• snooggums
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    433 months ago

    Plus commuter trains get delayed frequently to make way for cargo trains.

    • Clay_pidgin
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      313 months ago

      That’s because Amtrak only owns their own rails in the NEC (North East Corridor) Boston-NYC-Philly-DC. Everywhere else they are riding on privately owned freight railroad tracks, and the Amtrak trains are often shunted for freight to have priority.

      • @Pieisawesome
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        153 months ago

        Actually the law states that passenger rail has priority.

        It’s just unenforced so freight ignores it

      • @[email protected]
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        -23 months ago

        If the government owns the lines, it’s a different story, but most of the rail lines in the US are privately owned. So in most of the US commuter rail is using freight tracks on contract, with one of the stipulations being that the freight trains get priority.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          Other way around. Amtrak does have priority on all tracks per the 1973 Amtrak Improvement Act. However, this isn’t enforced, and the rail companies are kicking and screaming to keep it from being enforced.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 months ago

            Interesting. I had heard that many of the rail lines are used under contract because they’re privately owned by the freight companies and that the freight trains having priority was a stipulation of those contracts. Not the lines marked on this map, as those are Amtrak lines, but all the other ones across the country. It might be a local commuter rail thing or something.

            • @AA5B
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              13 months ago

              Oh no, that’s not owned by Amtrak. Amtrak owns the NEC Boston to DC, but very little of the rest

              The map is Amtrak service, which commonly runs on track owned by freight carriers