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The Delaware Valley Rail Passenger Electronic Edition December 1993 Vol. XI, No. 12 Published by the Delaware Valley Association of Railroad Passengers in the interest of continued, improved, and expanded rail service for the present and potential railroad and rail transit passengers of southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and nearby areas. For more information about DVARP and good rail service, please contact us: P.O. Box 7505, Philadelphia, PA 19101 215-222-3373 <73243.1224@compuserve.com> <---NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS The Electronic Edition is published as a service to the net community by DVARP. Please send your comments to <mmitchell@asrr.arsusda.gov>. Archives are maintained at <listserv@cunyvm.cuny.edu>. To obtain a newsletter file from January 1992 to the present, send an e-mail message to the listserv saying GET DVARP 9201 RAILNEWS (substitute the year and month you want for 9201). This newsletter can also be obtained by FTP to hipp.etsu.edu, directory pub/railroad/dvarp. DVARP thanks archivists Geert K. Marien and Dr. Robert Wier for providing these archive sites. Time to Renew Your DVARP Membership! use the coupon on page 15 No Dues Increase in 1994--details page 14 Inside The Delaware Valley Rail Passenger. 1 Broadway Limited farce demonstrates serious problems with Amtrak management 3 Riders win! Feds increase capital funding, concourse vagrants have new home, El car deal done. 4 On the Railroad Lines: Cynwyd line threatened by bridge closing, SEPTA people make merry. 7 South Jersey Update: Ridership up, but NJT not resting on its laurels 8 Harrisburg Line: John Pawson explains why SEPTA should have control of it. 10 Europeans, Americans teaming up to bid on high-speed trains for Amtrak. 11 Federal hearing on intermodal planning and implementation: different views of progress made. 13 PA, NJ, NY seek Phoebe Snow's return. 14-15 Dates of Interest, Up and Down the Corridor, DVARP Directory DVARP President: Chuck Bode Newsletter Editor: Matthew Mitchell Production Manager: Tom Borawski for other officers and committee chairs, see page 15 entire contents copyright c 1993 DVARP, except photos c 1993 credited photographers Opinions expressed in The Delaware Valley Rail Passenger are not necessarily those of DVARP or its members. We welcome your comments: call 215-222-3373 A "Broadway" Farce in Two Acts by Chuck Bode Act I--The Westbound Broadway Limited, October 17th: A Hot Train The trip begins normally--the Broadway Limited leaving Philadelphia 17 minutes late. Numerous package cars, about five coaches, a snack car, a dinner, and two sleepers in that order form today's train. Despite reports of sold out trains, this one is only about 50% full-- which will shortly be fortunate. Out on the mainline all seems well: the crew collects tickets and fills out reports of who is to get off at which station. The crew assures a concerned passenger that the train will make up delay time and arrive on time. Another passenger across the aisle is going to Huntingdon. She is also concerned about being late. She had to arrange to be met. Seems Huntingdon does not have even one taxi and she is too old to walk home. She hopes her ride will wait the 20 extra minutes because there is no way for him to know where the train is. The passenger next to her is less help. She rides the Broadway almost once a month and says it is never on time and is often hours late. Her husband is to meet her at Pittsburgh. As the saying goes--watch this space. Over the PA an announcement is made that there will be three seatings for dinner--5:30, and two later about 7 and 8:30. A member of the dining car staff comes through the train taking dinner reservations. Decisions, decisions. One of our party is hungry so we settle on 5:30. A stop to pick up passengers at Paoli is normal. A few hundred feet west of Malvern Station the train comes to a stop. Why would the Broadway stop in the middle of nowhere? Now about 5:35 our party heads to the diner, easier to walk in a motionless train. Entering the diner one sharp nose asks about an odd burning smell? This is a "hot car"--whatever that is supposed to mean-- seems to be the explanation. We are seated and our order taken. We remain in the curve west of Malvern--studying the superelevation with our water glasses. We notice that the crew begins telling arriving diners that the car is closed? A PA announcement is made for crew members--to come to the diner for dinner? There seem to be a few attempts to back the train and the crew is on the ground. About 6:15 our waiter tells us that passengers whose meals have been started can remain and finish, but that desert will not be served because the diner is to be removed from the train. Logical places to remove the car would seem to be Paoli or Thorndale which have switches and side tracks to store the