Worcester losing the Heart to Hub train is awful and should be causing Worcester folks to bark.
It also reaffirms my decision to lease a car last summer as a wise one as I used to take the H2H frequently after spending weekends in the Woo.
The fucking T is a joke and people wonder why nobody wants to take it vs drive. It is unpredictable, unreliable, and expensive. In a world where you may only need to commute into Boston 2-3 times a week a 10-12k/mi year lease @ 200-250/mo is just a much better allocation of money.
The T (and to a lesser extent MassDOT in general) is going to need to contend with major changes to the commuter market in the next few years. In particular, the T -- possibly for the first time -- is going to need to take seriously what I call the "consultant's commute": the worker who travels into the office a few times a week, or even a few times a month, and who is equally likely to do a very long day at the office when in-person (arrive at 7:30, depart at 6:30, that kind of thing) as they are to do a shortened day at the office, where they are only there for key meetings (e.g. arrive at 10:30, depart at 3:15).
Amtrak has had "consultant commuter" schedules to NYC, and to lesser extents the other BosWash cities, for years now. The old Empire Service schedules to Albany make that clear -- they're clearly intended for riders who need to travel to NYC on a somewhat flexible schedule, but aren't going to be making the ride every day. In fact, you can do such a commute to New York from destinations ranging from Washington to Springfield, Albany to Harrisburg. (And, arguably, the truly long-haul Metro-North commutes -- the runs that stretch toward two hours or more, from Poughkeepsie or Beacon, Southeast or Wassaic, New Haven or anything involving an SLE transfer -- are also much friendlier as "consultant's commutes," though I'm sure there are plenty of daily riders.)
For a long time, the T has banked on the commuter rail -- and to a lesser extent, the Park-n-Rides at Riverside and on the Red Line -- being the only option for riders because the alternative was to contend with the dual hells of 93 and downtown parking. For all of the drawbacks of the commuter rail -- unreliability, inconvenient schedules, uncomfortable seats in overcrowded cars with underpowered air conditioning -- it still beat out crawling up 93 at 5 mph in bumper-to-bumper traffic at 6:45 in the morning, every morning.
But you're right -- especially now, when such a hell would only be visited upon someone several times a month, and where they may be less traffic and where there may be more flexibility about when you actually need to be in the office -- the T is no longer going to have the captive lock that it once did.
Ironically enough, I think the solution for the "consultant's commute" (presumably geared more toward white collar workers) is the same as the one currently being implemented to support blue collar workers in places like Lynn and Brockton: regular all-day clock-facing service that's hourly if not better. Or, as TransitMatters puts it, Regional Rail.
For what it's worth, I do believe that there is a role for express/limited stop trains from Worcester and Providence. I realize I'm possibly in a minority here, but both of those cities share the combination of high ridership and long journey -- especially Worcester. Obviously these needs must be balanced against each other -- in a full-build electrified Regional Rail network with high-level platforms and short dwells, I think the need for express service is less acute, and more problematic to implement for crowding out regular local service.
But in the interim period, where for example you see 30 min/60 min headways peak/off-peak, I think there is a role for a small number of limited-stop trains in between those peak trains, in order to drop those 80-90 minute journeys down to 60-65 minutes. I do think there is a role for that in the medium-term. And I suspect that we will see the return of H2H later this year -- we're still in an awkward phase of reopening, and it looks to me like the T really wanted to demonstrate that they know how to make clock-facing schedules, so I'm guessing that combination played into the removal of H2H in the proposed spring schedules.
(And I will say this -- it is
beautifully clock-facing. Trains leaving Worcester every hour on the hour from 5am to 7pm? Framingham inbound locals departing every hour on the :55 from 4:55am to 7:55am? Outbound Framinghams leaving South Station on the :35 and Worcesters leaving on the :05? I can't remember ever seeing anything like that.
Providence's isn't quite as elegant, although you can tell they tried. Providence itself gets an inbound train every hour on the :15 [±3 min, with one exception] all day from 4:15am to 8:15pm. Outbound service is a bit messier, but basically is every hour on the :25 from 4:25 am to 8:25pm, with one -5 minute exception at 6:20pm, and one gap at the 5pm hour -- a very long-running gap caused, as best as I can tell, by conflicts with Amtrak's dual Acela and Northeast Regional departures during that block. But yes -- clearly much more of an intention for clockfacing schedules than I can ever remember seeing in the past.)
(Talk about missing the forest for the trees... in my previous readthrough these schedules, I didn't notice this clockfacing stuff at
all. But now that I'm looking, it's everywhere.)