesburg commuters. During the evening rush, Fox Chase service was restored with delays. The Gallery closed early, causing confusion as passengers had to use the night entrances to Market East. On Suburban Transit the Route 100 trolley was shut down while 101 was detoured and route 107 and 120 bus service was suspended. Many other suburban and city lines were on detoured or truncated routes. Elwyn train/bus connections were canceled. Amtrak reported major delays on the Northeast Corridor and one hour Metroliner delays. Amtrak trains were reported to be very crowded. DART and NJ Transit had their share of problems, but PATCO kept soldiering on. All in all, familiarity bred contempt, as transit's snowfighters did a generally good job. Through there was a lot of it, the snow was light and easy to move, and were were spared another ice storm. @@F Storms Hit Transit in the Wallet SEPTA reported last month that the severe storms this winter were a big contributor to bus and rail operating expenses that were three million dollars over budget in January, while costing almost the same amount in lost revenue when passengers stayed home from work and school. Federal and state governments are not talking about any 'disaster aid' for the transit systems which got essential people to their jobs. Speaking to the Daily News, Lisa Mancini of SEPTA's budget and planning office said that raising fares to close a projected deficit in 1994 is virtually out of the question because of the likelihood that added revenue would be wiped out by lost ridership. @@G On the Railroad Lines... Old Breaker Blues During the afternoon of January 28th, SEPTA lost all power between Zoo and the SEPTA phase break just south of Temple Station. All Amtrak train service to 30th Street was knocked out. At first, the only SEPTA trains running were Reading-side trains operating RailWorks-style via Fern Rock. Later this service was lost too. An attempt to shunt SEPTA power through the tunnel resulted in the burning of 20 feet of catenary when a pantograph bridged the SEPTA- and Amtrak-powered sections. The Inquirer reported that by 4:20 all service was restored using only two tracks in the tunnel. Problems did persist into the night, though. Several more trains were badly delayed. The power problems were repeated on January 31st, well after evening rush hour. Power was lost through the tunnel. One SEPTA crew source reports that they were asked if they spotted any smoke in the service disruption area just before the power was shut down. Reading-side passengers were again asked to assume the RailWorks position and use the subway/Fern Rock connection. Limited service was restored to all lines later in the evening. The 10th brought another outage that caused outrage. Interviewed on KYW, SEPTA Railroad AGM Jim Palmer blamed a 1930's era circuit breaker that tripped when Amtrak energized a train. According to Palmer, the circuit breaker was destroyed, causing the delay. He added that the breakers have taken a beating from the weather.-TB You Have Been Warned... SEPTA is considering a ban on eating and drinking on RRD trains as a way of reducing trash and cleanup expenses. Sensing that train crews taking their breaks make up a significant source of the litter problem, management has put them on notice that if the conditions do not improve, such a ban will be put in place. Consider this a notice to the passengers, too. If you value the opportunity to enjoy your breakfast on the go, or a Fisher's pretzel or other Reading Market delight,, make sure you don't spoil it for us all- keep the seats clean and take your trash with you when you get off the train!s 30th St. Work Underway The long-delayed reconstruction of the SEPTA RRD section of Amtrak's 30th Street Station has finally begun. Half of the suburban concourse has been blocked off and enclosed to allow workers to remove asbestos insulation without posing a health hazard to passengers. New escalators, improved lighting, and reopening of the fire-damaged ticket office are promised on conclusion of the project. Trains will run as usual throughout the project. New RRD Customer Center SEPTA has replaced the stationmaster's office at Suburban Station with a new Customer Service Office located to the west of the Amtrak and SEPTA ticket counters. The new office is more visible and welcoming to passengers who have lost articles on trains, are trying to find the status of their trains, or want to register a complaint or commendation. @@R1 Downed Wire Brings Ire On the 7th of February, during evening rush, an R2 Warminster train pulled down some catenary between Elkins Park and Jenkintown. Service was partially restored by single tracking over the inbound track. *More power problems struck Sunday morning the 20th, delaying trains at Glenside. *During evening rush on the 9th the Reading trunk faced half hour delays due to a switch failure at Wayne Junction. *An unconfirmed SEPTA source said that cab signals went out for a short time between 16th Street Junction and Temple on the morning of February 24. Wasn't this repaired during RailWorks(R)?s @@R2 Put to Sleep by Slow Train? The Warminster line was reporting up to 20 minute delays during evening rush on the 17th due to police activity. A passenger slept past his station, jumped up, ran out of the train and fell off of the train and onto the platform at Willow Grove. LumberWorks Latest Those pesky passengers will have to get out of the way of SEPTA's contractors for daytime off-peak trains (Monday-Thursday) through March and Sunday trains through May 1st. Normal train service will run Easter Sunday, April 3. Snow and ice storms had forced LumberWorks to be postponed. *The Warminster line reported up to 30 minute delays on the 1st during morning rush due to signal problems. @@R3 *On the 29th of January at about 10 am, service south of Secane was suspended for a time due to an electrical problem. @@R5 Bryn Mawr Rebuild OKed The SEPTA Board approved at their February meeting a plan to reconstruct the switches at Bryn Mawr. The new switches will be remote-controlled from Paoli. The project is estimated to be completed by July 15th; total cost may reach $750,000 with SEPTA and Amtrak splitting the bill. SEPTA will receive a permanent $50,000 per year reduction in trackage fees. Man Arrested in Lansdale Assaults: Hey Fort Washington: Got a Light? According to the Reporter, a Hatfield Township resident was arrested February 1st in connection with a brutal attack on a Telford woman which took place near the Lansdale Station. The woman's throat and face were slashed in the attack by a male who took her purse. The woman was a passenger on SEPTA train 588. Police arrested the suspect after a four hour investigation. He was arraigned on charges of attempted homicide, aggravated assault, robbery and theft. Police disclosed on February 8th that they had found the attack weapon along with personal property of the victim. The knife was stained with blood and was found in weeds at the end of Linden Street. Whitemarsh police were investigating the suspect in a similar crime which took place at the Fort Washington station January 29th. A Fort Washington woman had her purse snatched after departing train 598 at 12:40 am. The description of her attacker matched that in the Lansdale incident. DVARP has received complaints that the lights have been out on the northbound platform and parking lot at Fort Washington Station for most of February. The lights were still out as of press time. DVARP has not received reports of police meeting trains at Fort