Oh, sure--sorry. I'd have just posted except it's not exactly "Bay Area" (with the focus on the Sacto depot and all).
Editorial: Tracks of jeers
Sacramento needs a depot fit for a capital
Published 12:01 am PDT Monday, August 28, 2006
Starting today, there will be as many Amtrak commuter trains between Sacramento and Oakland as there are between New York and Boston.
The Capitol Corridor service is launching a dramatic expansion to 32 trains every weekday between the two regions, and 14 trains (seven each way) that will travel as far south as San Jose. Ours is one of the most successful urban train systems going in the country.
One wonders how much more popular the service would be if Sacramento didn't have a station that exudes all the warmth and welcome of a war zone.
It is an embarrassment. The city that has one of the best railroad museums on the planet has one of the most uninviting railroad stations. Go figure.
The Capitol Corridor service, meanwhile, is one of the great success stories of government in Northern California. In its eight years of operation, its trains' travel times have decreased. Fare box recovery (how much passengers pay to run the trains) has increased. And the on-board service is trying to keep up with the times. Plans are afoot to offer wireless Internet access on all the trains. And with 16 trains running each way every weekday between Sacramento and Oakland, the frequency is high enough to allow commuters to stop fretting about the schedule. If they miss one train, another isn't far behind. (To take a peak at the schedule, see
www.capitolcorridor.org)
While everything on board is humming right along, the scene changes once the train stops in Sacramento. The parking lot is among the most expensive and maddening in town, requiring a Ph.D. in computer science to decipher how to exchange one bar-coded parking ticket for another to finally open the gate. The walk from the depot to the train is now a gantlet of fences and jackhammers, where crews are extending the light-rail line. And the once stately depot is in a state of arrested decay as local leaders and the Union Pacific Railroad mull, ever so slowly, its future.
The plan is to lift the depot from its foundation and move it north, along with the tracks, to open the land for development and to create a new multimodal station for buses, trains and light rail. But that has been the plan for years. The train service improves, while the train station does not.
The train service, however, is now an indispensable part of Northern California's transportation system. Pressure will only increase to improve the service, particularly into Roseville and Placer County to capture a largely untapped source of passengers. (Please, UP, cooperate.) Sacramento needs a transportation hub worthy of this region to rise from the wreckage of the depot's current home.