car. With a diesel engine there should be no problem running around the train to remove the car--just takes time. Maybe Amtrak is sending a switch engine from 30th Street to make the project easier--it ought to be here by now. We finish eating and return to our coach. Frustrated passengers are being told the snack-lounge car is closed but not why. Therein is the nub of the problem--passengers not informed for hours. Some passengers would not be told what was going on until after 9. About 7--well over an hour motionless--an announcement is made for crew to assist moving food to the snack car. An announcement is made for help moving sleeping car passengers and their luggage forward. The train has now blocked one track for an extended time at peak commuter time. Beside it is a second track. For some strange reason only a couple eastbound trains go by. Wonder why none of the trains use the other track? Must be a lot of mad commuters by now. At 7:20 one Harrisburg train used the other track so we know it could be done. At 7:23 the Broadway moves--minus a diner and two sleepers. Finally underway, an announcement is made that some cars have been left behind. Otherwise, all that the passengers are being told is to stay in their seats and not move about--might as well be on an airplane with the seat belt sign lit. Oh yes, that passenger for Huntingdon is by now extremely concerned--but she has decided to try to find a place to call the police--her only hope for not spending the night outdoors at a deserted station. Recalling stories of how railroads strove to recover lost time, we hope Amtrak can uphold the tradition. Now three cars shorter the train should go faster. Time passes and a parade of passengers with much luggage moves forward through the coaches. We get later--Lancaster is 1 hour 58 minutes late, Harrisburg 2 hours 10 minutes. More time, maybe 9:30, and our coach is told there is free food in the snack car. We stop for Huntingdon at 11:04: 2 hours and 11 minutes late. The passenger's ride waited for her! She hadn't been on a train for many years. I suspect we won't ever see her again. Let's analyze act one. The train broke down. It took only minutes to determine the problem and apparently the crew knew then that the car could not be moved. Why did it take over an hour and a half to uncouple the cars? Passengers and their luggage could have been removed in much less time. A pizza place with delivery truck could have stocked the snack car along the way. We are left to conclude that the onboard crew eventually made a good series of decisions under difficult circumstances. They relocated the affected passengers and the food. They fed the sleeping car passengers first, then worked one coach at a time proceeding away from the snack car feeding the other passengers. They made food free, but that was probably as much to simplify logistics as for goodwill. We are also left to conclude that "management infrastructure" is weak. Some distant place must have had to authorize leaving the cars--as we will see in act two, there was no choice. Lack of training is a management failure, which is the only cause of the total lack of timely and useful announcements. There is no reason passengers should not have been told that a breakdown occurred, that the snack car was closed because it was being used as a diner or that limited facilities made it necessary to feed passengers one car at a time. Act II--Who Minds the Store? After the trip we began to inquire about what happened. Railfans seem to have information sources everywhere--a second CIA. What they report makes the management failure after the train stopped seem minor.the Broadway was on fire. The Broadway starts in New York City. From there to Philadelphia it passed numerous other trains--NJ Transit, SEPTA, and Amtrak. At least as far back as Croydon, SEPTA trains were reporting that the Broadway had a serious problem. Who decided not to investigate the situation then? Surely there are people to inspect at 30th Street Station. This is the last major Amtrak facility until Chicago. Why wasn't a through inspection made to determine why passing trains would report fire under the Broadway? Such a report from a bystander ought to be checked. Surely reports from experienced train crews would be taken seriously? Not by Amtrak. Additional reports of trouble were made by SEPTA trains between 30th Street Station and Paoli. There are even SEPTA mechanical staff at Paoli. They may not be familiar with details of Amtrak cars, but they could probably observe a major problem. How major was the problem? When the train finally stopped a wheel was flat--a flat 6 inches long! It required repairs so serious that the car sat at Paoli for days. How close was the Broadway to derailing before someone did something? Amtrak may cry lack of money, but the immediate problem seems to be lack of management. A secondary problem seems to be splitting the