Washington, but Lansdale Police have been observed meeting late-night trains. Nothing's Perfect The following was carried in the Reporter's anonymous "Sound Off" column: My husband pays an extra $10 a month to get a guaranteed reserved parking spot at the North Wales train station. The plowing was so poor that many of the parking spaces were covered with snow, which forced him to park in the road on Monday. Naturally, He got a ticket. SEPTA has agreed to reimburse him for the ticket, but every day this week he continues to have to park in the road. I just wish there could be more cooperation between SEPTA and the North Wales Police. Lansdale Trans. Center Proposed A public hearing is scheduled for March 18th at 2 pm in the Lansdale Borough Hall regarding the Lansdale station rehabilitation project. Parking will be increased from 192 spaces to 542, a new bus facility will be constructed in the Conrail freight area and the soil will be cleaned of contaminants. DVARP has endorsed this project as a better use of earmarked Federal funding than the proposed Gwynedd Valley Transportation Center. @@R6 SEPTA Sues to Stop Floods The Times Herald reports that SEPTA has filed suit against a Conshohocken landowner who has allegedly constricted the bed of the Plymouth Creek so that the only outlet for rain water is the R6 right-of-way. The suit claims that between 1960 and 1968, the landowner enclosed Plymouth Creek from the tracks to the river. It allegedly violates state environmental regulations which state, "all stream enclosures (must) be designed to pass a 100 year discharge without causing substantial hindrance to the flow."-TB @@R7 Platforms Curtailed Due to hazardous platform conditions at several R7 stations in the Northeast, SEPTA is asking passengers riding to Bridesburg, Wissinoming, and Tacony to use the first two cars of the train. *The Trenton line reported up to 40 minute rush hour delays on the 9th due to "Amtrak problems." *Service on the Hill East line was stopped for a short period due to a derailment of an empty car just after morning rush the 11th. @@R8 Trespasser Struck The Inquirer reports that a 21 year old Rockledge woman was trespassing on the right of way near Hasbrook and Unruh Avenues when she was struck by a northbound SEPTA train Jan. 30. A preliminary investigation found that the engineer had sounded his horn twice to warn the woman. It also found that the woman had apparently tried to get out of the way, but lost her footing. *Service on the Fox Chase line was suspended again for a short time after evening rush hour on the 21st. An unconfirmed report attributed the shutdown to a natural gas leak along the line. *Recent construction on Chestnut Hill West was taking place in the vicinity of Carpenter. @@H SEPTA RRD Notes Snow Brakes? How About Leaf Brakes? In the aftermath of the storm of the 11th and 23rd, SEPTA reportedly ordered its engineers to use the 'snow brake' on their Silverliners. Snow brakes maintain a continuous light application of the brake shoes to the train's wheels, to keep snow and ice from accumulating. Now that we know they work, can we modify the snow brakes for the slippery rail season without overheating the wheels?s Order, Order! Wonder what that board with lighted numerals at the west end of 30th St. platform C is? A scoreboard for SEPTA vs. Amtrak basketball games? No, it is a train order indicator, similar in function to the boards at the east end of platform A and on the Roosevelt Blvd. overpass at Wayne Junction. When the yellow light is flashing, train engineers must stop and see if the number of their route is posted on the board. If it is, the engineer must not proceed until the train orders (such as speed or crossing restrictions) are in hand. Focus on 'Snowbirds' A flyer handed out in late January solicited participants for a marketing study being conducted for SEPTA. Respondents who work in Center City and usually drive to work but took SEPTA during the snow and ice storms were asked to meet in a focus group being conducted by marketing consultant Porfolio Associates, Inc. The apparent object is to find out why these people choose not to ride SEPTA trains on a daily basis. Rails Help 'the Competition' Conrail and its short line partners in Pennsylvania and Upstate New York won wide praise for expediting trainloads of road salt during January and February. @@I SEPTA Suburban Transit Division N5 Lease to Net $1.3 M SEPTA has transferred the "tax title" of the N5 cars to a Swedish firm, Amco Financial, in a crossborder lease which will net SEPTA $1.3 million. The financier gets to write the depreciation off its taxes, and shares the savings with SEPTA. *Ten minute delays were reported on Route 100 between Bryn Mawr and 69th Street during early morning rush on the 3rd. The problem was corrected by 8 am. *All inbound service on Route 100 was canceled during morning rush hour on the 11th due to the storm. Later, service was reported restored with up to 45 minute delays. At about 4 pm all service on the Route 100 line was suspended again. New 'Pans' for Trolleys The SEPTA Board recently approved a contract for 35 pantographs for the Media-Sharon Hill cars at $10,600 each. @@J SEPTA City Transit/Subway-Elevated Division Concourse Much Improved The City's new policy of closing sections of the underground concourse during the overnight hours has resulted in a cleaner, safer environment for residents, shoppers, and workers who use the concourse. Encampments which had posed a health hazard have been removed. Restored to its original purpose, the concourse is making it easier and faster for pedestrians to get around Center City, and was especially welcome when snow and ice clogged streets and sidewalks. The process is being repeated at Suburban Station, now closed off from 1:00 am to 4:30 am. In a related matter, the Center City District announced the results of a survey of homeless persons on the streets of Center City, which lent support to its "Real Change" campaign designed to replace panhandling with a comprehensive package of social services. 45 percent of the persons interviewed admitted to using money given on the street to buy drugs and/or alcohol. Other reports say as many as 80 percent of the homeless on city streets and in transit facilities have substance abuse problems. Three-fourths of persons surveyed had been on the streets two years or more; almost half actually had a place to sleep with friends or relatives. If you support real change for the homeless, to put their lives back together, donate to the Center City District Foundation, which supports needed services.