Volume 50 Number 7 July 2019
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Regional Rail – Midtown Links
______________________________________________________________________________________ Regional Rail – Midtown Links Converting the region’s commuter rail lines into a regional rail system, with frequent service and integrated fares would greatly expand the utility of these lines. The single most important step is to connect the region’s two main railway stations: Grand Central Terminal (1) and Penn Station (2). Capacity on Manhattan’s Amtrak West Side Line (3) is limited by a single track tunnel under the West Side rail yards. A new double track connection at 10th Avenue and 34th Street would allow this line to enter the north side of Penn Station, permitting through operation with the 33rd Street tunnels under the East River. With this flow-through operation the West Side yard could be eliminated, avoiding the need for a deck and greatly reducing the cost of new development. The two existing Hudson River rail tunnels (4), severely limit capacity from the west. In the near term some capacity can be gained by through-operation at Penn Station, where all trains using these tunnels would continue on the 32nd Street tunnels under the East River, eliminating conflicts and delays. New tunnels (5) would double capacity across the river, and provide needed redundancy. The new tunnels would connect to existing platforms on the south side of Penn Station and would lead to the new connection to Grand Central. All trains using this connection would flow through from New Jersey to Grand Central, continuing north to the Bronx and beyond. A shuttle service (6) would link the disused West Side Yard with Penn Station, providing a low cost link for access to new West Side development. -
Training Front Line Personnel to Provide Quality Customer Service
Best Foot Forward: Training Front Line Personnel to Provide Quality Customer Service NOVEMBER 2003 Katherine Brower Associate Director Ellyn Shannon Transportation Planner Karyl Berger Research Associate Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the MTA 347 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10017 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors would like to acknowledge the professional and courteous customer assistance provided to them by personnel at all the transportation agencies contacted during the preparation of this report. This report has been a work in progress for many months and there are many people the authors would like to recognize for their time, assistance and perseverance in obtaining and sharing volumes of information with us. At the LIRR, special thanks go to Director of Government Affairs Janet Lewis who helped coordinate meetings and garnered the information from a variety of departments and personnel. Also at the LIRR, we would like to thank: Robert Cividanes, Donald Corkery, James Coumatos, Dr. John Diekman, Nathaniel Ham, Raymond P. Kenny, Rosanne Neville, Chris Papandreou, William E. Sellerberg and Fred Wedley. Metro-North staff were instrumental in pulling together a mountain of information and we want to acknowledge and thank: Margarita Almonte, Delana Glenn, Gus Meyers, George Okvat, Mario Riccobon, John Roberto, Mark Stoessner, Tom Tendy and Diana Tucker. The authors would also like to specially thank Lois Tendler, NYC Transit director of Government and Community Relations and Deborah Hall-Moore, Assistant director of Government and Community Relations. Without them, we would have never been able to complete this report. Also at NYC Transit, we would like to thank: Ralph Agritelley, Fred Benjamin, Rocco Cortese, Nathaniel Ford, Termaine Garden, John Gaul, Daniel Girardi, Anthony Giudice, John Grass, Kevin Hyland, Christopher Lake, Robert Newhouser, Louis Nicosia, Millard Seay, Barbara Spencer, Jennifer Sinclair and Steve Vidal. -
M7 Electric Multiple Unitанаnew York
