Worcester Line improvements also facilitate "CompassRail" development. Worcester is the fastest growing city in the NE and better transit is needed to continue. The Worcester Line is the 2nd most used lineI hope you are correct, and I love your optimism! I just feel the Transmit Matters report on the Framingham/Worcester line is so far down the list of important transit needs within the Boston area that it borders on fantasy. Extension of the Orange Line to West Roxbury, conversion of the Needham line to a Green Line extension, Red/Blue Connector, extension of the Blue Line to Lynn, and a host of other projects seem like a higher priority and greater use of limited funding.
Worcester is the fastest growing city in the NE and better transit is needed to continue.
One super-express a day, not timed for typical commute hours, being turned into a regular zone express is not exactly powerful evidence for a lack of demand.
Worcester County grew by about 8 % between 2000 and 2020So much so that they killed off H2H due to lack of demand.
I think the only county in MA that has increased pop growth is Barnstable. Although I think the declines in Middlesex and Suffolk aren't much.
Of course this story, with its various bizarre/surreal/farcical contours, is catnip for a scandal sheet like the Herald. Nevertheless, I'll point out that the raggedy tabloid has performed a vital public service here in pointing out the apparent astonishing lethality of the commuter rail, in terms of how many people were fatally struck by it over a five-year span (2017-2022): on average, 1.4 fatalities per month.
You can dig into the numbers in the FRA website.Of course this story, with its various bizarre/surreal/farcical contours, is catnip for a scandal sheet like the Herald. Nevertheless, I'll point out that the raggedy tabloid has performed a vital public service here in pointing out the apparent astonishing lethality of the commuter rail, in terms of how many people were fatally struck by it over a five-year span (2017-2022): on average, 1.4 fatalities per month.
(apparent, because, naturally, the Herald being the Herald, the stat is presented completely in a vacuum: on a per-mile-covered basis, is that high for an American commuter rail system? Low? Average? for all we know, the MBTA causes remarkably few monthly fatalities on the tracks, compared to peer commuter rail systems...)
https://www.bostonherald.com/2024/0...estrian-crossings-has-february-court-hearing/
Worcester County grew by about 8 % between 2000 and 2020
Evidence, please? Boy, you sure do like flinging out vibes-as-facts on the board.Pop is likely at best stagnant now. And the CR ridership issue you'd have to think is more WFH than anything else.
This statement isn't true regardless of whether you're talking about Covid short-term or, say, 2000-2021 long-term:I think the only county in MA that has increased pop growth is Barnstable. Although I think the declines in Middlesex and Suffolk aren't much.
Evidence, please? Boy, you sure do like flinging out vibes-as-facts on the board.
Don't change the subject. I asked for some evidence for this debunked claim. . .Well, why do you think they dumped H2H then? It was fairly popular in 2019 and it had a decent time slot unlike back in 2019.
Pop is likely at best stagnant now. And the CR ridership issue you'd have to think is more WFH than anything else.
One H2H time slot does not equal a microcosm of whatever systemic issue your 'vibes' claim is ruling across the board. Substantiate it with something.
The 2022 census data is available, I just didn't use it.
So I guess all the new buildings being built in downtown Wormtown are all being built by delusional people. I'm going to guess that, baring data from you, the funders dumping a billion or more into Worcester may have data that refutes your feelings.Well, why do you think they dumped H2H then? It was fairly popular in 2019 and it had a decent time slot unlike back in 2019.
(Source, using 2010 instead of 2000 for convenience)That's what I was referring to when I looked at it. And yes Barnstable was in decline before the pandemic. One possible explanation is that enough people on the Cape didn't commit to living there full time until some time in 22 but had been there largely since the beginning of the Pandemic.
It should be pretty logical.... people going in 5 days a week versus, what, 1? 2 maybe?
County | 2010 | Apr 2020 | Apr 2022 | % 10-22 | % 20-22 |
Suffolk | 722,023 | 797,936 | 766,381 | +6.1% | -4.0% |
Essex | 743,159 | 809,829 | 806,765 | +8.6% | -0.4% |
Middlesex | 1,503,085 | 1,632,002 | 1,617,105 | +7.6% | -0.9% |
Norfolk | 670,850 | 725,981 | 725,531 | +8.2% | -0.1% |
Worcester | 798,552 | 862,111 | 862,927 | +8.1% | +0.1% |
Barnstable | 215,888 | 228,996 | 232,457 | +7.7% | +1.5% |
Commuter rail ridership has reached 90%+ of pre-Covid levels late last year, well above the MBTA average. Using your logic of people going to work "one, two, maybe" times per week, the ridership recovery ratio should have been 0-40%.They haven't brought back 2019 service levels on the WL as a whole either. And WFH is why.