I rode North on the Texas Eagle from Dallas to Chicago a few weeks ago and the Dining car food royally sucks. Very bad, in fact they tend to overcook it. The chicken rubber chini meal was exceptionally bad. Service is great though. They have one dining car attendent now that runs down stairs to get the meal you select, microwave it and bring it back up to you to serve you. I was the only one that sat in the entire dining car to eat during the seating times I selected. Most everyone else selected to have the meals brought to them to their sleeping car compartment.
Other than that and having to wear your mask outside your sleeping car compartment. Nothing has changed. Sleeper Bathroom cleanliness has gotten better and was at or better than McDonald Standards when I rode BUT that is because the passenger load is so light. Sleeper was less than half full and just about nobody at intermediate small town stops, only big city passengers.
The state of Illinois isn’t subsidizing the western states, the people of Illinois are. They pay more federal taxes than are returned to Illinois. Many other states pay less and get more.
I do not place a lot of trust in those analysis because the larger populated states tend to also get huge Federal Grants that are left out of these calculations also hidden subsidies to the same states that are excluded. So for example, NY state. Do you think they include the Empire Corridor subsidies they get from the Feds for Amtrak in their calculations? What about NY’s benefit from the multi-Billion Dollar grant of the future Amtrak tunnels they are seeking? What about berthing of visiting Navy ships and economic impact of that? What about Federal Emergency aid and recovery (for example 9-11)?
charlie hebdo
JPS: Do you have any idea of what percentage of the loss on LD trains is stemming from sleeper service, including the “free” dining car service?
Not really! But here are some of the things that I found regard Amtrak’s food and beverage losses.
A 2005 IG report indicated that sleeping car passengers received a higher subsidy than long-distance coach passengers. The findings are dated, but the spread may still be present.
As per Page 27 of the Amtrak Service Line Plans |FY2020 – 2025, the food and beverage loss in FY19 was $41.5 million, which was down from approximately $72 million in 2012.
According to a 2013 IG audit of Amtrak’s Food and Beverage services, approximately 99 percent of the F&B losses were attributable to the long-distance trains. The percentages may have changed since 2013, but I suspect that at least 90 percent or $37.4 million of the FY19 loss is attributable to the long-distance trains.
According to the report, a portion of sleeper-class revenue is transferred to the food and beverage account. It is based on the menu price of meals consumed. When the Marketing Department sets the prices for sleeper tickets, which includes transportation and meals, it does (did) not consider the cost of providing the food and beverages as per the audit findings. The report found that the Great Southern Rail in Australia and the Rocky Mountaineer in Ca
Some of my domestic rides before and after the coming of Amtrak included the Broadway Limited, Super Chief, City of San Francisco, East Coast Champion, Merchants Limited, and the Spirit of St. Louis. I ate in the dining car on all of them.
I am 81. Memories fade over time. Having said that, with the possible exception of the India Pacific in Australia, I never had a meal on any of the aforementioned trains that of itself would have justified taking the train.
I disagree. I remember having some really supurb meals on all the specific trains mentioned. And in the worst cases on those specific trains the meals were at least good. In addition, the Kings Dinner on the Panama, Fried Chicken on the GM&O, any meal in a B&O or NP diner, and every meal on the Rio Grande Zephyr was something to look forward to, a high-point of the trip, and contributor to wanting to ride the train. I’m 88, and that is what I remember. I have never enjoyed dinner more than savorinig the Rocky Mountain Trout on the D&RGW when my sister was traveling with me and also enjoying the meal, with the marvelous scenery at the same time.
And I am convinved that the station restaurant with take-out is the solution to the problem.
I agree that the CZ & its reincarnation as the Rio Grande Zepher served a delicious Trout. I have enjoyed many a good meal on trains including some on Amtrak. For a period, they had regional menus that included Creole dishes on the City of New Orleans back in the late 70’s or 80’s. And on a trip on the CNO with my son, I remember requesting & receiving permission to ride in the ex SF Hilevel ElCapitan Coaches that were on the end of the train to be used North of Carbondale. We had the cars to ourselves. In the morning, came down the stairs and crossed over to the diner and enjoyed perfect RR French Toast. Also, riding the Broadway Limited and having dinner in the twin car diner during a rain storm in Indiana running alongside US Rt 30. Watching the autos kick up spray as we roll past them whie enjoying a good meal was nice. On a vacation trip when we rode the Empire Builder in '68, My son (age 7) got a little nausia from the diesel fumes in Cascade Tunnel so he and I did not have diner but later went to the Ranch Coffee Shop car where he had a BLT and declared it was the BEST he had ever had. I think an appetite had something to do with it.
On the other end of meal service, in '67, on the Monon’s Throughbred train to Louisville, a news butch was serving the “food” from his cooler in the vestibule of one of the coaches and I watched as he “built” a ham sandwich from a loaf of white bread (2 slices), a smear of butter, three thin slices of ham, and one leaf of lettuce, slid it into a glassine bag and Whalla. ONE HAM SANDWICH. I don’t recall where he got off but I suspect it was Crawfordsville. That was better than nothing.
What’s wrong with an 1860s solution when every subsequent solution described in White explicitly cost more to provide than it took in in revenue – including the ‘hotel car’ service that eventually morphed into Pullman ‘buffets’.
And that was in an age largely of low wage or other ‘people’ costs … and a surplus of immigrant or other groups willing to work hard and willingly for those low wages.