railroad into multiple pieces and removing many of the facilities. When it was one PRR, crew worked up from years of experience in freight service. That meant passenger crews were thoroughly qualified in dealing with mechanical operations and problems. There was also a pool of other employees to assist during problems--everybody worked for one boss rather than Amtrak, Conrail and SEPTA. The one boss, one railroad concept also meant assistance from the closest location during problems--PRR had engines at Paoli and Thorndale. But Amtrak banished Conrail and its freight from the line. Must have also banished SEPTA that evening. The issue affects every railroad user, passenger and freight. Is it in their best interest to continue discarding facilities and balkanizing the facilities? Or will it eventually lead to no facilities and no trains despite the illusory financial success in cutting costs by stripping off assets? From the Editor's Seat: No Free Ride! Are suburban employers justified in crying that trip reduction regulations are an unfair burden? I say no. The people who are crying have been getting a free ride for years, but it's over now. The government's subsidy of automotive transportation is so all-pervasive that people see it as some kind of basic right. For the good of all of us who live and work in the suburbs, that attitude has to change. Frantic development of the remaining open space in the suburbs has been hastened by policies which give away infrastructure improvements to businesses which locate on previously undeveloped sites. They buy the land cheap, and new roads, sewers, and other improvements subsidized by your tax dollars inflate the value of the property. The cheaper cost of relocation to rural areas is also being subsidized by the employees, with the time and money they spend driving to the out-of-the-way site. County and local governments have started to recoup through development fees at least part of the costs they incur, but the developers refuse to pay the entire cost. Meanwhile, many sites which already have been developed lie fallow, a blight on their communities. Those employers made their bed, relying on the automobile for all their transportation needs and imposing a burden on the community. Now let them lie in it. No free ride for drivers, either. Given that most businesses aren't going to pick up stakes and move, it's clear the solution is carpools and mass transit. Is paying for new mass transit routes an unfair burden on employers? Is subsidizing transit commuters an unfair burden? Let's look at the question the other way: how many billions of dollars do businesses spend on subsidies (yes, they certainly are subsidies!) paid to employees who drive alone to work? Redirect those subsidies to transportation services that are less hostile to the community, and the net cost is zero. That's right, zero! The law calls for a reduction in car use of only 25 percent. If three drivers start paying $30 a month for parking instead of being subsidized, the employer gets 90 dollars to spend on a transit pass for the fourth. Net cost: zero. There is a cost for the paperwork showing compliance with the regulations, but if the employers had done the right thing in the first place; things never would hav gotten to where the state had to step in. Happy Holidays! When you wish a safe journey to frineds and family who are traveling this holiday season, remind them the safest and most pleasant way to go is the train!--MDM Board Awards El Car Contract The SEPTA Board awarded the $285 million contract for 220 Market- Frankford cars to ABB Traction, after a third study found the New York firm to be a responsible bidder. Local subcontractors hoping for a piece of the ABB deal added to the tumult of job creation claims and threats of reprisal which had been building up for months. With FTA Administrator Gordon Linton in the audience, the Board voted 13-1 in favor of ABB. With such an overwhelming majority one would think that not much was said during the Board meeting; however, that is not our Board's way. At one point (after Andrew Warren asked for the vote to be taken), a plea by Board Member Jettie Newkirk to stop "political posturing" yielded an additional ten minutes of political posturing. Board members pledge eternal vigilance over ABB. After reading Steve Masters' story on the N5 in last month's DVRP, surveillance from Constantinople-on-Market may be wise. Concourse Cleared of Homeless Persons The City and SEPTA started cleaning the concourse on the 13th of November after removing homeless people who had been encamped there over a year. The Inquirer reported that David Cohen, the Mayor's chief of staff, said that no one who wanted a bed at the city's facilities had been turned away. To discourage further encampments, exits from the eastbound side of 13th St. Station are being closed at 8:00 pm. The South Concourse is now locked down after the