-MDM Alternative for DelCo Homeless Stalled Delaware County's planned shelter for the homeless, approved a year ago, is mired in court. Residents of the Cobbs Creek section of Philadelphia, across from the proposed shelter site near 63rd Street, accuse DelCo of racially-motivated 'dumping' of the problem in their back yard. Risky Business, Those Stairs The Inquirer of February 12 carried a photo of a bobsled track otherwise known as the Erie Avenue entrance to the Broad St. Subway. The stairs were barely visible under hard packed snow. A sour note to otherwise good winter storm performance. New Frankford Terminal in Design Stage Planning and engineering personnel at SEPTA are working on the plan for the new Bridge-Pratt terminal. Local businesspeople are objecting to the preliminary plan, which would relocate the bus stands up Bustleton Ave. and away from their shops. A local steering committee is to advise SEPTA. El Redecking Continues The next Frankford El station to be renovated will be York-Dauphin; SEPTA held a forum to inform residents about the upcoming construction in their neighborhood. Evening (8:00 pm to 12:30 am) and weekend (all day) shuttle buses will replace trains from Huntington to Bridge-Pratt. Single Tracking Between 30th and 52nd For the last three weekends in February, the El was single tracked on the east-bound side. For the first weekend in March the El will single track over the westbound side. The Team that Rides Together...? ...didn't win this time, but at least enjoyed the trip! The University of Pennsylvania men's basketball team rode the Broad Street Subway to their game at Temple instead of taking a slow team bus. The 'Subway Series' game gained a lot of publicity from the ride: Temple won 76 to 65. Take the Subway-Surface Lines to next year's rematch. @@K SEPTA City Transit/Light Rail Division Confusion in the Subway The Subway-Surface Lines operated well during January's bad weather when many autos were off the road. But reliability steadily deteriorated as motorists returned to the streets before all the snow and ice were gone and got stuck-causing gaps in service of more than an hour. A power problem affected Routes 13 and 34. Initially Route 13 passengers were advised by the electronic signs to use Route 36 and catch a shuttle from Elmwood depot to Yeadon loop. After a couple days, that message was replaced by one only indicating reduced service. Then a most confusing message indicated that in the PM 3 buses were operating on Route 34 to 30th Street and that Route 34 streetcars were operating to 40th & Market Streets. We never found out what was meant by "PM", where the buses were, or a streetcar to 40th & Market. Friday and Saturday February 4 and 5, none of the information signs were on. There were no reports of delays on KYW traffic and transit reports. However, surprised passengers found MFSE single tracking in West Philadelphia, with noticeable delays-enough to make passengers late for work. The project appeared to be rescheduled trackwork. Third rail was replaced the weekend of February 19 and 20. This time cardboard signs were posted Friday to warn passengers. Hopefully, SEPTA will continue to advise passengers in advance. *A double whammy tunnel blockage/power outage played havoc with the Green Line on the tenth. The disabled trolley was reported to have been removed at around 11 o'clock. *Route 13 was bussing between 49th and Yeadon because of a "street problem" during morning rush on the 8th. Trolley Coalition Tours Elmwood For the January Philadelphia Trolley Coalition meeting, SEPTA provided a tour of Elmwood Depot. Two impressions from that tour are important. First, the depot is spotlessly clean. That indicates a safe workplace with good morale. Second, the undersides of the Kawasaki LRVs are completely free of rust, corrosion, and crud typically found under streetcars after several years of service. The equipment compartment doors fit and open properly. There was no indication of "patch up" or "make do", all the equipment under the cars was in proper condition. This indicates that SEPTA has been successful with its maintenance and overhaul programs. After 13 years of service the only problem with the LRVs appears to be some rusting of bodyside panels at floor level.-CB @@L SEPTA City Transit Schedule Change Highlights Continuing to realize the folly of cutting service to save money, SEPTA increased bus and trolley service slightly in new CTD schedules issued last month. But the most noticeable change in SEPTA's schedules is right on the cover of the subway-surface timetables: a picture of an LRV and the word "Trolley" in bold print. LRD is continuing to position itself as a premium service. On the Green Line, two-car trains operate on the 10 and 13; there are minor increases in service weekdays on 10, 11, and 34, Saturday on 13. On the bus side, West Philadelphia residents will also enjoy more service on the perenially-overcrowded 21 and 42 lines and the 15. Big improvements come with express service on the North Philadelphia's Route 48 (see below). Midday service on the 22 and 55 lines to the north suburbs is improved to every 20 minutes. South Philly SEPTA service is little changed from fall schedules. Seasonal increases for IRS employees are in effect in the Northeast. Coordination of service was the other big Northeast theme. Trips on the 19, 24, and 67 buses are spread out more evenly, while both 28 and 70 bus schedules now show connections to the R8 Fox Chase train, an important step toward a seamless transit network. There were reductions of service on some routes, which is to be expected as travel demand shifts: in one noteable case, the short-turn trips will no longer operate on the 76 Ben FrankLine in Center City. All in all though, the trend is a good one: solving overcrowding problems before they drive customers away from the system. @@M SEPTA City Transit/Surface Division Snow Solutions Coming? Unconfirmed reports say that SEPTA is looking into permanent solutions to the street-blockage problems which drastically curtailed service during storms this winter. New CTD Surface AGM George T. Hague is considering fixed snow emergency routes, as suggested here last month, and discussions with the City of Philadelphia about improved coordination to keep buses moving are underway. Existing City ordinances against blocking traffic need to be beefed up: if your bus or trolley service got stalled because some selfish driver got his car or truck stuck, please call or write your City Council member. Many voices are necessary to impress on Council the need to get something done on this matter. Meritorious Service Medals Add SEPTA Surface Division drivers and supervisors to the list of winter storm heros. SEPTA helped evacuate patients and staff from Parkview Hospital in Juniata Park after a pipe burst. Another bus served as a warm-up room for firefighters battling a blaze on Warrington Ave. in the Southwest. 'Biodiesel' Demonstration SEPTA tested a mixture of 80% regular #2 diesel fuel and 20% soybean oil in its Route 76 buses last month. The fuel is purported to be cleaner- burning than straight diesel at the same time it reduces our dependence on foreign oil. Live, Not Memorex(R) SEPTA's schedule request line, 580-7777, is now answered live, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The answering machine will no longer be used. @@N Where's Route 202? A year after the SEPTA Board awarded a contract to Krapf's Coaches, Inc. to operate bus service from Wilmington to West Chester, the go-ahead for that service has still not been given. The cause of the delay is not clear, but grievances from SEPTA's unions about the contracting-out have been rumored, even though the new service will not replace any SEPTA drivers. Tom Hickey, from Route 202 co-sponsor Delaware Railroad Administration, hopes service will start some time in May. @@O Wayne Junction: The Story That Didn't Happen by Tom Borawski The report came over the radio: canopies at Wayne Junction had collapsed due to the weight of the snow. Wayne Jct. passengers were told to transfer at Fern Rock. One would assume that it was the old wooden Reading-built structure at Wayne Junction that collapsed. The new section, built about four years ago at a reported cost of $1 million, should be solid for another 50 years. Right? Wrong! In a major embarrassment, eight sections of the newly installed canopy collapsed in the aftermath of February's snow storm. The station canopy is configured in what can be