Love reading your posts, F-Line. It's like you're a writer for a living, or something.
I was once convinced that F-Line was in fact Rich Davey himself. As crazy as that sounds, I thought at the time I had enough evidence to make the argument. But alas, that was shattered. Who is this mysterious F-Line? We may never know.
...although I've been told he's a prominent BSRA member, supposedly.
Taunton...that's the Phase I build. ... Run the buses to Taunton Depot @ 24/140.
Get the rehabbed track sewn up to the Middleboro Secondary.Stick a pocket track there for short-term layovers. Deadhead shift changes to the existing Middleboro layover yard. Signalize that E-W branch so there's Cape thru-routing options and NEC emergency diversion options in a cheap pinch, even if it's only at 40 MPH between Attleboro-Middleboro until there's a real need for regular service on it.
You know I love your style, but this seems like a lot of capital stock that will get very few trains per day, where there are still people suffering from poor headways on existing lines. For the same money, I'd go back to service improvements in the core (like more service, electrification between Route 128 and SS)
The Big Dig is different on far too many levels--and failed on too many of them-- to be a useful starting point for why South Coast should get rail. Among the key points, though, is that the Central Artery was actually crowded and being used beyond its design limits. We knew then who the users would be. Not so with South Coast rail: it is unclear who would use the thing (certainly compared to Middleboro enhancements or a Blue Line to Lynn)The enormous amount of money spent on the big dig-Boston is shows how investment in infrastructure seeds new investment.
Let's focus on that word: "deserves" Generally, the idea behind a deserving recipient of money is that you'll put it to good use. Your rhetoric is more like "feels entitled to squander" rather than deserves.New Bedford our sister city in the southcoast also deserves rail,...
All of us here in the Southcoast deserve rail....
the City Of Fall River deserves this investment...
The enormous amount of money spent on the big dig-Boston is shows how investment in infrastructure seeds new investment. In Fall River, more than just about any community
in MA investment at the state& federal level has been lacking for well over 60 years. In Fall River, support for rail is extremely necessary to spur development. Any development.... If the prevailing attitude will continue to be Fall River is some how not worth rail, from those who to try to define our city because of ignorance, then development will lag for years to come. New Bedford our sister city in the southcoast also deserves rail, but there are some in Boston and the Southcoast that try divide us claiming that one is better than the other. This is wrong all of us here in the Southcoast deserve rail. For us it is just part of the puzzle, but of all the cities and towns tied to Southcoast rail the City Of Fall River deserves this investment.
The enormous amount of money spent on the big dig-Boston is shows how investment in infrastructure seeds new investment. In Fall River, more than just about any community
in MA investment at the state& federal level has been lacking for well over 60 years. In Fall River, support for rail is extremely necessary to spur development. Any development.... If the prevailing attitude will continue to be Fall River is some how not worth rail, from those who to try to define our city because of ignorance, then development will lag for years to come. New Bedford our sister city in the southcoast also deserves rail, but there are some in Boston and the Southcoast that try divide us claiming that one is better than the other. This is wrong all of us here in the Southcoast deserve rail. For us it is just part of the puzzle, but of all the cities and towns tied to Southcoast rail the City Of Fall River deserves this investment.
If you aren't going to use it, you don't deserve it, and if you aren't willing to start out by driving to Taunton, then your words about wanting to ride ring hollow. The politicians who purport to speak for NR/NB say "we all want rail *sooo* desperately that we're unwilling to drive to Taunton for it" ...absurd.
I'm not sure I can agree with that, Arlington. You're essentially making the argument that simply because certain cities are more cultured or more enlightened than others (you essentially make South Coast folks sound like whiny hicks in this post), the residents of the second-class cities have to drive 30 miles, then stop and take a train to prove that they'd take a train if it was across the street from their house?
That would be like telling Worcester residents that they would have to drive to Framingham for 10 years before they'd get service at Union Station, or telling residents of Newton that the Green Line will reach them when they've driven to Kenmore enough to prove they really want it.
In dense metro areas, you can end up with situations where this actually works, like folks along Route 2 driving to Alewife and taking the Red Line in, but the South Coast has a long commute and relatively open roads, meaning that there's little incentive, one you've driven for 20 minutes, not to simply drive the rest of the way.
I realize that if people turn out in droves for an inconvenient train they'll likely turn out even more strongly for a convenient one. I agree with that. But you're taking that logic too far.
The other half of the logic is the logic of phasing. Worcester was reached in phases, and improved in phases, through cities with proven ridership and at moderate cost.
Let Taunton play the role of Framingham here: Once Taunton has proven its ridership, then (and only then) would it be time to explore extending it beyond.
Same went (and goes) for Old Colony: Middleboro has now proved out and we can talk seriously about extending to Buzzards Bay and the Cape Flyer. Greenbush has not proved out...and really proved that hasty roll-outs of lines with unproven ridership are just politician-inspired wastes of $500m that could have been spent where there were riders.
Ok, that's logic I can get behind, as long as we're talking about closer-in communities proving that they can justify their own stations for the sake of a balanced line. I'm just saying that asking people at the end of the line to drive to the middle to prove that they'd ride from the end is silly.
The enormous amount of money spent on the big dig-Boston is shows how investment in infrastructure seeds new investment. In Fall River, more than just about any community
in MA investment at the state& federal level has been lacking for well over 60 years. In Fall River, support for rail is extremely necessary to spur development. Any development.... If the prevailing attitude will continue to be Fall River is some how not worth rail, from those who to try to define our city because of ignorance, then development will lag for years to come. New Bedford our sister city in the southcoast also deserves rail, but there are some in Boston and the Southcoast that try divide us claiming that one is better than the other. This is wrong all of us here in the Southcoast deserve rail. For us it is just part of the puzzle, but of all the cities and towns tied to Southcoast rail the City Of Fall River deserves this investment.
That would be like telling Worcester residents that they would have to drive to Framingham for 10 years before they'd get service at Union Station, or telling residents of Newton that the Green Line will reach them when they've driven to Kenmore enough to prove they really want it.
Driving into downtown Boston and finding parking to hop on the already crowded transit line is slightly different then driving to a convenient park and ride for a CR stop right off of the highway.
Also, both of those services you mentioned DO get the ridership worthy of not only their continued existence, but in the case of Worcester, expansion and reinvestment into the line. Worcester has proved itself as an EXTREMELY viable route with tons of ridership, so voila, they are now getting more frequent service along with improved stations. If you really want to bring that analogy to the Worcester Line into play, then make FR/NB "suffer" with regular, no frills commuter rail, which will be improved as ridership demands.
I know that if I were a resident of FR/NB, I would be bullshit if my town (in reality the state will, as well as other taxpayers) paid tons of money for a service which hardly gets used, so it only makes sense to test the waters and gradually expand. If it is such an incredible success that is worthy of multi-million dollar stations and improvements, then great, the T can now put money into what would be a stable and financially sound line.