last subway train passes each night. With the health and safety hazard to passengers and SEPTA employees alleviated, DVARP has lifted its warning to avoid 13th Street eastbound. Fed Budget Brings Boost to Transit While Federal funding of mass transit is significantly increased over FY 1993's budget, the full funding levels authorized by the ISTEA law still have not been achieved. When the House and Senate got through with President Clinton's proposed budget, the riders and capital planners of the nation's mass transit systems were winners. Programs allocating capital funds to transit agencies based on fixed criteria like number of miles of service operated were sharply increased. Transit operators and supporters are still worried about the cost of compliance with Federal mandates like the Clean Air Act, Americans With Disabilities Act, and Railroad Retirement taxes, for which Congress has set aside no money. On the capital grant front, Congress shifted its funding preference from building new rail systems and lines to rebuilding older systems like SEPTA's. Federal operating funds allocated to SEPTA should stay about the same, an outcome pretty much expected. It's likely that legislators were influenced by transit's promise that increased funding would result in increased jobs in America's cities. APTA's breakdown of the Federal transit budget appears below: FY 93 ISTEA FY94 Change Section 3: Capital Grants Authorized New Starts/Extensions 721.8 820.0 667.9 -7.5% Rail Modernization 666.3 820.0 760.1 +14.1% Bus 336.9 410.0 357.0 +6.0% Formula Funding: Sec. 9 Urban 1560.5 2642.6 2226.6 +42.7% operating portion 802.3 1059.3 802.3 0.0% Sec. 18 Rural 90.8 153.8 129.6 +42.7% Sec 16b Elderly 48.6 68.7 58.7 +20.8% Interstate Transfer 75.0 --- 45.0 -40.0% Planning/Research 91.0 160.7 98.3 +8.0% TOTAL FTA@ 3799.6 5325.0 4582.6 +20.6% @includes administration, Washington Metro Computer Corner: Internet SEPTA Schedules a Success Hundreds of people have checked out the SEPTA commuter rail schedules available on the PennInfo computer system. You don't have to be a Penn student to use them: anyone with an internet connected computer can enter the command telnet penninfo. upenn.edu to access the system. SEPTA's latest printed schedules now also show how. Subway Info On-line Pierre David of Versailles, France has created an on-line direction- finder for several subway systems including New York and Paris. For details, e-mail to Pierre.David@ masi.uvsq.fr DVARP Newsletter Disks Available Once again, you can obtain a full year of the Delaware Valley Rail Passenger on floppy disk. Send $4.00 to DVARP for disk and postage, and specify IBM or Macintosh format: 5.25 or 3.5 inch. On the Railroad Lines. Engineer and Conductor Unions Consider Merger UTU News reports that informal discussions are underway between officers of the United Transportation Union (which represents SEPTA's conductors) and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (which represents the engineers) to determine if a merger of the two unions can be achieved. The News quotes UTU President G. Thomas DuBose, "I want to emphasize that, at this time, neither union has agreed to any merger plan or conditions, but both sides do agree that further talks are necessary, and that a merger would serve the long-term interest of both memberships." R1 Surfacing Complete The track maintenance project which disrupted weeknight service to Elkins Park, Jenkintown, and Warminster is now done and schedules are back to normal. Wire Pulled Down The Reading trunk suffered hour-long delays October 28 due to downed wires just north of Jenkintown. The trunk suffered 30 minute delays during the morning rush November 10 due to a "Conrail equipment problem," reportedly a derailment. R2 Delaware Deal Done Delaware Transportation Authority (DTA) and SEPTA have amended the operating agreement for service to Wilmington. The agreement will "permit SEPTA to capture its incremental costs" while DTA will be "credited for revenues attributable to passengers originating in Wilmington." Sharon Hill Station Benefit Looking for a conversation starter for your desk or living room? A holiday gift for a model railroading friend? Sharon Hill Historical Society is selling HO scale "save our station" boxcar kits as a fundraising effort for restoration of the Sharon Hill train station at $10.98 each, including postage, from SHHS, c/o John A. Nawn, 144 Laurel Rd., Sharon Hill, Pa. 19079-1322. --CB R3 SEPTA Girds for I-95 Project As PennDOT prepares to rebuild the Delaware Expressway, parking lots at SEPTA Regional Rail stations will be expanded at Yardley, Woodbourne, Langhorne, Neshaminy Falls, Trevose, and Philmont in 1994. The West Trenton line had 15 minute delays during the morning rush November 11th due to "late track work." R5 North Wales Safety Talks Representatives from SEPTA, PennDOT and the Public Utilities Commission met with North Wales Borough and Upper Gwynedd Township officials to discuss crossing safety. The Inquirer reports that the meeting was arranged by State Senator Holl after the September 30th accident which killed a North Wales child. Lansdale Station an Historic Dump State Senator Edwin Holl has written to SEPTA GM Gambaccini asking that SEPTA renovate the Lansdale Station according to the Reporter. The station was built in 1902. R6 New Warning Sign, But Crews Still Flagging At Markley Street in Norristown a new electric "no right turn" sign has been installed which lights up when the crossing gates are activated. Crews are still hand flagging the railroad crossing at Main Street. 