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Amtrak Ridership Skyrockets On Northeast Corridor

Have you noticed an increase in ridership when taking Amtrak?

Short-range Amtrak travel has soared over the past 15 years and New London’s Union Station is a stop on the two most popular routes in the Northeast Corridor.

According to a Brookings Institution report, Amtrak ridership has grown by 55% since 1997 -- most of this increase is short-distance routes (less than 400 miles). Eighty-three percent of all Amtrak ridership in 2012 was via short-distance routes.

The two most popular routes in the Northeast Corridor are the Acela and Northeast Regional, which both make stops in New London. Both routes are slightly more than 300 miles.

The Acela had 3.395 million riders in 2012 while the Northeast Regional, which makes more stops, had more than 8 million riders. That’s an increase of 1 million riders in 15 years for the Northeast Regional (the Acela did not exist in 1997), according to the report.

“Those two routes generated a net operating balance of $205.4 million in 2011, with $178.8 million derived from Acela operations alone. This is not a new phenomenon as over the five fiscal years ending in 2011, these two Northeast Corridor routes delivered an average positive balance of $135.9 million per year. They also generated this return via their own operations—the two routes received essentially no state funding support for operations during those five years,” according to the report.

“However, since Amtrak owns most of the track in the Northeast Corridor and must maintain the tracks for its own services plus regional freight and commuter functions, it incurs higher long-term depreciation costs not included in these operating statistics,” reported the Brookings Institution.

Adie Tomer, associate fellow at the Brookings Institution and one of the authors of the report, told The Boston Globe:

“If you’re close to another big metropolitan market and the train runs frequently, people are going to take it,” Tomer said. “When distances extend past about 400 miles, any individual is going to think long and hard about taking a flight, for time considerations alone.”

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Scotty B June 11, 2013 at 07:15 pm
You facts are correct Kathleen, Since Chief Ackley was promoted in June 2009 - Close to 40Read More Officers have left the department! 13 retired 22 went to other police departments 3 resigned or were terminated Survey says...! Instead asking about the nice artwork, lets ask why they are leaving...?!
Rick Lushay June 12, 2013 at 08:07 am
Scotty B. If you know or even speak to any police officers or any NLPD employees you would know theRead More reason why the officers are leaving. The police administration is terrible, no leadership at the top and a city administration and four city councilors driven to gut and destroy the police department. These well educated and ambitious young officers know that there is no career opportunity here in the Whaling City so they are doing what is best for themselves. You would do the same.
Kathleen Mitchell June 12, 2013 at 06:02 pm
If anyone bothered to read the mayor's response above, the part that I could figure out and reallyRead More concerned me was "The administration has also begun the process of using State LOCIP funds (at no cost to New London taxpayers) to install better lighting and security cameras throughout our City this year." I do check out things before I write about them and I checked out his claim regarding the use of LoCIP (Local Capital Improvement Program) No request has been made to the city council, as yet, for LoCIP funds for use as stated by the mayor. I did think a headline in The Day today was interesting "UPDATED: NL cops use video surveillance, GPS coordinates to capture shooting suspect" and couldn't help but wonder if the information provided to the reporters was to support the mayor's claim that our city is safe regardless of the number of police on duty.