Electric Multiple Unit -M- 7 POWERCAR WITH TOILET ---10' 6' B END FEND I 3,200 mi , -: -" 0 C==- ~=0 :- CJCJ ~~[] CJCJCJCJCJCJ [] I D b 01 " ~) -1::1 1211-1/2 t~J ~~W ~~IL...I ~w -A'-'1~~~- I ~~ 309~mmt ~ 1 I~ 11 m 2205~16~m-! 591..1.6" mm --I I 1- -- 59°6" ° 4°8-1/2. , ~ 16,~:,60~m ~-- -;cl 10435mm ~ .-1 25.908 mm F END GENERAL DATA wheelchair locations 2 type of vehicle electric multiple unit passenger per car (seated) under design operator Metropolitan Transportation Authority passengers per car (standing) crush load under design Long Island Railroad order date May 1999 TECHNICAL CHARACTERISTICS quantity 113 power cars without toilet .power fed by third rail: 400-900 Vdc 113 power cars with toilet .auxiliary voltages: 230 Vac / 3 ph / 60 Hz train consist up to 14 cars 72 Vdc .AC traction motor: 265 hp (200 kW) DIMENSIONS AND WEIGHf Metric Imperial .dynamic and pneumatic (tread & disc) braking system length over coupler 25,908 mm 85'0" .coil spring primary suspension width over side sheets 3,200 mm 10'6" .air-bag secondary suspension rail to roof height 3,950 mm 12' II Y;" .stainless steel carbody rail to top of floor height I ,295 mm 51" .fabricated steel frame trucks rail to top of height 4,039 mm 13' 3" .automatic parking brake doorway width 1,270 mm 50" .forced-air ventilation doorway height 1,981 mm 6'6" .air-conditioning capacity of 18 tons floor to high ceiling height 2,261 mm 89" .electric strip heaters floor to low ceiling height 2,007 mm 79" .ADA compliant toilet room (8 car) wheel diameter 914 mm 36" .vacuum sewage system -
September 25, 2017 Volume 37
SEPTEMBER 25, 2017 ■■■■■■■■■■ VOLUME 37 ■■■■■■■■■■ NUMBER 9 CLUB IN TRANSITION-4 The Semaphore David N. Clinton, Editor-in-Chief CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Southeastern Massachusetts…………………. Paul Cutler, Jr. “The Operator”………………………………… Paul Cutler III Cape Cod News………………………………….Skip Burton Boston Globe Reporter………………………. Brendan Sheehan Boston Herald Reporter……………………… Jim South Wall Street Journal Reporter....………………. Paul Bonanno, Jack Foley Rhode Island News…………………………… Tony Donatelli Empire State News…………………………… Dick Kozlowski Amtrak News……………………………. .. Rick Sutton, Russell Buck “The Chief’s Corner”……………………… . Fred Lockhart PRODUCTION STAFF Publication………………………………… ….. Al Taylor Al Munn Jim Ferris Bryan Miller Web Page …………………..…………………… Savery Moore Club Photographer……………………………….Joe Dumas The Semaphore is the monthly (except July) newsletter of the South Shore Model Railway Club & Museum (SSMRC) and any opinions found herein are those of the authors thereof and of the Editors and do not necessarily reflect any policies of this organization. The SSMRC, as a non-profit organization, does not endorse any position. Your comments are welcome! Please address all correspondence regarding this publication to: The Semaphore, 11 Hancock Rd., Hingham, MA 02043. ©2017 E-mail: [email protected] Club phone: 781-740-2000. Web page: www.ssmrc.org VOLUME 37 ■■■■■ NUMBER 9 ■■■■■ SEPTEMBER 2017 CLUB OFFICERS BILL OF LADING President………………….Jack Foley Vice-President…….. …..Dan Peterson Chief’s Corner ...... …….….3 Treasurer………………....Will Baker Contests ................ ………..3 Secretary……………….....Dave Clinton Clinic……………..….…….5 Chief Engineer……….. .Fred Lockhart Directors……………… ...Bill Garvey (’18) Editor’s Notes. ….…....….12 ……………………….. .Bryan Miller (‘18) ……………………… ….Roger St. Peter (’19) Members .............. ….…....13 …………………………...Rick Sutton (‘19) Memories ............. .………..4 Potpourri .............. ..……….6 Running Extra ...... ………..13 ON THE COVER: (Clockwise from top left) Mechanical Committee room; Model Shop clinic; Woodshop; back of temp. -
Model Railroading in the Time of Covid-19
Volume 50, Number 1 Spring 2020 Official publication of the Sunrise Trail Division of the National Model Railroad Association, Inc. Model Railroading in the time of Covid-19 It has been more than five months since the coro- type of event we all have come to expect.” navirus hit the Sunrise Trail area. The news has been Closer to home, the Sunrise Trail Division had to grim and life has changed dramatically for most peo- cancel the Spring Meet in March and is presently con- ple. For many, work is from home, sports have been sidering options for the November meet. cancelled, and all public gatherings, including model railroading events, are being postponed. Among the events that were cancelled were the National NMRA Convention, sched- uled for St. Louis, and now, the NER Conven- tions scheduled for October in Westford, Massachusetts. According to the organizers, the “Mill City planning team has finalized plans with the hotel to move the next NER Regional Convention out one year to October 8-11, 2021. This was a difficult decision, but it was But the hobby has been alive and kicking online— clear we would not have the ability to safely host the the National NMRA has been hosting a virtual lineup of the annual convention on line—the week- long marathon provides a bonanza of model railroad layout tours and clinics that can be found on the NMRA Youtube channel—go to www.youtube.com and type “NMRA” in the search field and you will get the links to all the sessions. Two Sunrise Trail Division members present- ed clinics—John Feraca presented a clinic on building the Beaver Creek branchline to his Stone Canyon Railroad, and Ed Koehler pre- SPRING 2020 1 sented an introduction to modelling firefighting. -