52nd Street Jumpover to be Phased Out (photo of structure) DVARP has learned that the structure which connects the R6 Cynwyd line to the Amtrak main line will be phased out in approximately one year. The current alternative is to use the track 1 tunnel which has in the past proven to be unworkable (because of the requirement to travel against the usual flow of traffic). A new Cynwyd line connection must be made now before the bridge is history. Bala Station: From Lease to Easement Leases which allowed commuters access to Bala Station through private property have been converted to perpetual easement. Kazoo-Toting SEPTA Volunteers Bring Christmas Cheer The Paoli, Chestnut Hill West, Frankford, and Broad-Ridge lines hosted Santa specials on 'Black Friday'this year. Upon the train's arrival, the 'circumferentially-challenged' man in red lead a parade of Mummers and kids to the musical tree at center court. Sixty SEPTA volunteers started musical careers by handing out free kazoos to the kids. DVARP Volunteer Coordinator Betsy Clark reports that the R8 Chestnut Hill West run was packed. Thank you SEPTA volunteers and Happy Holidays to you all! CTD Track Upgrade New welded rail was installed Sunday November 21 on the southbound local track between Erie and Girard. Trains operated on the express track while shuttle buses served the local stations. @Weekend service disruptions on the Frankford El are suspended until January. @Market-Frankford cashier Harold Murray earned a Star Award for assisting a SEPTA Police Officer in the apprehension of a thief. STD @KYW reported that Route 100 was offering only "limited service" on Saturday Nov. 20. No reason for the disruption was given. @The latest Route 125a schedule offers through buses from Center City to Collegeville and Upper Providence. Six round-trips are now offered for those working at the MontCo companies sponsoring the service, three for suburban residents who work in Philadelphia. Such A Deal: 8? a Token Ever wonder how much tokens cost SEPTA? The Board recently awarded a $170,000 contract to buy 2 million tokens. That works out to 8? per token. New Bus Microphones for Handicapped Will Help Everyone SEPTA awarded a $242,000 contract to Neoplan, the manufacturer of SEPTA's bus fleet, for lapel microphones to be added to bus PA systems. The mikes are required by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) but will help everybody, as long as the operators actually use them. SEPTA rules require drivers to announce all Center City stops, and other points which are marked with little 'megaphone' stickers on the transit stop sign. Eye on the Infrastructure: Route 13 Work Expanded The Board approved an $73,000 increase in the contract price for the Chester Avenue Track and Roadway Improvements Project. The total contract value stands at $683,000. National Post Ends for Gambaccini SEPTA GM Louis Gambaccini's term as Chairman of the American Public Transportation Association ended in October as he was replaced by Rod Dirdon of Santa Clara County (San Jose), California. Section 9 Subsidy Update The Federal formula subsidy for rail operations, on which Newtown privatization plans rest (see cover story: October DVRP) is $21,000 per year per mile, according to SEPTA CFO Feather Houstoun. SEPTA Joins Trip Reduction Team SEPTA finally accepted its role as provider of transportation solutions to employers faced with state manates to reduce the number of cars employees drive to work. A SEPTA brochure outlines several employer-oriented SEPTA programs, like COMPASS, the corporate pass sales program, and the employer-supported services like Route 125a. Meanwhile, WCAU-TV jumped on the media support of transit bandwagon by sponsoring a brochure touting the DVRPC's TransitChek commuter benefit program. In its brochure, SEPTA promises two new services: customized transit itineraries for new employees, and a 'guaranteed ride home' for employees in areas with limited transit service who have to leave work early or late. The latter program has been successful in several other systems. The Market Development Office at SEPTA is responsible for serving the employers: if your employer isn't 'on-board' with SEPTA yet, do your fellow employees a favor and get the boss to call 580-7963. News