Commuter Rail Trends Part I
For the first part of my dive into CR ridership data I took a look at how ridership panned out during June 2024 which has been the highest ridership month for the CR so far post-pandemic (data is unfortunately unavailable prior to 2020 besides the 2018 counts).
-Overall average
Weekday ridership was 112,379 while
Weekend ridership was 33,959, a -70% drop. That's quite a large drop and if weekend ridership has been higher than pre-pandemic like they say then pre-pandemic must've been abysmal.
-The overall service drop from Weekday to Weekend was -49% (259->133 trips). In pure trip numbers this appears like a standard North American weekend service falloff but the line-by-line picture displays how the T's 2hr every line service is actually quite inequitable to the lines serving the most riders. The bulk of the trip removals occur on the Providence, Worcester, and Franklin Lines.
View attachment 54319
This is in contrast with the lines that see the least service reduction, the Old Colony Lines, due primarily to having far less weekday service to begin with.
View attachment 54320
The ridership effect of these massive service falloffs aren't enough to unseat the Providence Line as the highest ridership weekend line but there is a massive effect. The Worcester Line does see itself drop down to #3 notably behind the only "line" not following the heavy service falloff trend, the Newburyport/Rockport.
View attachment 54321View attachment 54322
The Franklin Line has the worst ridership falloff of the highest ridership lines (it's also seeing record weekday ridership).
View attachment 54323
What the Newburyport/Rockport demonstrates is, the obvious, that maintaining a reasonable level of service on the weekends retains a decent amount of ridership. It accomplishes this with its highest ridership coming from its main truck, something the Franklin Line can emulate as well as the Providence somewhat. If the T maintained their 2hr service model but including the Stoughton and Foxboro branches, they'd at least see a bit of a weekend ridership increase. The case is stronger for the Franklin Line since there is a lot of demand for weekend trips to Patriot Place and Legacy Place as well as Norwood, Dedham, and Hyde Park residents generating a lot of the line's ridership. Stoughton has a larger question mark over it because it isn't that large of a contributor to the Providence Line ridership and Providence as well as Worcester should have at least hourly weekend service anyway.
A side note on the Old Colonies:
Despite the minimal ridership falloff they simply don't have the population density or are too wealthy to bother with even worse frequencies than weekdays (aside from the Middleboro) so they're weekend ridership drop is the worst of all.
View attachment 54324