AAPRCO & RPCA Members Meet to Develop Their Response to New Amtrak Regulations
Volume 1 Issue 6 May 2018 AAPRCO & RPCA members meet to develop their response to new Amtrak regulations Members of the two associations met in New Orleans last week to further develop their response to new regulations being imposed by Amtrak on their members’ private railroad car businesses. Several of those vintage railroad cars were parked in New Orleans Union Station. “Most of our owners are small business people, and these new policies are forcing many of them to close or curtail their operations,” said AAPRCO President Bob Donnelley. “It is also negatively impacting their employees, suppliers and the hospitality industry that works with these private rail car trips,” added RPCA President Roger Fuehring. Currently about 200 private cars travel hundreds of thousands of miles behind regularly scheduled Amtrak trains each year. Along with special train excursions, they add nearly $10 million dollars in high margin revenue annually to the bottom line of the tax-payer subsidized passenger railroad. A 12% rate increase was imposed May 1 with just two weeks’ notice . This followed a longstanding pattern of increases taking effect annually on October 1. Cost data is being developed by economic expert Bruce Horowitz for presentation to Amtrak as are legal options. Members of both organizations are being asked to continue writing their Congress members and engaging the press. Social media is being activated and you are encouraged to follow AAPRCO on Facebook and twitter. Successes on the legislative front include this Congressional letter sent to Amtrak's president and the Board and inclusion of private car and charter train issues in recent hearings. -
MTA Capital Program 2008–2013
MTA Capital Program 2008–2013 February 2008 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Overview: The MTA 2008-2013 Capital Program-- - i - “Building for the Future on a Firm Foundation” 2008-2013 Introduction: Investment Summary and Program Funding - 1 - I. Core CPRB Capital Program - 7 - MTA NYC Transit 2008-2013 Capital Program - 13 - Overview Program Plan MTA Long Island Rail Road 2008-2013 Capital Program - 45 - Overview Program Plan MTA Metro-North Railroad 2008-2013 Capital Program - 73 - Overview Program Plan MTA Bus Company 2008-2013 Capital Program - 101 - Overview Program Plan MTA Security 2008-2013 Capital Program - 111 - Overview Introduction MTA Interagency 2008-2013 Capital Program - 115 - Overview Program Plan II. Capacity Expansion - 123 - Completing the Current Expansion Projects: MTA Capital Construction Company: - 125 - Overview Program plan East Side Access Second Avenue Subway Fulton Street Transit Center South Ferry Terminal Regional Investments Miscellaneous 2005-2009 Capital Program New Capacity Expansion Investments - 141 - Overview Investments to Implement Congestion Pricing New Capacity Expansions to Support Regional Growth Communications Based Train Control Second Avenue Subway Next Phase Penn Station Access Jamaica Capacity Improvements #7 Fleet Expansion Capacity Planning Studies Sustainability Investments Program Project Listings (blue pages) - 149 - (not paginated; follows order above, beginning with blue pages for MTA NYC Transit and ending with blue pages for MTA Capital Construction Company) MTA Bridges and Tunnels 2008-2013 Capital Program - B-1 - Overview Program Plan Program Project Listings - B-25 - 2005-2009 Capital Program THE 2008-2013 CAPITAL PROGRAM: Building for the Future on a Firm Foundation In the early 1960’s, the New York Metropolitan Region’s mass transportation network faced financial collapse and a crisis of capacity. -
“Every Thing in Its Place” Gender and Space on America’S Railroads, 1830-1899
