Tag Archive for 'transit'

05
Aug

No love for Amtrak tonight

(NB: We went to San Francisco on Sunday. I’ll write about the rest of the trip later, but right now I need to vent!)

Coming home from San Francisco yesterday got a bit too adventurous for my tastes. We made it to the Powell Street BART station on time, but the train we had been planning to board was running late. I figured this wouldn’t be a problem, since we had allowed for a missed connection. Our second BART train was on time, so we pulled into the Richmond BART/Amtrak station right on schedule. The Capitol Corridor #746 was sitting right next to the BART tracks, separated from us only by a chain link fence. (The BART train was clearly visible to the Amtrak personnel, if they had bothered to look for it.) We had already arranged for Caitlin, the fastest of us, to run down the platform and stairs, under the tracks, and back up onto the Amtrak platform so she could hold the train for us. I’m sure that there is somebody on the planet who could have done this faster than Caitlin, but I don’t think any of them were traveling with us last night. Anyway, as you’ve probably guessed, Caitlin’s head was just clearing the top of the stairs when the doors closed and the train pulled out of the station. Nice way to handle a connection, Amtrak!

We had also planned for the possibility of missing this train. The last train of the day, #748, was due in exactly another hour. But I had never been in the Richmond station after dark, and the quantity and “quality” of beggars, weirdos, and other assorted lowlifes was an eye-opener. Also, it was getting chilly and the wind cuts through every bit of that station like a knife. (We had already spent an hour at the same station that morning. Colder, but no zombies out between 07:00-08:00 on Sunday morning.) So I’m stranded on Amtrak’s platform with my wife and three teen-aged girls, and it’s getting colder and darker by the minute. I could deal with being asked for spare change every few minutes, but the lady down in the station area screaming and cursing at her small children pushed my wife and I beyond our limit, and we decided to get out of there however we could.

Fortunately (?), we weren’t the only ones who got stranded by Amtrak. Two small groups of college students had been on the same BART train, heading for Davis via the #746. We approached both groups, a pair of young women and three young Chinese students, and asked if they would care to join us. Strength in numbers! Now instead of three frail groups, we were TEN–Don’t mess with Us! Granted it was two children, four young women, two young non-threatening guys, and a middle-aged couple, but we all felt much safer in each other’s company.

There was a Burger King about 1.5 blocks away, so we headed for it. Our bad luck continued, as they had locked up the Burger King dining room just before we walked up. (After our experience in that part of town, I can hardly blame them for their policy!) There was a grocery store in the same parking lot, and we managed to get in there before they closed. We agreed to meet back at the front of the store in time to walk back to the station, then we split up and bought ourselves some cold supper. We made it back to the station without incident, in plenty of time for the final train.

Two paragraphs back, I wrote “Fortunately (?)”–I think it was fortunate that we didn’t make that train, because I’m not at all sure what would have happened to those college students if we had made it and they hadn’t. Would they have banded together? Even if they had, would a group of five been enough for a deterrent? Thanks, Amtrak, for giving me some unpleasant mental fodder.

I may take Amtrak at some point in the future, but I don’t think I’ll ever again stop at the Richmond station. I’ll find another way to make the Amtrak/BART transfer, even if I have to walk a few blocks to do it. But I’d really like to know what the operator/driver/engineer was thinking when that train pulled out 30 seconds early, leaving 10 paid passengers stranded in a crappy part of town?

31
Jan

Is Sacramento a bike-friendly town?

(NB: I read about Uneasy Rhetoric in today’s Sacramento Bee, and the site turned up when I was searching for Sacramento bicycling information, so I decided to check out the post. I started to leave a comment, but it got long enough that I wanted to post it here on my own site and pingback to the original article.)

Uneasy Rhetoric faults Bicycling Magazine for failing to include Sacramento on its list of “best bicycling cities”. I’m a bicycle commuter, and I’m afraid I have to agree with Bicycling Magazine–Sacramento has a long ways to go before we become a “top town” for biking.

The rating criteria included:

  • “Cycling-friendly” statistics
  • Bike culture
  • Climate/geography
  • Surveys of experts and Bicycling Magazine readers

I’d say that Sacramento gets top marks for climate and geography. Our topography is almost absolutely flat, and the weather is very mild. In any given year we only get a few rain storms (real storms) and the temperature just barely gets below freezing a couple of days. (I don’t think they care about how hot it gets, since Phoenix got an honorable mention.)

I think Sacramento lost points for lack of bike racks and city bike projects. The article doesn’t mention it, so I’m guessing they didn’t give any points for Regional Transit’s bicycle-friendly operation. We also probably lost on “Bike culture (number of bike commuters, popular clubs, cool cycling events, renowned bike shops)”. (Emphasis mine.) Talk about some subjective measurements! (Except for number of bike commuters.) I’ve heard that approximately 1% of commute trips in Sacramento are via bicycle, but I can’t find documentation or references to support (or refute) that claim. As for bike culture in Sac, honestly we could use some more buzz. Anybody want to help with a Sacramento bicycling podcast?

More bike-related posts, articles about Sacramento, or specifically Sacramento bicycling posts are available.

23
Jan

Sacramento Bicycle, Pedestrian & Trails Master Plan

I was listening to a Bike Talk podcast (show #5, “Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates”), and they mentioned SACOG’s Regional Bicycle, Pedestrian, and Trails Master Plan. It took me a bit of searching to find this, so I thought I would post the link. It’s part of their Bike Information and Planning page.

In looking at the SACOG page, I can see why this didn’t turn up as a top search result–the document titles are all graphic images instead of text. LAAAME! Get a clue, SACOG! If you have a document about “Foo”, make sure that “Foo” appears prominently where search engines are going to look for it — HTML title, keyword, head elements, or at the very least as text in the first paragraph of the page! Search engines don’t “read” graphics, and alt tags are more likely to be used in image searches.

14
Dec

Transit status alert system

Monday’s Sacramento Bee had an article on Regional Transit’s recent problems with light rail operations. The most frustrating thing about the system running behind schedule (to me) is lack of notification. I usually don’t care if my bus is running 10 minutes late — I just don’t want to stand at the bus stop for an extra 10 minutes, especially when I don’t know how long I’ll have to wait. Near the end of the article, a passenger-notification system is mentioned:

In Washington, D.C., rail officials now send electronic alerts directly to commuters’ computers, cell phones and personal digital assistants.

Joseph and I discussed a similar system for the Sac State shuttle service, which routinely runs behind schedule at the beginning of every semester. Joseph’s idea was to set up an email list server with a separate list for each of Sac State’s three different routes. Transit riders would subscribe to the alert service for the route(s) they take, using their cell phone’s text messaging address, an alphanumeric pager address, or any other device capable of receiving email. Thus if the driver on route #2 is running behind schedule, s/he would alert the dispatcher, who would in turn send a single email to route #2’s subscribers. The email list server would then notify all the subscribers’ pagers, cell phones, PDA’s, etc. This same information could, with a bit more effort, also be posted on a web page or put into an RSS feed. Email list servers are very mature technology, and they don’t require much infrastructure. Such a system could be implemented on a commodity PC in a matter of hours. The only other requirement would be a decent internet connection.

According to the Bee article, RT’s future projects list includes a public information system for light-rail stations, costing $2,000,000. ?!? That’s crazy! RT should follow Washington DC’s example (or just hire Joseph for a few days) and send alerts directly to patrons’ alphanumeric pagers and cell phones. How much could such a system possibly cost? Granted that they have many more routes and riders than Sac State, but the basic idea should scale up very well by investing a bit more money in the hardware. Spending $2 million just on kiosks at light rail stations doesn’t make any sense to me.




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