described as an inverted Times Roman "L." The main support column is not centered, so apparently snow build-up caused an uneven loading. SEPTA has shored-up the remaining canopy with wooden braces. The original structure, deteriorated as ever, is still standing. The following did not happen: Four SEPTA passengers were not rushed to Temple University Hospital after the roof fell. One passenger did not receive three broken ribs due to the accident. Another passenger did not sustain a neck injury. A third passenger was not pinned under the wreck for 15 minutes, and a fourth passenger did not escape injury by jumping on the tracks, narrowly missing a departing train. The law firm of Dewey, Kahn, Soakham and Grabbitt, PLC did not rush one of their radio-dispatched attorneys to the hospital. A neck brace company in Paducah, Kentucky did not receive an overnight, rush order. Two expert witnesses in soft tissue injury did not have their beepers activated. While these four riders don't exist, a red-faced engineering firm and contractor do. They have a lot of explaining to do. @@P Norristown-Reading Opportunity? The Pottstown Mercury, Feb. 13, reported on a DVRPC/Montgomery County study of reactivating the Pottsville to King of Prussia line. This study focused on the kind of land use that would be required to make the rail line successful. The area being studied includes Lower and West Pottsgrove, Limerick, Lower and Upper Providence, Upper Merion, Pottstown, Royersford, Phoenixville, and Spring City. Later, the Mercury's editorial strongly supported restoring the line: "...the restoration of train service between Norristown and Reading-with stops at Phoenixville, Royersford, Pottstown, Birdsboro, and several new stations along the way-would be the best thing to happen to the region in decades....Trains must be part of the Pottstown area's future. The sooner, the better." Congressman Curt Weldon (R-7) also endorsed the service in a newsletter. This burst of support is an opportunity members should support. Contact elected officials to indicate support for the service. Write letters to the editor! Talk to community groups!s DVARP's Commuter Rail Committee will work with interested members to coordinate activity for maximum effect. Contact the Committee at 215- 222-3373 message box 2. @@Q 422 "Town Center" Dead, Kulpsville Plan Alive Plans for a transportation center as the core of the Kulpsville [Montgomery County, near Lansdale] "town center" are on track, according to a story in the Reporter. The paper said the proposed transportation center would be where drivers from a nearby turnpike exit would park and take shuttle buses to their jobs or the retail district planned for the center. The center will be built through a partnership of Towamencin Township, the business community, and state, Federal and county governments. @@R MontCo Grants for Community Service? The local bus services operated by Cheltenham and Abington townships may be saved by a $100,000 matching grant from Montgomery County. The services, which primarily benefit senior citizens but are open to all, had been supported by the state legislative grants commonly known as "Walking Around Money" as well as by state lottery proceeds subsidizing senior riders. @@S SEPTA Coalition Reawakens? In a newsletter sent out last month, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Area Coalition for Transportation (ACT) outlined plans to lobby for increased state operating support of SEPTA. The Coalition, run from SEPTA HQ, explained the "operating crunch" faced by SEPTA, saying a 14 percent ($32 million) increase in state and local funding will be necessary to balance SEPTA's FY 1995 budget without fare increases or service cuts. @@T Phone Changes With the 610 area code now in service, SEPTA riders in the west suburbs should check the list of 610 phone exchanges before calling their local SEPTA station or customer service center. While most RRD stations in the west suburbs and up the R6 line have local phones which are in the new area code, a few like Norristown Transportation Center are in SEPTA's 580 exchange, which will remain in 215. Overbrook station, which is in the city, will still be 215. @@U Employer Trip Reduction Upheld Again State regulations forcing large employers to promote alternatives to single-occupant car commuting for their employees have been upheld by the Federal Environmental Protection Agency. Business seeking to maintain the status quo of subsidizing parking while ignoring mass transit had sought an EPA ruling denying that the Philadelphia region is in "severe nonattainment" of air quality standards. Remarkably, Pennsylvania Environmental Resources Secretary Arthur Davis sided with the car proponents. @@V Mediator Sought in Trackage Issues With member commuter railroads experiencing problems in securing routes over former freight lines for their passenger trains, the American Public Transit Association has called on Congress to pass a law authorizing the Interstate Commerce Commission or other body to resolve disputes. These disagreements commonly come up when and where commuter service is to be started or expanded. While the freight carriers see commuter use of their tracks as a potenital profit center, they can sometimes put roadblocks in the way of that service, such as limitations on the number of trains. Worries about lawsuits have caused some lines, Conrail most notably, to require full indemnification from consequences of passenger train operation, even in cases where the freight railroad is fully responsible for the accident. Other demands have included costly double-tracking or new signal systems, as the railroads see a way to finally tap into government pockets for the capital investment their highway and barge competitors get at highly-subsidized rates. @@W Another Term for Board Honchos SEPTA Board Chairman Thomas Hayward and Vice Chairman Patrick McCarthy were both reelected last month. @@X $1.7 Billion California Road Subsidy The earthquake relief bill passed by Congress includes 1.4 billion dollars to rebuild double-deck highways which collapsed in the Northridge earthquake. Another 300 million was included as a retroactive handout for San Francisco Bay area roads hit by the 1989 Loma Prieta quake. Though the quake relief is being added to the deficit and will be paid for out of general tax revenue rather than user fees, nobody called this money a subsidy to cars and trucks. @@Y Grade Crosssing Crash in DelCo: 4 Dead A family of four was killed February 19, when Frank Kilgore ignored warning signals and drove the family car in front of a CSX freight train. The fatal collision ocurred at the Naaman's Creek Road crossing in Upper Chichester near the Delaware state line. Police reports say the the flashing lights were working properly, and the locomotive engineer rang the bell and sounded the horn as directed. The train was traveling within the 50 mph track speed limit. Local politicians have sought for PennDOT to upgrade the crossing with gates, paid for with Federal funds. Design work for the upgrade was to have been completed last fall. But county accident statistics show that gates are not a panacea: half of the four fatal grade crossing collisions in the past decade were caused by drivers going around the gates. Three of the four involved drivers under the influence of drugs or alcohol. @@Z Trailways Teams with Amtrak Philly-Pittsburgh travel flexibility has been improved by Trailways' acceptance of Amtrak tickets and move to the Pittsburgh Amtrak Station. Public transport's