compiled by Matthew Mitchell and correspondents: Chuck Bode, Howard Bender, Tom Borawski, Betsey Clark, Regina Litman, James Lutz, Don Nigro, John Pawson, Dan Radack, William Ritzler, Lee Winson. Additional news from BITNET, ESPA Express, Highway Builder, Jenkintown Times-Chronicle, KYW, Lansdale Reporter, NMRA Bulletin, Newark Star-Ledger, Norristown Times-Herald, Passenger Transport, Philadelphia Inquirer, Surface Transportation Policy Project, USENET, UTU News Online. Montco to SEPTA: Take Our Money The Times Herald reports that Montco Commission Chairman Mario Mele told SEPTA officials, "Transportation is an area where I'd like to spend more..it will be cheaper for the taxpayers in the long run.We can't have more cars on the roads and we can't build more roads." Route X Extension Mulled Route X, one of SEPTA's least-known and least-used routes, may undergo a metamorphosis into a longer, stronger Route 77. The current Chestnut Hill-Glenside-Jenkintown service would be extended to Northeast Philadelphia via Township Line Rd. and Cottman Av., making the first circumferential SEPTA route in the north suburbs. Transit supporters in Montgomery County have been asking for the extension for years, but have not been able to find the funding SEPTA needs to extend the route. Now the County Commissioners are considering providing that support. But another obstacle to the extension may be opposition from Jenkintown residents living along the route, but there is likely to be plenty of support from other residents who would be able to access shopping, medical services, and jobs with the new bus service. 422 Corridor Transit Plan Dropped An effort to regulate suburban sprawl and bring back the railroad village has been officially dropped by the Montgomery County Planning Commission, according to the Inquirer. The villages would have been called "Transit Activity Centers." The clustering of development was an effort to preserve open space, reduce traffic congestion, and save millions in infrastructure costs: water, sewage and electricity. The plan was killed by local municipalities intent on maintaining control of the planning process. Some residents appear to favor sprawl since the proposed villages resembled the city they were escaping from. There were fears that the land designated as "open space" would be reduced in value. Auto Subsidy = 10 x Transit's A study released by Professor John Pucher of Rutgers shows that the subsidy provided to motorists is ten times that of the average transit user. He has calculated that the price of gasoline would have to rise to between $6 and $8 a gallon to cover the full social costs and economic costs of driving. BARTA Celebrates 20 Years BARTA, serving Berks County and Reading, celebrated its 20th birthday Oct 8 by serving coffee and cake to the passengers. BARTA also published a 16 page area transit guide as a newspaper supplement paid for by advertisements in the supplement. Red Rose Captures Design Award Red Rose Transit Authority (Lancaster) won the 1992 PennDOT Excellence in Transportation Design/Construction Award. This award had once been limited to highway and bridge projects; 1992 was the first year it was expanded to include transit & airport projects. The winning project was renovation of the Lancaster Information Center during fall 1991. Renovations included addition of a change machine, telephone, schedule rack, snack area, and seating. DVARP congratulates RRTA for this achievement. November was the 18th year RRTA participated in the Toys for Tots program. RRTA accepted donation of a toy as the base fare from November 1 through 21. Cyclists Aggressive in Anti-Car Protests A group called Bicycle Action Movement held several demonstrations recently, to call attention to the dangerous conditions cyclists face on Philadelphia streets. State and City officials have been very slow to recognize cycling as a useful transportation alternative, and to implement sections of the ISTEA law which mandate planning for bicycle routes as part of the overall intermodal transportation planning process. One recent example of the car-only attitude was the Walnut Street Bridge reconstruction, which failed to include a bike lane or shoulder for safe biking. Cyclists held a "die-in" there when the bridge opened: the first such protest here. More recent demonstrations have blocked car traffic around City Hall and at other locations in Center City. The protests acheived their goal of publicizing cyclists' problems, but there is a long way to go before drivers and PennDOT share the road. While the Delaware Valley Bicycle Coalition was not affiliated with the demonstrations; it is sympathetic with the protestors' objective. DVBC President Noel Weyrich said he would "support any activity that underlines to City officials that they are not doing nearly enough for bicyclists." NJT Ridership Up 4% The Newark Star-Ledger reports that ridership on