They should have championship parades on the weekend, not on a Tuesday when people are trying to get to work.
It almost has to be ASAP after the season ends because the players will want to skip town.
They should have championship parades on the weekend, not on a Tuesday when people are trying to get to work.
They should have championship parades on the weekend, not on a Tuesday when people are trying to get to work.
I sat at Anderson/Woburn this morning as the 7:41, 8:01, and 8:11 trains whizzed by without stopping. No communication from Keolis or the T, or extra carriages for the trains.
Drove down to Medford to get to work.
Commuter Rail INCREDIBLE JOB today!!
Green Line.... well... it happens!
Why not move the parade to later in the day?
Because the effects on the evening commute would actually be worse.
Because the effects on the evening commute would actually be worse.
We've now had 12 parades since 2001 around here. All but one of them have been on a weekday.
IIRC the Red Sox 2004 parade was not on a weekday. So if the Bruins parade was on a weekend that would be two.
On the news tonight they said the city is going to do the red-blue connector but it could take up until 2040.... wtf.
They should have championship parades on the weekend, not on a Tuesday when people are trying to get to work.
^ That could be a very good idea if they re-invested the station dwell thereby saved into faster operations (more turns per hour)
The T could have focused on only stations with the highest capacity, like all-door boarding or slack parking.
But therein lies the rub. . .
The T could do a lot of things, but someone on the event logistics side has to be an equal partner in that planning because the T doesn't have the authority to act alone on someone else's behalf. And City of Boston didn't do that here. Didn't even advise on the matter. They pretty much just said "do what you did for the other 10 title parades" even though the crowd predictions were running close to a half-mil HIGHER because of the weather...then continued to blitz the airwaves with "Take the T!" advisories aimed at drivers. The T ran all the service it could with the equipment it had, and ended up melting down in exactly the proportion the crowd was an above-and-beyond blowout.
How exactly are they, as a 175-municipality chartered service district of the Commonwealth, supposed to act alone to fill all gaps that event planners in the City of Boston and/or state government would not do? Remember...we had our "Pope vs. SEPTA" moment during the 2004 Democratic Convention where all parties joined hands and immaculately planned for the service disruptions. And we have the annual statewide holiday status of Patriots Day smoothing over jurisdictions between the towns affected by road/transit closures on the Marathon route. Whether individual offices in downtown Boston were closed or not yesterday because of compromised access, it was still a regular Tuesday workday for the extreme majority of the T district. If the extremeness of the crowd AND the needs of daily commuters couldn't be accommodated by achievable train service, then the event planners should've had something to say about blunting that risk instead of just letting the entirety of the CR system drown a gruesome death.
All I am suggesting is that there should be a "super crush" plan--probably coming from the Governor's Office-- and all I am asking is whether SEPTA's limited stop strategy might be applicable here? (Particularly given that up thread the first social media observation was that three trains in a row went through Anderson without stopping)