Lawmakers included in the new state budget a provision to have the Department of Transportation establish a working group to “identify and evaluate the economic and cultural benefits and political, legal or logistical challenges to the Berkshire and western Massachusetts regions” of seasonal weekend train service between Pittsfield and New York City.
Such a service would be modeled on the seasonal weekend CapeFlyer service, which shuttles passengers between Boston and Barnstable during summer weekends. The working group would be required to contact New York officials in an effort to collaborate, and to submit a report to the Legislature by next March.
....Reconnecting scenic western Massachusetts to the nation’s largest city is not a new idea, even in recent years. In 2010, the Housatonic Railroad Company, which operates freight service through Connecticut and the Berkshires, optimistically projected about 2 million annual fares if daily, year-round service resumed.
The Berkshire Regional Planning Commission also studied the idea earlier this decade, getting to the point of identifying potential station locations. And in early 2015, the state finalized the purchase of nearly 40 miles of rail between Pittsfield and the state’s southwestern border, seen as a potential precursor to establishing new passenger service to New York through Connecticut.
But in the time since, Hinds said, Connecticut’s government has been mostly uninterested in helping establish a north-south route. Hinds thinks Massachusetts and New York could work together to establish a different route that bypasses Connecticut, instead heading west toward Albany before cutting south to the city. The legislation would not require MassDOT to consider this route exclusively.