“EVERY THING IN ITS PLACE” GENDER AND SPACE ON AMERICA’S RAILROADS, 1830-1899 R. David McCall Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in History APPROVED: __________________________________ Kathleen W. Jones, Chair ______________________________ _____________________________ N. Larry Shumsky Richard F. Hirsh September, 1999 Blacksburg, Virginia Key Words: railroad, gender, passenger, 19th, space Copyright 1999. All rights reserved. R. David McCall i Abstract “EVERY THING IN ITS PLACE” GENDER AND SPACE ON AMERICA’S RAILROADS, 1830-1899 R. David McCall Gender was a critically important component of the rules and practices of railroading in the nineteenth century. While railroad passengers were initially composed of a homogenous group of middle-class men and women, increased use of trains very quickly led to separations by sex and class. Victorian understandings of respectability and gender roles and view of the world as being ordered and hierarchical strongly shaped how railroads treated their passengers. Like home and hotel parlors, railroad passenger cars constituted an intersection of the sacred private realm of the home and the less pure mundane arena of public life. Nineteenth-century middle-class Americans used space to define and maintain societal distinctions of gender and, especially, class. The definition and decoration of space in rail passenger service reinforced Victorian values and restricted and controlled behavior. Diverse gender and status roles distinguished white middle-class men and women from immigrants and members of other races as railroad passengers. Even white middle- class men and women did not have the same experience or expectations of nineteenth- century rail passenger service. -
May 1, 1971 Amtrak May 1, 2018 Lancaster Dispatcher Page 2 May 2018
1935 - 2018 VOLUME 49 NUMBER 5 DISTRICT 2 - CHAPTER WEBSITE: WWW.NRHS1.ORG MAY 2018 MAY 1, 1971 AMTRAK MAY 1, 2018 LANCASTER DISPATCHER PAGE 2 MAY 2018 THE POWER DIRECTOR “NEWS FROM THE RAILROAD WIRES” AMTRAK TO STOP OPERATING SPECIAL AMTRAK, PRIVATE CAR GROUPS DISCUSS FUTURE OF CAR MOVES TRAINS, CHARTER MOVES WASHINGTON, Apr. 4, 2018, Trains News Wire - Amtrak management and WASHINGTON, Mar. 28, 2018 - Special trains leaders of two groups representing private-car owners held a conference and certain private varnish moves will no call Tuesday to discuss issues arising from the passenger railroad’s new longer be allowed on Amtrak routes according policies on charters and special trains, among them the future of moves to to a brief notice of a policy change sent to or from midpoints on a train’s route. Amtrak employees and obtained by Trains In meeting notes distributed to members of American Association of Private News Wire Wednesday morning. Railroad Car Owners and the Railroad Passenger Car Alliance, and obtained “Generally, Amtrak will no longer operate by Trains News Wire, Amtrak leadership said the passenger railroad has charter services or special trains. These operations caused significant been charged with evaluating private cars on scheduled trains and how operational distraction, failed to capture fully allocated profitable margins those services can continue,while also improving on-time performance and and sometimesdelayed our paying customers on our scheduled trains,” the “Amtrak economics.” notice reads. Amtrak’s policy change of March 28 plainly stated the railroad’s intentions “There may be a few narrow exceptions to this policy in order to support to no longer operate charter services or special trains, citing operational specific strategic initiatives, for example trial service in support of growing distractions, low profit margins, and passenger delays. -
Transportation Trips, Excursions, Special Journeys, Outings, Tours, and Milestones In, To, from Or Through New Jersey
TRANSPORTATION TRIPS, EXCURSIONS, SPECIAL JOURNEYS, OUTINGS, TOURS, AND MILESTONES IN, TO, FROM OR THROUGH NEW JERSEY Bill McKelvey, Editor, Updated to Mon., Mar. 8, 2021 INTRODUCTION This is a reference work which we hope will be useful to historians and researchers. For those researchers wanting to do a deeper dive into the history of a particular event or series of events, copious resources are given for most of the fantrips, excursions, special moves, etc. in this compilation. You may find it much easier to search for the RR, event, city, etc. you are interested in than to read the entire document. We also think it will provide interesting, educational, and sometimes entertaining reading. Perhaps it will give ideas to future fantrip or excursion leaders for trips which may still be possible. In any such work like