market share improves when riders can go even only one way by train. @@AA 30th Street in a Pickle! The Vlasic(R) stork was pushing pickles (free samples) at both levels at 30th Street January 24th during evening rush hour. Neither Amtrak nor SEPTA nor DVARP is responsible for any consequences of their use with Bucks County Cafe Mocha. @@BB Diamond State Notes Snow Hits Evening Service DART canceled night service at 7:30 pm on the 9th due to the weather. The storm of the 11th caused the cancellation of DART Routes 3 and 8 with all other routes using main roads only. @@CC South Jersey Update PATCO Celebrates 25th Balloons and mummery were the order of the day for passengers who boarded PATCO on February 15th-the line's 25 birthday. PATCO's 25th anniversary comes at a time when the region can appreciate its weather- hardened capabilities. The Inquirer quotes PATCO President Paul Drayton saying that it is "the best-run system in the country," and many transit experts nationwide agree. Watch for an upcoming DVRP story analyzing what's right at PATCO. DVARP Committee Meets with Senator DVARP/NJARP South Jersey Coordinator Don Nigro and DVARP South Jersey Committee member Bill Ritzler met with NJ State Sen. John Matheussen (R- 4) February 17th. The Senator asked for meeting after several recent articles and an editorial which appeared in the Gloucester County Times. The atmosphere was cordial, and the Senator expressed several goals: 1) Increasing intra-state mobility as a part of any new South Jersey rail expansion; 2) A new rail line would help focus development patterns and growth in Gloucester County; and 3) The implementation of any new rail service in Gloucester should be independent of the circumstances in Burlington County. Nigro and Ritzler explained the DVARP perspective. A one-seat ride into downtown Philadelphia is a primary goal. DVARP also presented the cost and ridership differential between modes as shown in the NJ Transit Burlington/Gloucester Corridor Assessment. DVARP thanks Senator Matheussen for his time and interest in rail transit and in DVARP's views. The Senator has been invited by William Haines, Chairman-NJ Senate Transportation Committee to participate in hearings regarding South Jersey rail transit issues. A voice in Trenton on behalf of Gloucester County residents is necessary if effective rail transportation is to occur. DVARP Ad Seeks Moorestown Support In an effort to turn the tables on opponents of rail service to Moorestown and Mt. Holly, the DVARP South Jersey Committee placed an ad in the News Weekly. Recognizing the opponents' claim that trains running through Moorestown would upset some neighbors, the ad reminded those neighbors that doing nothing, or worse yet, forcing Burlington County trains to terminate in Maple Shade, would mean more cars on Moorestown's streets. Readers could draw their own conclusion: a train is a much better neighbor than the hundreds of cars it replaces. NJ Study: Transit is Part of the Job Plan An urban jobs and development strategy conducted by the New Jersey DOT says that though mass transit to connect city residents with suburban jobs is an economic necessity, it must be part of a more comprehensive jobs package. That would include child care and training in basic job skills like reading and writing. The transit contribution would be best made with better geographic coverage of bus service to serve widely scatterred employment sites. Service hours need to be extended to meet diverse job schedules. NJ Transit has already started enhancing service so that residents of the Garden State's cities can find and keep jobs; will Pennsylvania recognize mass transit's role in the state's economic vitality?s NJT Ridership Stats First quarter (July-Sept) data released by NJ Transit shows a broad increase in bus and rail ridership, even though employment in New Jersey, New York City, and Philadelphia continued to decline. The strongest performance were put forth by the Atlantic City Rail Line, which had a record increase caused by extension of service to 30th St. South Jersey bus ridership gains were led by the commuter routes to Philadelphia, which even after an accounting change showed an eight percent increase. Our thanks to Alan Tillotson for providing the data. line.............ridership.... change (thousands) A.C...................187.9....+21.1% NE Corridor..........4567.7....+1.0% Coast................1579.0....+5.9% Raritan...............947.1....+8.9% Morris & Essex.......1728.0....+3.5% Main/Bergen...........972.9....+1.5% Boonton...............366.1....+2.3% Pascack...............307.9....+1.0% Rail Total..........10656.6....+3.1% South Jersey Bus.... 4162.1....+7.5% North Jersey Bus....26068.8....+5.3% PATCO................2738.7....-1.0% @@DD How a Cynwyd Closure Would Affect 400,000 Residents by John Pawson Soothsayers claim that the R6 Cynwyd service has been "winding down" since May 1986. That's when SEPTA abruptly cut it back to Cynwyd from the Ivy Ridge park-and-ride terminal which was opened just six years earlier. After all, they will say, the three stations to which the line has been truncated are not enough to support a commuter rail line on their own. The downward spiral has involved fewer stations served, therefore fewer people to be served, fewer trains, and (surprise!) fewer passengers on the surviving trains. They will probably concede that SEPTA has been managing the route's demise; just let events proceed to their 'logical' conclusion. That will get the Cynwyd line off the Railroad Division's budget. A strategic approach on the other hand, reaches an entirely different conclusion. That forward-looking approach involves considering the populations served-and not served-by the present R6 service, the potential traffic, and how to get the commuters most rapidly, comfortably, and economically to and from Center City and other destinations. The conclusion is that a restructuring which would serve serve current and past stations would give the Schuylkill Valley's taxpayers the best return on the dollars which they now pay to SEPTA through their taxes and fares. About 440,000 people are expected to live within the potential R6 service area in the Schuylkill Valley by the end of the decade. This includes the residents of Philadelphia, Montgomery, and Chester Counties who live closer to existing or potential R6 stations than to stations of other rail lines. That number comprises about one-ninth of the total population which SEPTA was created to serve. Suprisingly, SEPTA's leading commuter rail line, Paoli-Parkesburg, serves fewer persons, about 310,000. On weekdays, R5-west carries about 10,100 round trips; both sides of R6 just 1,600. Both corridors are about 40 miles long. R5-west carries about 3.3 percent of its tributary population, R6 only 0.4 percent. SEPTA's share of the Schuylkill Valley transportation market is much smaller than it ought to be, even considering socio-economic factors and the competition from the Schuylkill Expressway. Faster and otherwise more attractiove rail transportation is needed- economically and soon-in the Schuylkill Valley Corridor. The first factor that needs to be considered is the future of the two parallel routes which form the first eight miles of the 40-mile corridor. These routes are the former Pennsylvania Railroad via Cynwyd and former Reading via East Falls. The two converge in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia. The Cynwyd route-the abandonment candidate-makes the more desirable route between Center City and the outer Schuylkill Valley. Why? 1. Other factors aside, the faster route is to be preferred. Penn Center to Ivy Ridge via Cynwyd was a 20 minute trip in 1983; via East Falls, the trip requires 23 minutes. 