The MBTA made signifcant progress on fixing dozens of Red Line slow zones, the MBTA is finally able to restore weekday service on the Red Line back to
Fall 2022 service levels. As mentioned in an earlier post,
none of the Summer 2023
bus service cuts that slashed weekday and Saturday bus service are getting restored this summer almost 1 year after the new contract. Instead, there is
a new unannounced 10% service cut frequency reduction for the 47 bus this summer (billed by the T as "departure times shift due to travel time updates").
Summer 2024 detailed changes (thanks to the
GTFS update -
no frequency map changes)
Summer 2024 service cuts & frequency reduction:
47 bus - 5 fewer weekday trips (56 -> 51 trips)
Note: Off peak weekday headways are moving from every 20 minutes midday to every 30 minutes midday. This is a loss of 50% of the off peak midday service. Peak service did not get as much of a cut so this is a new, more peak-heavy schedule.
Summer 2024 frequency increases:
Red Line - 9 new weekday trips for Ashmont and Braintree individually (73/72 -> 82/81 weekday trips)
Green Line B Branch - 1 new weekday trip (145 -> 146 trips)
111 bus - 8 new weekday trips (206 -> 214 trips)
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Now some comments about the new changes:
If restored track conditions (not improved, only restored) allows restoration of faster travel times and more train frequency, why is the more subway frequency only on weekdays and not also applying to off peak weekend frequency? It's not like the slow zones are fixed on weekdays only and speed restrictions are still in place on weekends. If the tracks allow restoration of trip times back to Fall 2022 service levels on weekdays, then this should result in frequency improvements on weekdays AND weekends, not weekdays only.
COVID resulted in a flattening of transit demand and the T
moved the Orange Line to a more all-day, off-peak schedule back in Fall 2021. Slow zones and vehicle shortages reduced 2022-23 subway service. The new GM Eng began rebuilding subway service with new OL cars; and slow zone track repairs on all 4 subway lines, As the slow zones get fixed, weekday peak schedules get restored to restored speeds/frequencies, off peak schedules remain on the reduced slow zone schedules. The T is now backsliding on the all-day, off-peak flatter service pattern post-COVID, with a more peak-heavy service pattern with terrible off-peak headways. Off peak headways are literally "timetabled headways, plan your connections/transfers", not "SUAG and transfer at ease". There should be urgency to restore off peak headways on the subway system, as slow zones get fixed, at the same rate as peak weekday service restorations.
Last time I used the Orange Line was 6pm on a Thursday in May 2024, and there were 6 - 8 minute headways and I never needed to wait more than 6 minutes for a train that day. Then later I passed through the Haymarket station late in the afternoon on June 8th, 2024, and I see a screen saying "Orange Line trains every 10 - 14 minutes", yikes. At that point with off peak double digit headways with almost 15 minutes between trains, one might as well just publish subway timetables for the Orange Line and run the Orange Line on a timetabled schedule off peak.
The T has a growing problem with off peak frequencies despite being in the post-COVID era. The GLX's D and E branches run 11 - 16 minute headways off peak with dozens of bunched trains. It's no wonder why transfers from Kenmore bus transfers to OL northside transfers don't work at all with the Gov'y forced transfer - 3 seat ride, or
a 11 - 15 min headway from N. Station. The unfunded BNRD's T7 route from Sullivan/Seaport will also similarly be inaccessible for Kenmore transfer GL riders since the
BNRD T7 serving Sullivan, Haymarket, State, and the Seaport, will not serve Gov'y, meaning it can't get westbound GL transfers onto northbound OL transfers to cover the lack of NSRL (BNRD 86 cutback to Harvard), meaning that even if BNRD were to get fully funded, Kenmore and Sullivan would still be a 3 seat ride with a Gov'y transfer, or a lenghy wait for a D at North Station., despite both Sullivan and Kenmore literally being on the subway system and the unfunded BNRD frequent grid adding the T7 to Sullivan/Seaport.