NJ Transit's buses and trains has grown almost 4 percent over the last 6 months. Rail ridership increased 3.5% for the period. NJT Executive Director Shirley DeLibero attributes the increase to employment gains in the region, improved service, television advertising and the steady fares. NJT registered a 1.7% increase last year. The numbers for specific lines are as follows: (April-June '93 Vs. April-June '92) Northeast Corridor +3.5% N. Jersey Coast Line +7.8% Raritan Valley Line +6.9% Morris & Essex Line +2.4% Main-Bergen Line +1.4% Boonton Line +0.5% Pascack Valley Line -7.0% Atlantic City Line +1.4% TOTAL +3.5% NEC Station to serve Newark Airport NJT has hired architects to begin design of a new Northeast Corridor station which will serve Newark International Airport according to the Star-Ledger. The paper said that current plans call for trains to make stops at the new station every 15 minutes. The station will be linked to the airport via a one mile extension of the airport monorail system now under construction. The paper said the new station and monorail extension are expected to cost about $157 million. SEPTA Sleeps, New Jersey Acts The Star-Ledger reports that New Jersey Transit unveiled a $7 million experimental program to add 41 bus and rail services for suburban office parks, malls and industrial parks not now well served by transit. In addition new park and ride facilities will be constructed in Woodbury- Avondale area and at the Vince Lombardi Service area in the NJ Turnpike. Also routes would add evening and weekend service and "reverse commute" service will be expanded in certain bus routes. DVARP Hits West Trenton Study A DVARP response to an NJ Transit study claiming that restoration of West Trenton-Bound Brook-Newark service would not be viable identified several benefits missed in the NJT document. While the original study said that riders would be diverted from the Northeast Corridor line, the new service was not credited for NJT cost savings or reduced traffic gridlock which would result. The study also assumed a very inefficient operation, with as much deadhead as revenue mileage. If DVARP's proposal to run the trains into Pennsylvania were adopted, the trains would pick up more passengers who would pay more money to ride. Jenkintown alone boarded 39 percent of the passengers of the old Crusader. Garden State Notes @New Jersey Transit continues to try to make its train schedules more user-friendly. New-look schedules were published for some of the Hoboken Division lines. @Phila. Extension Brings AC Rider Boost Ridership on the NJ Transit Atlantic City Rail line was up over 20 percent recently, thanks to the extension of service to 30th Street. Fare revenue increased even more. @NJT revised some South Jersey bus schedules November 6. A Bad Idea is Catching Once transit managers in other parts of North America saw SEPTA steamroll its customers with the RailWorksr service shutdown, they got the idea they could do likewise in their own cities. The latest to consider carrying out all-important construction projects without the needless bother of serving customers is the Chicago Transit Authority, which would close the entire Lake-Englewood-Jackson Park El for two years. 1994 TIP Process Underway The DVRPC is about to begin developing the FY95-2000 TIP. As part of the preparation process DVRPC is soliciting comments on last year's TIP development process and the types of projects selected for inclusion in the TIP. Copies of last year's TIP have been distributed to 22 libraries for public review. Written comments will be accepted through January 15, 1994. DVRPC Seeks Comments on Process For evaluation of the development process of the regionwide Transportation Improvement Program, the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission is requesting your views on the planning process. Did you think your voice was effectively heard? Did the projects DVRPC recommended fulfill the goals of furthering economic and community growth while reducing negative impacts like air pollution and traffic congestion? Send your suggestions to DVRPC, The Bourse, 21 South 5th St., Philadelphia, 19106-2582. FTA & FHWA Workshops The Federal Transit Administration and Federal Highway Administration will hold a series of regional outreach meetings/workshops on metropolitan planning, statewide planning regulations, management systems, and CAA air quality conformity regulations. Staff from the Federal agencies will brief meeting attendees about the new regulations and answer questions on their implementation. While members of metropolitan planning organizations are the target audience, the public is welcome to participate. This is an opportunity for you to learn about and perhaps shape the planning process. Workshops will be held in New Brunswick and Washington: see page 14 for dates. Information is available from the National Transit Institute at 908-932-1706.