2. Prompt accesss to and from Amtrak's 30th Street Station becomes an increasingly important market factor as the service is extended beyond Norristown. The route via Cynwyd is 12 minutes faster. 3. Distance from Suburban Station to Ivy Ridge via Cynwyd is 8.4 miles; via East Falls, 8.7 miles. 4. The Cynwyd route passes the edge of the City Line business district at Bala station; the East Falls route is much farther from it or any other major business district. 5. The Cynwyd route stations at Manayunk and Ivy Ridge are safer, less costly to maintain, and more accessible (no climbing the 39 steps) than the comparable East Falls route stations. 6. The four stations on the distinct part of the Cynwyd route serve 30,000 people while the three distinct stations on the East Falls route serve just 20,000. When service on the two routes was more in balance, the number of passengers boarding at these stations was in similar proportion. 7. The use of grade-separated junctions promotes more reliable service than the use of flat junctions. The Cynwyd route's 52nd Street connection is grade-separated; the East Falls route connection at 16th Street Junction is flat. 8. If the Cynwyd route is chosen as the main route to Manayunk, Wissahickon Transportation Center, and the other stations on the East Falls route can still be served by diverting trains which now run empty to Roberts Yard. Under the present operating scheme, no such fortuitous, low-incremental-cost service is possible. 9. The cost of repairing the concrete-arch viaduct over the Schuylkill (bridge 7.70) is not uniquely chargeable to the Cynwyd route, since SEPTA found it cheaper to repair than to tear down. It is a general corporate burden. Indeed, SEPTA has already received bids on the engineering phase of the bridge repair. 10. The matter of retaining the outbound connection at 52nd Street is Amtrak's business. One condition of the Federal funding of Amtrak is that it supply suitable routes on its Eastern network for commuter trains to use. 11. Making the Cynwyd route the dominant one facilitates a solution to the problem of excessive travel time and unreliability on the R8 Chestnut Hill West line. Fewer trains and only one track on the East Falls route would reduce the cost of connecting the Hill West line to the Reading side of the system in the vicinity of R6 Allegheny and R8 Westmoreland stations. Such a connection could speed R8 service by five minutes. To offset the eleven advantages of making the Cynwyd line the dominant one, there is only a complex of short-sighted attitudes to favor the East Falls route: "That's how the tracks go and we don't want an unknown, and nothing will be changed." Both routes definitely need capital investment for tracks, bridges, signals, electrification, etc. sooner or later. Each route would require one level of investment to maintain as a double-track railroad, a lesser level as a single-track line. Yearly maintenance costs would parallel the capital costs. This writer suggests, after examining seven alternatives, that the Cynwyd route be fully restored to double-track status and extended to link with the Norristown line near Shawmont station. By itself, this restoration would end the delays at the switch (known as "Jeff") just north of 52nd Street. One track of the East Falls route would remain in operation between 16th Street Junction and a new station platform to be located opposite the Manayunk West station, premitting a relatively easy transfer between trains of the two routes. Either one route or the other must become the main route. The easy, do- nothing alternative is to allow the Cynwyd route to be abandoned. Residents of Wynnefield and Bala Cynwyd will lose train service. The greater number of R6 passengers, those beyond Manayunk, will gain nothing. The other alternative is one of those rare, all-positive decisions in transportation. All stations can continue to have service. The majority of passengers will get a ride which is three minutes faster. Perhaps that's why a SEPTA staffer told this writer a few years ago that shifting the Norristown trains to the Cynwyd route "would pay for itself in a year." @@EE A Seat Reservation Plan for Amtrak by Matthew Mitchell One frequent cause of passenger complaints about Amtrak's Northeast Corridor service is overcrowding of some trains and the mad dash for seats at boarding time. Couples and families often find they cannot get seats on the train together, especially departing intermendiate points like Philadelphia. Giving passengers a seat reservation option would go a long way to solving those problems. It could also help Amtrak run with more efficiency and attract new riders. Here's one plan which could overcome most of the previously-stated objections to such a plan. If done right, it would pay for itself. Based in part on tested European practices; it would not be hard to implement, either in Amtrak's Arrow(TM) computer, at the ticket counter, or on board the trains. Because Amtrak's chief advantage in this market is its frequency and flexibility of service, Amtrak should not require reservations except as presently done on Metroliners. With reservations optional, only a small fraction of passengers would book them-the ones who find them most important. Amtrak would establish reservation lists for trains in its Arrow system, just as it does for medium- and long-distance trains. They could use the number of reservations for a given train as a preliminary indicator of expected ridership. That would let train consists be adjusted up or down to meet demand, reducing overcrowding for unreserved riders and saving Amtrak money. Passengers wishing seat reservations would pay a nominal service charge (say $2.00 or 3.00) at the time of reservation. This fee would be non- refundable, to discourage no-shows as well as recoup the cost of processing the reservation. Reservations would be accepted at ticket counters, travel agents, and over the phone until a few hours before the train departs Boston, New York, or Washington. ____________________________________ |Amtrak welcomes... train seat | | | | Mary D. Passenger 141 A18 | | PHL-WAS Mar 21 Window | |___________________________________| Depending on the number of reservations made, all or part of the first or last car(s) of the train would be designated as the car for reserved- seat passengers. A manifest of all the reservations, in seat order, would be printed on perforated stock at the origin station shortly before departure. A conductor would tear off the checks, printed with the passengers' names, and place them above the seats. When passengers board, the name tags allow them to find their seats easily. The tags also serve as seat checks, saving the conductor a little work in lifting tickets. @@EE Railroads, People Take 2nd Place in Foreign Affairs I. Free Trade, Bad Drivers? CRASH [Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways] reports that one result of NAFTA has been lowering of truck safety standards. The requirement for understanding traffic signals and signs has been waived for Mexican drivers operating in the U.S. CRASH also reports that the Clinton Administration has promised the American Trucking Association an official role in implementing NAFTA, but will not include public safety associations. Time to contact Clinton, your Congresspersons and Senators. II. Save Venezuela, Kill Our