this there is always the question of what to include or exclude or where to draw the line. Our first thought was to limit this work to railfan excursions, but that soon got broadened to include rail specials for the general public and officials, special moves, trolley trips, bus outings, waterway and canal journeys, etc. The focus has been on such trips which operated within NJ; from NJ; into NJ from other states; or, passed through NJ. We have excluded regularly scheduled tourist type rides, automobile journeys, air trips, amusement park rides, etc. NOTE: Since many of the following items were taken from promotional literature we can not guarantee that each and every trip was actually operated. Early on the railways explored and promoted special journeys for the public as a way to improve their bottom line. -
New York Central RR High
West Side TKThe rise ? and fall of Manhattan s High Line by Joe Greenstein 1934: nearly complete, the two-track High Line will lift trains out of nearby Tenth Avenue. New York Central © 201 Kalmbach Publishing Co. This material may not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher. www.TrainsMag.com itm r* .. : 1 . 1 4tl * * ': 1* *'::. ,. * j ** % t * * m ? " '' % * m > wmg m ': ** ' f<P 4 5$ :f/Y ? \ if -\ fi n '% ft 2001: wildflowers grace the moribund High Line Al above Long Island's car yard at 30th Street. silent, an old rail road viaduct still winds its State-of-the-art St. John's Park Terminal way down Manhattan's West anchored the south end of the High Line. Side. Once a bustling New York Central freight line, it hasGhostlynot seen a train for 20 and of the railbank a federal to this years, conservancy, preserve unique vestige of Man most New Yorkers barely notice the program that converts unused rail hattan's industrial past. Indeed, in view drab structure. But the "High Line" has rights-of-way to recreational trails, with of recent catastrophic events here, the sparked an impassioned debate between the understanding that railroads may idea of paying homage to the city's it is an his reclaim them. In to those who think important someday opposition transportation history has taken on a is the Chelsea torical legacy worth preserving, and this idea Property Owners new poignancy. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime those who view it as an ugly impedi Group, which views the High Line as a opportunity," he said. -
Transportation: Past, Present and Future “From the Curators”
Transportation: Past, Present and Future “From the Curators” Transportationthehenryford.org in America/education Table of Contents PART 1 PART 2 03 Chapter 1 85 Chapter 1 What Is “American” about American Transportation? 20th-Century Migration and Immigration 06 Chapter 2 92 Chapter 2 Government‘s Role in the Development of Immigration Stories American Transportation 99 Chapter 3 10 Chapter 3 The Great Migration Personal, Public and Commercial Transportation 107 Bibliography 17 Chapter 4 Modes of Transportation 17 Horse-Drawn Vehicles PART 3 30 Railroad 36 Aviation 101 Chapter 1 40 Automobiles Pleasure Travel 40 From the User’s Point of View 124 Bibliography 50 The American Automobile Industry, 1805-2010 60 Auto Issues Today Globalization, Powering Cars of the Future, Vehicles and the Environment, and Modern Manufacturing © 2011 The Henry Ford. This content is offered for personal and educa- 74 Chapter 5 tional use through an “Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike” Creative Transportation Networks Commons. If you have questions or feedback regarding these materials, please contact [email protected]. 81 Bibliography 2 Transportation: Past, Present and Future | “From the Curators” thehenryford.org/education PART 1 Chapter 1 What Is “American” About American Transportation? A society’s transportation system reflects the society’s values, Large cities like Cincinnati and smaller ones like Flint, attitudes, aspirations, resources and physical environment. Michigan, and Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania, turned them out Some of the best examples of uniquely American transporta- by the thousands, often utilizing special-purpose woodwork- tion stories involve: ing machines from the burgeoning American machinery industry. By 1900, buggy makers were turning out over • The American attitude toward individual freedom 500,000 each year, and Sears, Roebuck was selling them for • The American “culture of haste” under $25.