Prioritizing Rail Expansion in New England
New England rail activist Kenny Uong talked about some New England rail lines that should be built. The proposals are not bad in theory, and remind me of longstanding advocate demands, but in practice, the prioritization is all wrong. In truth, further investment in regional rail in New England – by which I mean RegionalBahn-style service to small towns like Westerly and Manchester, not core commuter rail service in Boston to be turned into an S-Bahn – is a waste of money in the current situation. Activists and railfans like closing gaps in the network of the service that exists but isn’t used, such as the outer tails of commuter rail in Rhode Island and Connecticut, but in truth it cannot be expected to have meaningful ridership until there’s better intercity rail, and in some cases it can even be counterproductive through lading high-speed tracks with slower traffic.
This is not an attack on Kenny, who did good advocacy for better buses and rail in his home region of Los Angeles as a teen and who keeps doing the same now that he lives in Providence. Rather, it’s a showcase, I think, of how railfan wishcasting can turn into actual proposals by advocates that look good but can never perform well.
The proposals
Kenny proposes five lines:
- An extension of Shore Line East to the Rhode Island border at Westerly
- A rail line going inland from New London to Norwich via Mohegan Sun
- An extension of MBTA Commuter Rail in Rhode Island to Westerly to meet Shore Line East
- An extension of MBTA Commuter Rail into New Hampshire to serve Nashua and Manchester
- An extension of Amtrak Downeaster service deeper into Main, from Brunswick to Rockland
Long-time readers may remember that the second and fourth both appear in a post I wrote in 2020 about New England high- and low-speed rail coordination. So obviously I don’t think they are bad. I do, however, think they depend on other investments, outside the low-speed regional rail paradigm.
A rail line to Mohegan and Norwich works if and only if there is high-speed rail from New York to New London, without which it is uncompetitive with driving or with buses to the casino. I can be convinced that a rail line might work if an extensive upgrade of the New Haven Line to cut 30-45 minutes from train trips (like 30-30-30, reducing New York-New Haven trip times to an hour; this is also in the no-bypasses version of our Northeast Corridor proposal). At current trip time, unfortunately, rail is not competitive with the transfer time – New York-New London is 2.5 hours today, and New York-Mohegan/Norwich would be around 3 hours, whereas Google right now, at 10 pm New York time, gives me a 2:20 driving time to the casino. Rail is more competitive at rush hour, but a casino with midnight buses does not generate particularly peaky traffic. The Northeast Corridor proposal’s schedule is 1:12 New York-New London every half an hour, which makes a connecting regional train competitive; otherwise, it’s not worth it.
Similarly, an extension of commuter rail into New Hampshire is best saved for after the MBTA system extensively modernizes its core service, with electrification of the Lowell Line and high platforms. The Lowell Line could potentially be fast – it was built in 1834, before rail builders figured out that sharp curves could be built without derailing the trains. But it isn’t now, and it’s still designed as a strictly unidirectional system, bringing in suburban commuters to Boston in the morning and back home in the late afternoon. For example, the Route 128 stop on the line, Mishawum, is barely served and not really connected to the nearby office parks. Then the lack of electrification and the low platforms hurt reliability and raise operating costs, and so far the MBTA is buying battery-trains only on the Fairmount Line and at extremely high costs, the agency’s managers still feeling allergic to hanging catenary wires. No outer extensions should be entertained under the current paradigm.
The Westerly connection
The most interesting – and flawed – bits in the proposal come from the idea of connecting Shore Line East with MBTA Commuter Rail service at Westerly. There are feasibility studies from both ends, with results that are trumpeted in the media as portending great demand but actually prove the opposite (the Connecticut study estimates 160,000 riders/year, which is a bit more than 500/day).
The issue is that today, one can chain commuter rail trips from south of Wilmington (technically Newark, Delaware) to New London, but there are gaps past both ends, between New London and Wickford Junction and between Delaware and Perryville. Railfans see the gaps and want them closed with commuter rail extensions so that they can take the entire Northeast Corridor without using Amtrak. These railfans then advocate to study such extensions – for example, the Rhode Island Association of Rail Passengers is involved.