Lungs Auto-Free Press tells how events seemingly far removed from transportation decisionmaking support automobiles. Three sentences from their article tell all: The Environmental Protection Agency is considering a request to let Venezuela ship gasoline to the U.S. that contains more of a smog- producing chemical than American refiners are allowed to market.... Meanwhile, the Venezuelan Ambassador to the U.S. argues that the U.S. must allow the imports under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, to which both countries are signatories....The State Department has reportedly asked the EPA to interpret U.S. regulations liberally to allow the imports in order to provide an economic boost to politically unstable Venezuela. While we import this obviously cheaper foreign gasoline to feed the country's auto habit, who is going to provide an economic boost to the inner city where residents are increasingly separated from auto- accessible suburban jobs. Do Camden and North Philadelphia apply for foreign aide to get a nice subway system like the one being built in Venezuela?s -CB @@FF Countrywide 'Highway Revolt' The people of Switzerland voted last month to maintain their ban on heavy trucks passing from Italy to Germany and France on Swiss roads. Rather than harm the Swiss environment and batter the roads, trucks are loaded onto piggyback railcars for the trip across Switzerland. @@GG Think Spring! Get Out Your Bicycle! Bike-on-rail permits for most area transit systems including SEPTA are issued on a calendar year basis, so while you're renewing your DVARP membership, make sure to renew your bike permit, too. With the permit, riders can take bikes onto subway and commuter trains during off-peak hours. (note that the NJ Transit Northeast Corridor line does not yet accept bikes at any time) The permit system ensures that cyclists understand the rules of the program, and releases the transit operator from liability. Until bicycle advocates succeed in securing a region-wide permit system, you will need separate permits for each of these systems: call during business hours for an application. SEPTA:............................215-580-7852 PATCO:..............215-922-4600, 609-772-7998 NJ Transit: Atlantic City:.......609-343-7172 North Jer. Coast, Rar. Vall.:.... 201-491-7000 Long Island:......................718-990-8228 Metro-North:......................212-340-3000 @@HH Green Time- a Great Idea Passenger Transport reported that Minneapolis formed "Team Transit" to implement low cost, quick-to-do projects to improve bus operations. They came up with 'green time,' which is a new way of allocating traffic signal time. Time within the cycle is allocated to the number of people moving, not the number of vehicles. A bus is counted as 40 automobiles. Thus, streets with public transportation get more green time than the auto only cross streets. Green time should have wide applicability in our region, and would be a natural for "Transit First" in Philadelphia. We urge its implementation throughout the region at intersections where one street has much less public transportation than the other.-CB @@II Architectural and Engineering Marvel Reborn Take the "Whistle Stop Tour" of the renovated Reading Terminal Trainshed, the historic rail landmark now a centerpiece of the Pennsylvania Convention Center. The Shed will be opened to the public on Sunday, March 20: admission is free. The day will be highlighted by a "calling contest" for SEPTA conductors and station staff, in which entrants will be judged on speed, diction, and style as they call out the multiethnic melange of station names: Lenni-Lenape, Welsh, German, and many more. Also featured will be architectural and art exhibitions and railroad memorabilia. @@JJ GAO Says Transit Shortchanged UTU News reports that a U.S. General Accounting Office report found that mass transit is not receiving the funding it should under provisions of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA). "Of the $11.2 billion in flexible highway funds obligated by states and localities in fiscal year 1992, less than 3% ($319 million) was invested in mass transit or nontraditional projects," the report said. "Six months into fiscal year 1993, investment patterns remained essentially the same, with 3% or less of flexible highway and mass transit funds being invested in mass transit or nontraditional projects." Without concerted action by the public, business as usual, paving over more and more of our country, will continue.-TB @@KK Computer Corner: DVRP Now on Fidonet We are pleased to announce that the electronic edition of the Delaware Valley Rail Passenger can now be downloaded from any BBS participating in Fidonet. This will allow many computer users to take advantage of the quick delivery of the on-line newsletter, without a long-distance phone call or joining a commercial on-line service. To have the file sent to you, issue a "file request" command for file DVRP9401.LZH to net address 1:250/730. As with the other archive sites, substitute the desired year and month for the '9401' in the filename. An umcompress program will be needed to convert this to text your word processor can read. DVARP thanks Doug Leibold of our sister organization Transport 2000 Ontario for making this site available.-MDM @@LL Site Set for NARP Region III Meeting The Region III Meeting of the National Association of Railroad Passengers will be held Saturday, April 16, in the Wilmington City Council Chambers, Lewis C. Redding City-County Building, 8th and French Sts., in Wilmington. Passengers coming from Philadelphia may wish to use Amtrak to get to the meeting: SEPTA's R2 trains give Wilmington inconvenient arrivals of 8:14 and 10:14 am (leave Center City at 7:25, 9:25). Return service is better, with trains leaving at 2:34, 4:34, 5:36, 6:34, and 8:31. The City-County Building is eight blocks from the Amtrak station, see the R2 Wilmington schedule for a map. Connections are easy: all DART buses from the station stop at the City-County Building; ride DART in downtown Wilmington for free with a SEPTA TrailPass. Individuals who are not NARP members are welcome to attend the Region meeting, and to find out more about the nationwide passenger rail advocacy group and the activities of Delmarva Rail Passenger Association, NJ-ARP, Keystone ARP, and DVARP. The registration fee of $10.00 includes lunch. Call Doug Andrews of Delmarva RPA at 302-995- 6419 for more information. @@MM Evening DVARP Meeting Because of the scheduling of the NARP Region III Meeting for the usual DVARP third Saturday, the April DVARP meeting will be held on Thursday night, April 14, from 6:00 to 9:00 pm, at Temple University Center City. Make a note of it! @@NN DVARP to Host '95 Meeting? At last month's General Meeting, members agreed to have DVARP offer to host the next NARP Region III Meeting. If the offer is accepted, the meeting will take place in Philadelphia in early spring of 1995. John Dawson and Sharon Shneyer, DVARP members who are also NARP Region III Directors, along with DVARP Administrative VP Bob Machler, are volunteering to make the meeting arrangements. @@OO Dates of Interest "The Great Canadian Train Ride." Jenkintown Kiwanis Lecturama Series at the Keswick Theatre, Easton Rd. and Keswick Ave., Glenside. Tickets $10.00 at the door. POSTPONED due to inclement weather, call Mike Czerwonka, 215-886-4195 for new date and time. Philadelphia Trolley Coalition: Sun., Mar. 13, 1:00 at the Boyertown Museum of Historic Vehicles, 28 Warnick St., Boyertown, PA. Guest lecture on