The Downeaster is facing a lot of track maintenance and tie replacement work this fall and next spring to summer. So anyone planning a Downeaster trip should be prepared for delays and check for service cancellations. NNEPRA is expecting that the track work will result in lower ridership for the current (state) fiscal year.
Portland Press Herald: Construction delays likely to dent Downeaster ticket sales. Excerpt:
Portland Press Herald: Construction delays likely to dent Downeaster ticket sales. Excerpt:
With Winter weather holding off, the track work has been extended through November 14 with cancellations of #683, #686 on weekdays. Downeaster website construction alert.Fewer people are expected to ride Downeaster trains in the current fiscal year because of anticipated construction delays, according to the rail authority that operates the passenger service.
Work crews replaced 2,000 rail ties over the summer and will replace an additional 28,000 ties this fall and next spring, said Patricia Quinn, executive director of the Northern New England Passenger Rail Authority.
Passengers made a record 537,000 trips on the Downeaster during the fiscal year that ended June 30, even though the service posted its worst-ever on-time performance because of the construction delays.
Those delays will be even worse this fiscal year, which began July 1, prompting the rail authority to predict that ridership will fall to 519,000 passengers, a decline of 3 percent.
The ties will be replaced along the route between Portland and the Massachusetts/New Hampshire border, Quinn said. Crews with Pan Am Railways, which owns the railroad, will install the ties. The freight rail company is paying for the labor, and the Downeaster is paying an estimated $2.3 million for the ties and ballast.
Quinn said the work will continue this fall until the ground freezes up, and then crews will start again in the spring and work until June.