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Well, they'd have to get some more cars first. Oh, and a place to keep them at night.
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20 6-car trains (the most they ran at rush hour pre-expansion) is the same number of cars as 15 8-car trains. And they could keep doing that until they get more cars, even after they return to 4-track service, since it doesn't significantly reduce quality of service (3-minute vs. 4-minute headways is barely noticeable to most riders) and it saves them some money in operator payroll costs. As a bonus, fewer trains into the Loop means less chance of delay and less waiting, so faster rush hour operations. Lost in most discussions about 8-car expansion is that the CTA can use the capacity to reduce train frequency instead of just increase capacity, which saves some operator labor costs at the (probably minor, at least at rush hour) expense of rider convenience. |
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/l...,2937641.story
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Also, they announced that the southbound Red line schedule will be reduced to accomodate the next phase in 3-tracking at Belmont and Fullerton when there will only be 1 southbound track in operation. This should make the AM commute absolutely dreadful since south of North Avenue it's already a challenge to squeeze onto any of the Brown and Red lines or the #22 bus, but at least we're entering the home stretch of that project. |
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^^^ Diversey would be open at the end of June, Wellington would not be shutdown until diversey is open
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My guess is that they either have or will rework the construction schedule of Diversey to allow the station to open in April, even if it's not yet substantially complete (e.g. no elevators, temporary railings and light fixtures, etc.). Not sure what the extra cost of that would be, though.
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According to Crain's a temporary station will open at Diversey March 30.
http://chicagobusiness.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?id=28188 Mr. Huberman also outlined a timetable for when Brown Line stations are scheduled to either reopen or close. Those dates are: Southport, to open March 30 Wellington, to close March 30 Paulina, to close March 30 Diversey, to open June 28 (a temporary station will open on March 30) Damen, to open in November Irving Park, to open in December |
That's great to hear a temporary Diversey station will be opened up, especially since that means the total reconstruction downtime for the residents in that area will end up being less lengthy than others have experienced at their own local brown line stops. :)
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I love it when breaking news proves me right so quickly. ;-)
Seriously, though, I'm especially happy that Diversey will get an early opening, even if it is just a temporary station. I like a lot of stuff on Diversey and have missed that station. |
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^^ Less than two more years to enjoy having stations shut down from Western to the Loop. I love not doing all the stops. (yes, a selfish Western Brownline rider).
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Daley made a major announcement today on a $227 million capital program to improve "safety and reliability" on the CTA.
Press Release: http://www.transitchicago.com/news/c...ticleid=123887 It says this is federally-funded, so I'm not sure if these are just the usual federal formula funds that are being assembled into a single/coherent program. The big "good" news items for me: - Overhauling the Nova LFS (6400-series) buses, which are 7 years old and otherwise would be run into the ground in a few years. - Upgrading the signal system (not sure what they plan to do, but anything would be good, particularly on the unreliable North Main line. |
^ I'd like to see some money put into multilingual ticket dispensors.
Seriously, though, how did Daley suddenly get this lump sum of cash? I wonder if this has anything to do with Daley's meeting with President Bush a short while back. "Hey George, we're trying to get the Olympics so I need some extra cash for the CTA. Oh, and can Congress hurry up and pass that anti-doping law?" "Sure Dick. Now lets go have that pint of Guinness and some chicken fingers" |
.pdf presentation of the plan: http://www.transitchicago.com/news/m...apitalplan.pdf
It says the plan will use surplus funds from the Douglas branch reconstruction and the cell phones in subways service, plus borrowing from future federal formula funds. Doesn't give the relative breakdown between those two sources. The plan apparently also includes buying 150 new hybrid articulated buses and reducing slow zones by over 100,000 feet by this December. I guess they are getting some pretty good mileage out of the Douglas reconstruction, although I can't figure out why the trains still have to go so dang slow over the whole Paulina connector. |
The rail highlights seem to be:
1) Structural work (especially on the Green Line-Englewood branch) 2) Platform lighting/signage/canopy upgrades 3) Repairs and upgrades to signal/computer systems 4) Overhauls of all Red Line and most of Blue Line rolling stock 5) Computer information system to track maintenance, slow zones, workforce, etc.. 6) Slow zone work: O'Hare branch, State Street subway, Green Line-Englewood, Ravenswood Brown Line, Northside Main, and Dan Ryan. |
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The money appears to just be bonding out future expected federal funds, there's no new money here. This is in addition to the future expected federal funds that were bonded out to repair the O'hare slow zones, and the future expected federal funds that were bonded out to buy more railcars. In short, this is all just borrowing against the future, which has been the recurring theme of repeatedly getting these sorts of public agencies into crisis/doomsday mode. |
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Maybe we can hope that borrowing against future federal funding makes a little more sense now that we can potentially look forward to an administration change and an end to this funding desert. |
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