history of area trolleys. For meeting and carpool information, call Joel Spivak, 215-785-7717. SEPTA Citizen Advisory Committee: Tues., Mar. 15, 5:45 pm at SEPTA Board Room, 714 Market St. SEPTA on Site (Suburban Transit): Wed., Mar. 16, 7:30 to 9:30 am and 3:30 to 5:30 pm at 69th St. Terminal, 7:30 to 9:30 am at Norristown Transportation Center. SEPTA Public Hearing on Proposed Lansdale Transportation Center: Fri., Mar. 18, 2:00 at Lansdale Borough Hall. NJ Railroad and Transportation Museum "Getting on Track" Symposium: Sat., Mar. 19, 9:00 to 5:00 at Hall of Science Auditorium, Drew University, Madison NJ. Presentations on proposed museum. Registration $30.00, contact Bob Hooper, 4 Carriage Hill Dr., Long Valley NJ, for information. DVARP South Jersey Committee: Sat., Mar. 19, 11:00 to 12:30 at 104 Edison Ave., Collingswood, NJ. DVARP General Meeting: Sat., Mar. 19, 1:00 to 4:00 at Collingswood Public Library. Reading Terminal Trainshed Reopening: Sun., Mar 20, 12:00 to 5:00 at Pennsylvania Convention Center, 12th and Arch, Philadelphia. Deadline for April newsletter material: Mon., Mar. 21, to Matthew Mitchell or in DVARP mailbox. SEPTA Board Meeting: Thu., Mar. 24, 5:45 pm at SEPTA Board Room, 714 Market St. DVARP Transit Committee: Thurs., Mar 31, 5:30 to 6:60 at 30th St. Station, Southwest arcade next to elevators and Ro and Sons Produce. Delmarva Rail Passenger Association: Thu., Apr. 7, 6:30 pm at Stationmaster's Office, Amtrak Wilmington Station. Call Ken Berg, 410- 648-4405, for more information. DVARP Commuter Rail Committee: Sat., Apr. 9, 12:00 at Chestnut Gourmet, 1121 Chestnut St., Phila. DVARP South Jersey Committee: Sat., Apr. 9, 10:00 to 11:30 at 104 Edison Ave., Collingswood, NJ. Daylight Time begins April 10: New schedules take effect on Amtrak, SEPTA Regional Rail and Suburban Transit, NJ Transit Rail, and other operators. DVARP General Meeting: Thurs., Apr. 14, 6:00 to 9:00 pm at Temple University Center City, 1616 Walnut St. (please note that the time printed on the back cover last month was in error) NARP Region III Meeting: Sat., Apr. 16, 10:00 am, at Wilmington City Council Chamber, Lewis C. Redding City-County Building, 8th and French Sts. Registration fee of $10.00 includes lunch; guest speakers expected. Call Doug Andrews, 302-995-6419, for more information. Listings based on information provided to DVARP. Contact sponsor to confirm time & place. Call 215-222-3373, message box 3, to add your event to this calendar. @@PP DVARP Membership/Renewal Coupon Yes, I want to support improved passenger train service in our region! Here are my DVARP membership dues for 1994! Name Membership Number Address City, State, Zip Please choose a membership category below, enclose check and mail to: DVARP, PO Box 7505, Philadelphia, PA 19101 ( ) Regular: $15.00 ( ) Family: $20.00 ( ) Supporting: $25.00 ( ) Sustaining: $50.00 ( ) Patron: $75.00 ( ) Benefactor: $100.00 ( ) under 21 or over 65: $7.50 @@QQ Up and Down the Corridor News of other Northeastern commuter rail and rail transit services Snow Cripples LIRR The Metropolitan Transportation Authority's Inspector General is investigating Long Island Rail Road's management following the snow- induced shutdown of service February 11. Thousands of commuters were stranded by the action. Only a skeleton service ran over the weekend, and the effects lingered into Monday's rush hour, when a quarter of LIRR's 920 MU cars were still sidelined. The powdery snow which made shoveling easy is reported to have gotten up into traction motors, causing flashovers. LIRR also blamed its all-night running for some of the problems, but that seems illogical as the trains should have the effect of clearing off snow and ice. Metro-North had far fewer problems. Less than ten percent of their cars failed, while their bottom-contact third rail was less susceptible to icing than LIRR's top-contact electrification. More Park in Metropark NJT will expand parking at Metropark from 1791 to 3500 spaces in a two phase project. With its strategic location adjacent to the Garden State Parkway, Metropark is a big park-and-ride point. As reported in Passenger Transport, the project will begin with a seven level 2,000 space parking garage to be located near the front of the station. The second phase will be 1,500 spaces on five levels in a structure east of phase one. To ease congestion, $4 million is to be spent improving 11 intersections within 3/4 mile of the station. WMATA to Lose its 'Edge?' Federal ADA legislation may spell the early scrapping of the Washington Metro's unique platform edges. The law requires a textured edge which blind people can detect by feel, such as the bumpy edge now installed at some SEPTA stations. Ironically, WMATA installed the granite edges with recessed flashing lights as a means of warning deaf people when a train was coming. WMATA seeks an exception for its edge, citing the contrast between the smooth edge and the bumpy tile on the body of its platforms, its excellent safety record, and the $30 million cost of a refit. @@RR DVARP Phone & Voice-mail Directory __ DVARP main number (voice mail line):.... 215-222-3373 1 Chuck Bode, President:................... 215-222-3373 5 Tom Borawski, VP-Transportation:......... 215-552-4198 6 Robert H. Machler, VP-Administration:.... 215-222-3373 5 Sharon Shneyer, VP-Public Relations:..... 215-386-2644 3 Matthew Mitchell, Newsletter Editor :.... 215-885-7448 4 Betsey Clark, Volunteer Coordinator:..... 215-222-3373 8 Treasurer:............................... 215-222-3373 8 John Pawson, Commuter RR Comm.:.... 215-659-7736 (6 to 9 pm please) 3 Transit Committee:....................... 215-222-3373 7 Don Nigro, South Jersey Committee:....... 609-869-0020 1 Dan Radack, Bicycle Coordinator:......... 215-232-6303 Media Hotline (digital beeper):............. 215-552-4198 Computer e-mail (internet):.... 73243.1224@compuserve.com or..........................mmitchell@asrr.arsusda.gov @@SS Upcoming DVARP Meetings: PATCO trains leave 16th & Locust Sts., Philadelphia every 11 minutes including 12:31, travel time to Collingswood, 14 minutes. Remember to purchase return trip SEPTA transfer before leaving subway station at 8th St. or Walnut-Locust. *From Collingswood PATCO, walk one block to Haddon Ave., turn left (towards Camden)walk three blocks to library on right, turn right at entry for meeting room. Thursday, April 14, 6:00 to 9:00 pm Temple University Center City please note Thursday date! Saturday, April 16, 10:00 am NARP Region III Meeting, Wilmington Saturday, May 21, 1:00 to 4:00 Ludington Library, Bryn Mawr location to be confirmed, please watch this space @@TT Agenda for the March meeting: 1:00 Introductions, agenda, minutes 1:10 Issues requiring immediate action R6 Cynwyd Report for NARP Region III 2:30 Other issues South Jersey Committee Burlington/Gloucester Corridors Summer seashore service Commuter Rail Committee: R6 Cynwyd infrastructure Transit Committe: New SEPTA streetcars Autos obstructing transit routes Administration: Incorporation Community fairs and events @@UU Committee Meetings: South Jersey Committee: Sat., Mar. 19, 11:30 at 104 Edison Ave., Collingswood, NJ Transit Committee: Thurs., Mar. 31, 5:30 at 30th St. Station-southeast arcade next to Ro's. Commuter Rail Committee: Sat., Apr. 9, 12:00 at Chestnut Gourmet, 1121 Chestnut St. Bulk Rate U.S. Postage PAID Philadelphia, PA Permit #721 DVARP P.O. Box 7505 Philadelphia, PA 19101-7505 Forwarding and Address Correction Requested Return Postage Guaranteed Join DVARP Today! Use the coupon on page 19 First Class Mail