As a region to which I have occasion to visit at least once a year, traveling from Chicago, I am quite mindful of the absence of any Chicago-Atlanta service. Existing schedules would require two nights in each direction and would involve connecting with the Crescent at Wash. By comparasion, a "safe and sane" drive is 13hrs, and can be done in one sitting, even though in my declining tears, I choose to "break" such trip with a 10-12hr en-route hotel rest stop.
Be it assured though that the one CSX/L&N route to Chicago is something resembling saturated. There are some 60 trains daily over a single tracked route, and obviously no room to accomodate anybody's passenger train.
If you are from Atlanta, why not take in lunch at either of the two restaurants located at trackside along Paces Ferry Road in Vinings; you will quickly "see what I mean".
[This message has been edited by Gilbert B Norman (edited 07-25-2004).]
Atlanta has a huge airport because it is a hub for Delta and the vast majority of passengers through ATL are there only to change planes. Compare Salt Lake, Cincinnati, and Nashville for examples.
Having said that I agree it is a shame that there is little Amtrak service through Atlanta. I, for one, would welcome restoral of a Florida-Chicago route via Atlanta.
Right now they have decent service from many trains to many cities(although I really wish the City of New Orleans went through STL, but have been informed that would cause major delays), but I think larger cities such as STL and ATL should have more attractive stations to encourage rail travel.
Right now, any time I hear someone at school say they are going to Chicago on vacation, I ask "By train I hope?". They always say, they've seen the amshack once and find rail travel deprssing because of it.
Sad
This said, even assuming sufficient capacity to handle a couple of passenger trains on the traditional Evansville-Nashville Route, we would still be looking at a run time of 16 to 17 hours plus for a Chicago to Atlanta train. Throw in about 9 more to get you to Jacksonville, and another 9 for Jacksonville to Miami, we would have a best time for a Chicago to Florida train of about 36 hours given reasonable dwell times. Reasonable Florida times would probably not make for reasonable Atlanta times. It would take megabucks to get the Chicago to Atlanta time down to about the same as driving time, primarily due to the circuity and curvature between Nashville and Atlanta.
This has not even addressed such things as Atlanta - Savannah, Atlanta - Montgomery - New Orleans, Atlanta - Chatannoga / Knoxville - Cincinatti, Atlanta - Augusta - Columbia SC, additional service Atlanta - Washington, etc., etc., etc.
I believe there will be another amendment on this year's ballot to repeal the original.
[This message has been edited by Gilbert B Norman (edited 08-03-2004).]
Rail travel isn't primarily to get someone from CHI to FL fast as driving. It's to serve the online population, which constitutes most of an LD train's ridership.
So what if it's a little slower? Someone driving doesn't have the same purpose as a train - or plane for that matter.
People who keep bringing up the fact that "it's slower than driving" are doing a disservice to passenger rail.
They need to point out that there's a difference.
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[This message has been edited by MOKSRail (edited 08-03-2004).]
I have noted here before that existing schedules in the NE to Florida market are quite competitive with "safe and sane' (which would include a 10 hour time out South of the Border) driving times. Times offered by the Chicago-Miami "City of Miami' IC-CofG-ACL-FEC were very competitive with driving, although we should be mindful that the "competition' had only US41 available (there were "gaps" in I-75 even into the 70's).
Unfortunately, the topography and traffic levels on the C&EI-L&N-NC&STL/CSX route would make even the CSX Executive Train that had been "given the railroad", hard pressed to be in the league with the 13 hour drive time noted.
[This message has been edited by Gilbert B Norman (edited 08-03-2004).]
I was responding more to comments from others that say it's so much quicker to drive.
I'll edit my statement accordingly.