The job market and wages are not as good in the Providence area when compared to Boston. The job advantage however flips when it comes to housing as you can get more for far less in the Providence area. Working in Boston while living near Providence is a winning personal money strategy on both fronts.
The job market and wages are not as good in the Providence area when compared to Boston. The job advantage however flips when it comes to housing as you can get more for far less in the Providence area. Working in Boston while living near Providence is a winning personal money strategy on both fronts.
Yeah. A couple of anecdotes: I once had a CEO (small-ish startup/spin-off from a larger company) who lived in Providence and commuted to our office in Back Back every day. He was able to walk to the Amtrak station and get to the office faster door to door than I was living ~6-7 miles away in Dorchester. I guess Amtrak has (or had) a monthly type pass that was about the same as the MBTA, but, you could be on an Acela and go from Providence to Back Bay in under 30 minutes.
Another is a good friend/former colleague of mine who was born and raised in RI and ended up working in Boston their entire career (having met on both of our first gigs out of college). In the end, he was able to buy quite a nice house in a decent school system for a fraction of the price of anything within even 495, while still making a Boston salary (literally - at least 1/3 or less). He didn't live near Providence, but around TF Green, and found the trade-off of an hour and a half on the CR as worth it, especially given his companies and sector where he could get a decent amount of work done on the commute, making the entire thing not too bad. That said - he has been fully remote since 2020, and I don't think he is planning on ever doing that dance again unless forced. He did on occasion drive to Providence and catch the faster trains (both MBTA and Amtrak).
This always brings me back to what I think the vision on the Providence line should be: we have high-speed and regional rail making the run in 20-30 minutes, which is great. Unfortunately, they also don't stop at TF Green/the Airport. Then we have the MBTA doing the run with all the local stops taking 1-1.5 hours. I think, at least from the local MBTA side, moving into a fully electric world with 15-30-minute clock-facing schedules would be huge. With full-height platforms and electrification, I think the CR could slot in at a 30-45 minute run to Providence, and under an hour to TF Green (ideally 45 minutes). That opens up a big market of people in Boston going to Providence for a night out (and probably even more vice-versa), but also makes TF Green a viable alternative to Logan, and can long-term alleviate Logan's traffic and log-jam. With an electrified regional rail type service, TF Green becomes about as far (time-wise) as JFK is to Manhattan, and I would argue depending on where in Boston (and the Greater Boston Area), TF Green might become even more convenient than Logan with this level of service.
The last anecdote as it is a bit late, and I should get some sleep now that I have the little one back asleep: a few years ago with our first, we ended up doing a full trip to Providence and their Children's Museum on the Acela. We did drive to 128 (vs. taking the HSR and Red in town and Amtrak at South Station), and with the cost of the Amtrak tickets + bus + admission to their Children's museum, it was cost comparable to going into Boston's, paying for parking and admission. Plus, the kiddo loved going on the train (and actual HSR at that). One downside, of course, was the bus on the Providence side and the few blocks walk with a toddler (luckily a decent little family pub for lunch to break it up on the way back), but otherwise, it was pretty fast door-to-door: probably 10-15 minutes to 128, free parking there, 20 minutes on the Acela and a 10-minute bus ride rivals a bit the pandemic level red line service we had - and certainly driving in and getting parking can take anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour.
This is to say in my rambling: better, faster service to Providence and TF Green I think only helps and behooves us in Boston and Massachusetts in general. RI might be a different state, but, I think overall from a nonparochial viewpoint, as a city and airport are some of our best bets for investment. Anecdotes, again, but I know if we had fast regional rail service we would be more apt for day and weekend trips to RI (along with potentially flying out for longer trips), and I know quite a few people off-setting that in the RI world that would be coming to Boston for nightlife/restaurants/day trips.
This is a bit of a rant (and one I think I have been on before), but, yeah, I think the Boston <=> Providence link is very strong, and should be cultivated given what RI has to offer from Providence as a city and also TF Green as an airport.