General MBTA Topics (Multi Modal, Budget, MassDOT)

FWIW, MassDOT pavement design is based on equivalent single axle loads (ESALs), where all projected vehicle traffic (cars and trucks) for a particular roadway is normalized so as to account for the impact on a pavement surface over a particular lifespan.
 
I don't really know what thread is most appropriate for this, but the TransitMatters executive director is leaving for Toole Design.

 
The overhaul contract bids for the HSP-46 locomotives were due 1/07/25, Anyone know if anyone bid and if so, who?

Update: Understand it's been extended to February 26th.

DS
 
Last edited:
It's not - road wear increases as the fourth power (square of the square) of axle load - so a vehicle that's just 19% heavier will cause twice the road wear, despite having a much smaller gap in fuel efficiency.
That may be true - but even with the Hummers and Cybertrucks of the world - it's really the tractor-trailers and buses that rip up pavement.
 
https://www.mbta.com/news/2025-01-17/mbta-shares-planned-service-outage-scheduled-january-june-2025

Noted outages:
  • RL Ashmont to JFK/UMass from April 1 – April 9 for proactive rail maintenance.
  • OL North Station to Oak Grove from May 10 – May 18 to support MassDOT’s Maffa Way/Mystic Avenue Bridge construction project.
  • OL North Station to Forest Hills from June 21 – June 29 for signal upgrade work.
  • BL Bowdoin to Airport from June 7 – June 15 for infrastructure work.
  • Haverhill and Newburyport/Rockport Line from Oak Grove to North Station / Swampscott to North Station will be closed the following days to support MassDOT’s Maffa Way/Mystic Avenue Bridge construction project and MBTA signal work.
    • January 18 – January 19
    • February 1 – February 2
    • February 15 – February 16
    • March 8 – March 9
    • March 22 – March 23
    • April 5 – April 6
    • April 24 – April 27
 
https://www.mbta.com/news/2025-01-17/mbta-shares-planned-service-outage-scheduled-january-june-2025

Noted outages:
  • RL Ashmont to JFK/UMass from April 1 – April 9 for proactive rail maintenance.
  • OL North Station to Oak Grove from May 10 – May 18 to support MassDOT’s Maffa Way/Mystic Avenue Bridge construction project.
  • OL North Station to Forest Hills from June 21 – June 29 for signal upgrade work.
  • BL Bowdoin to Airport from June 7 – June 15 for infrastructure work.
  • Haverhill and Newburyport/Rockport Line from Oak Grove to North Station / Swampscott to North Station will be closed the following days to support MassDOT’s Maffa Way/Mystic Avenue Bridge construction project and MBTA signal work.
    • January 18 – January 19
    • February 1 – February 2
    • February 15 – February 16
    • March 8 – March 9
    • March 22 – March 23
    • April 5 – April 6
    • April 24 – April 27

I can't help but feeling a bit disappointed that we are going to be seeing more weeklong shutdowns, especially for "proactive rail maintenance" and "infrastructure work". Cynically, it looks like the earlier TIP work was not done as well as later shutdowns, to the point where some of it requires significant effort to either fix or address problems that weren't previously identified. I imagine the Ashmont branch is getting CWR because there wasn't enough experience to do that in October 2023. Hopefully a better description of the work planned (and then performed) for the Ashmont branch shutdown and the partial Blue Line shutdown is provided.
 
I can't help but feeling a bit disappointed that we are going to be seeing more weeklong shutdowns, especially for "proactive rail maintenance" and "infrastructure work". Cynically, it looks like the earlier TIP work was not done as well as later shutdowns, to the point where some of it requires significant effort to either fix or address problems that weren't previously identified. I imagine the Ashmont branch is getting CWR because there wasn't enough experience to do that in October 2023. Hopefully a better description of the work planned (and then performed) for the Ashmont branch shutdown and the partial Blue Line shutdown is provided.
AFAIK, all the subway and green line rail is continuously welded and has been for a long time now.
 
Two school bus news items:


The City of Boston currently has 40 electric school buses operating, representing about 5 percent of its fleet of 751 buses.

But with the 125 new buses funded from this grant, electric buses will comprise more than one-fifth of the Boston school bus fleet.

 
I don't really know what thread is most appropriate for this, but the TransitMatters executive director is leaving for Toole Design.

IMO, it's probably difficult to overstate how successful TM has been under Johnson. Like, I'm pretty sure the Globe gets a quote from TransitMatters on most, if not all, articles they write about the T. The TM Data Dashboards have been transformative, both within advocacy circles and beyond. The Regional Rail initiative wouldn't be anywhere near where it is today without TransitMatters' work. The whole thing is really just a remarkable success story. TM's loss (and our loss in general, as an advocacy community) is absolutely Toole Design's gain. Hopefully Toole is able to do good work in Boston under Johnson's leadership -- and either way, I'm really happy for him -- I have to think this is a tremendous opportunity for him. It's certainly well-deserved.
 
Okay but hold on, that article is confusing. He’s charged with wire fraud… but the article also talks about selling wire to scrap yards?
This article explains it better. There were two schemes going on.
  1. Invoice fraud: Pigsley's friend would buy things using his company, then that company would submit falsified invoices to Keolis for 'work done' or some other false pretenses, Keolis with reimburse the friend, then Pigsley would get whatever the company bought. (And his friend apparently got a cut too.)
  2. The far more interesting literal wire fraud. Working at Keolis he procured copper wire, then just stole it by having it delivered to his house where it would disappear. He would then sell it for scrap.
In terms of where the crime of wire fraud, not the literal wire fraud, was happening, it could have been anywhere. Wire Fraud is just using a method of electronic communication to defraud someone, that could be by phone, email, text, telegram, etc. Given that this whole thing is fraud and involved placing orders and paying invoices, presumably electronically, those charges could apply to one or both schemes.
 
Hey, criminal activity aside, at least he’s got a sense of humor…he basically turned a pun on “wire fraud” into an additional charge! Innovation takes many forms, I suppose.
 
Im sorry but the guy's name is actually "Pigsley"? Is this some kind of joke but real life?
 
The Red Line’s Braintree branch will soon increase its speed from 40 miles per hour to 50 miles per hour where feasible, the MBTA announced Monday.

The Red Line branch’s speed restorations are expected to take effect “within days, pending final inspection,” the agency wrote in a press release.
 
A commuter rail train had derailed at Sourh Station, coming from Providence, I think. No one was hurt.
 

Back
Top