In something like a Rocky Mountaineer where the luxury can be built in without excuse, you can afford to run staffed diners with efficient commissary backup, cordon bleu chefs, attentive and memorable service. How you even approximate that on a transportation service fraught with its own politics and lacking more than a circumstantial organizational esprit de corps is trouble enough. How it could reliably pay its way is worse.
On the other hand, longer and longer LD trips will be intolerable without sensible food options… which must either conform to profitability if Amtrak provided, or offer dependable service at all times, if Amtrak-coordinated. It is difficult to imagine a ‘catering’ commissary model with adequate non-Amtrak business to thrive as needed, to be able to afford the food cost and prep time in the necessary range of meal options, and to act successfully in dispensing ‘wasted’ or unclaimed meals as ‘profitably’ as possible. Perhaps some locations with Mr. Klepper’s ‘station restaurants’ can manage that; it is quite certain to me that few if any post-1870s methods of providing food on trains will do better.
Again, I think my station restaurant concept can solve the problem, where the food brought to the dining cars, either eaten while still warm or refrigorated for microwave, is only a small part of a large bfoad-menue operation that includes sit-down, take-out, and possibly home and office delivery.
The station restaurant concept can only work IF the restaurant is a draw for the locals in numbers far beyond whatever Amtrak clientele gets involved in it. Secondly will Amtrak make a ‘meal stop’ or will the meals be loaded on the train in bulk and then distributed by Amtrak personnel. If there is a meal stop, will Amtrak pay the track owner additional fees for increased track occupancy? Will there be meals to order, or ‘one size fits all’? If it is meals to order - what kind of infrastructure will be implemented to facilitate the ordering? Who pays for the trash disposal for all the trash that is created on the trains from the ‘leftovers’ from the meal service?
There is much more complexity to the station restaurant concept than first meets the eye.
It’s logistically impossible in most cases to ‘dwell’ any LD train while the passengers get off and scarf down the equivalent of a ‘Demi-poulet avec vin rouge’, let alone have a leisured dining experience. In some cases it might be possible to let passengers detrain to get their meals, or pick them up as delivered to trainside. But that’s about the extent of it.
That means a choice of menu of three basic kinds: packaged with minimal prep (for taking to rooms directly, perhaps with special heat and cold provision); items for lounge make-ready (microwave or convection reheat with no more than spot prep or quick finish cooking; attractive plating and presentation but no ‘waiter’ table service other than perhaps drinks); and actual sit-down prep and service, using the diners but not relying on commissary stocking, unused food, prep requirements etc. It may be possible to pass most or all the plates, silverware, etc. off the train in sealable containers, to be ‘contract-washed’ at a corresponding ‘station restaurant’ for the opposite direction.
At least theoretically – I have described some ways to make this workable at least in principle – you can have some of the ‘diner’ attendant staff board with the food, and detrain with the dishes, to keep them out of the four-day rotation of death that would involve one food crew riding end to end. Relatively easy, to the extent any restaurant can do it, to adjust the called staff to the actual service requirements on a particular day.
Frankly I think the analogue of an upscale version of a Holiday Inn Express free breakfast bar could easily be put in portable carts, and the food prep as easily done by one or two people in the diner as is done in the motel. An analogue for all-you-can-eat-within-reason (as for evenings at Drury) could be similarly arranged for lunch or even dinner.
Other than a 2-hour unplanned stop at Frankfurt on a flight from Singapore to London, I have never been to Germany. Maybe I should go. My ancestors on my dad’s side were from Germany, but they left there in the 1840s because of religious persecution. They were anabaptists.
What is it about the “meal model” used by Deutsche Bahn that should make me want to go there? And eat a sit-down meal on a train?
I am writing, first, to state the case for Amtrak and particularly long-distance passenger service, This service is essential, absolutely essential, for that portion of the elderly and handicapped population that cannot fly and cannot endure long auto or bus trips to access the Continental United States. Removal of those trains would limit the travel of those citizens to regions of about 120 miles around their homes. With respect to the overall travel industry, Amtrak’s long distance service can be compared to the hard-of-hearing systems, handicapped ramps and elevators, that get subsidized by general ticket sales to entertainment industry patrons that never use them, But depriving grandchildren of a visit from their grandparents hurts the children as well as the grandparents. That is probably the reason most Americans want the service to continue, as reflected in the votes of their elected representatives,
But these trains do more. They provide the very best way for foreign tourists to visit and know the landscape, and even the people of the country. In winter in parts of the Northwest, the Empire Builder train prevents the isolation of many communities. And
I think there is more in the attitude DB uses and in some of the plans they have than in applicability of the exact amenities and menu choices.
There are a couple of very good pages at bahn.de that cover the recent meal program and some of the reasoning behind it – but for some reason my mobile browsers render these detail pages only in German whether or not I select the ‘English’ version of the site (tab at upper right), and then Google Translate has some weird snit about scraping the page text content and rendering it as English.
Some of the DB incentives, like hiring yearly ‘chef advisors’ who are famous in the food community or influencers with substantial media following, are things that have in some form been tried in the States – and some of the ways the food is served, facilities used and kept clean, and waste/trash is handled might be issues for union discussions. The most important thing I see to be adopted here, though, is the kind of enthusiastic top-down championing that is an essential precondition for effective implementation of Six-Sigmaesque quality improvement. DB shows it while Amtrak mouths expediency and experimental cost reduction to ‘game’ parts of the Congressional profitability mandate.