And those extensions are largely useless. There is a mode of transport for connecting different city regions in the Northeast: intercity rail. One can take Amtrak between New Haven and Providence today, at competitive trip times. The fares are high, but that’s because operating costs are high; regional rail is if anything more expensive to operate, and raises questions of whether subsidizing this specific trip is a good use of Connecticut and Rhode Island’s money. What’s more, people take these high-fare trains – the trip times on that segment are competitive, and buses struggle to serve a thin market, lacking the ability of trains to easily serve multiple cities and piggyback on the much thicker New York-Boston market.
Germany has parallel intercity trains that run fast and regional trains that run slow but are free to ride with the Deutschlandticket. When the free tickets on regional trains were introduced with the 9€ monthly of summer 2022, people rode them for the novelty, and then stopped, because nobody actually needs to string regional trains between cities, averaging maybe 60 km/h, just for the free trip. Trains that are not time-competitive are not getting ridership, and this includes any attempt to get passengers to connect at Westerly between regional trains to New Haven and regional trains to Providence.
So any extension to Westerly from either end has to live purely on regional traffic. Last time Rhode Island paid for an MBTA extension to the south, it got parking lots at T. F. Green Airport and Wickford Junction, and massive ridership shortfalls. Wickford Junction, in the middle of nowhere in northern South (Washington) County, has a parking garage with 1,100 spots, which drove up the construction costs of the station to $44 million in early 2010s prices. Ridership in the fall 2024 counts was 157 inbound boardings, or 314 total trips, compared with a ridership projection of about 3,500; the cost per daily trip in today’s prices is about $200,000. This is not a corona artifact – the MBTA recovered all corona ridership shortfall, alone among major American commuter rail agencies. It’s just what happens when commuter rail is extended to a place with few commuters to Boston; Providence is not a strong enough city center to hold a peaky commuter rail system as a destination (the Superman Building is still empty and seeking financing for a residential conversion). Westerly is not going to do any better than Wickford Junction.
But what such an extension would do, in lieu of getting any ridership, is interfere with intercity trains. The fastest parts of the Northeast Corridor are in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. A system of timed overtakes is used right now to let Amtrak share the corridor with slow diesel trains; Attleboro has four tracks for that. South of Providence, this is obviated by the fact that there’s almost no commuter traffic, but the more there is, the more one has to worry about timetabling, which would complicate schedules and reduce reliability for the intercity trains that get ridership in service of regional trains that would not.
Some of this would improve if service on the Northeast Corridor in general improved. However, the issue of interference with intercity trains would only get worse if intercity service were sped up and ran more frequently. In theory, it should be possible to run a stopping train between New Haven and Providence on the legacy line, with intercity trains running on a bypass in Connecticut, but the timetabling in Rhode Island would still be difficult and the ridership would not be particularly strong. Other than Mohegan Sun, towns like Mystic and Westerly aren’t destinations, and for origins, the train would struggle to beat driving to New London to take the train from there to New York.
Railfan prioritization
Taking a broader view of this, railfans tend to prioritize the wrong lines, and not just in the United States; Germany has the same problem with rail advocacy. To the person who’d ride the train even if driving were faster, the most important priorities are where train service does not exist, such as across the gap between New London and Wickford Junction. But to the civil servant deciding how to prioritize infrastructure money, it’s more important to invest in trains that can get more riders than just the railfans; taking a line from 0% to 5% modal split is less important than taking it from 20% to 40%, it’s just less important to the sort of people who are already in the 20% of rail users and would be in the 5% if service and modal splits deteriorated.
In truth, the priority in the Northeast should be high-speed rail, in coordination with some specific urban and inner-suburban commuter rail investments; I keep pushing grade separation of Hunter and Shell Interlockings just south and north of New York respectively for a reason. On the commuter rail system, the priority must likewise be making the system usable by more than suburban 9-to-5 commuters, and investing in making it unrecognizable to the American traditionalist and recognizable to the European RER or S-Bahn user. Regional rail is in the best cases a lower priority, and in many not worth it even as a lower priority.




