Thursday, September 26, 2013
Power Failure Disrupts Metro North’s New Haven Line; May Last Days
    
Hours after a predawn    power loss shut down much of Metro-North Railroad’s New Haven Line early on    Wednesday, officials warned that service could be imperiled for several    days, and possibly longer, upending commutes for tens of thousands of    travelers.
    
      The disruption      began after a Consolidated Edison feeder cable in Mount Vernon, N.Y.,      failed around 5:20 a.m., snarling service between Stamford, Conn., and      Grand Central Terminal.    
          The utility said      the type of repairs needed “typically take two to three weeks.” Officials      hoped to line up alternative power sources that could hasten a return to      normal service, but state and transit officials conveyed little optimism      that the fixes would come quickly.    
          “People need to      now assume this is a long-term problem,” Gov. Dannel P. Malloy of      Connecticut said in a news conference.    
          After speaking      with officials at the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the governor      said, “It was clear that they don’t have an immediate solution to this      problem.”    
          The authority said      commuters who use the New Haven line would encounter a patchwork of trains      and buses on Thursday morning, a setup that would continue “until further      notice.” The agency said the plan could accommodate about a third of the      regular ridership.    
          Con Edison said it      was unsure why its 138,000-volt feeder cable, which supplies electricity      to the railroad’s overhead power lines, had failed. Another cable that      typically provides power to the New Haven line was out of service for      scheduled repairs as part of equipment upgrades, the utility added. That      feeder was not expected to be functional until mid-October.    
          The transportation      authority said it was assessing the possibility of finishing the upgrades      ahead of schedule.    
          Mr. Malloy      suggested that, in the interim, riders turn to the railroad’s Harlem line,      or car-pool. He noted that the episode bore little resemblance to a      Metro-North service disruption in May, when a collision injured scores of      passengers. In that case, full service returned in less than a week.    
          But after that      episode, officials were initially more hopeful about restoring service      quickly, Mr. Malloy said. In this case, he said, “that confidence does not      exist.”    
          Around 9 a.m. on      Wednesday, the authority began an “extremely limited” hourly diesel      service out of both Grand Central Terminal and Stamford.    
          Stations were      stuffed with passengers, some already hours late to work. Once they      boarded, there was often crowding in even tighter quarters.    
          Service on Amtrak,      which shares the tracks with Metro-North, was also affected, with delays      throughout the Northeast and a suspension of Acela Express trains between      New York City and Boston.    
          More than 40,000      commuters take the New Haven line during a typical morning rush.    
          For regular      riders, the morning’s commute turned suddenly ominous.    
          Michael Alpert,      45, from Westport, Conn., was greeted by an exodus of cars when he arrived      at Green’s Farms station around 6:35 a.m. A fellow rider informed him of      the power issues. “He offered me a ride into the city,” Mr. Alpert      recalled, but “said I was on my own getting home.”    
          Mr. Alpert decided      to work from home.    
          Chris Halloran,      25, who commutes from the Upper East Side to Stamford, opted to rent a      car.    
          “The only car they      had left was the Mustang convertible,” he said, “which was fun to drive on      a beautiful day, but it was $125, plus gas.”    
          Others suggested      that the service disruption represented a tipping point.    
          “This is making me      think long and hard about the need for a monthly Metro-North ticket,” said      Melissa Haber, 39, of New Rochelle, N.Y. “The service has been lousy for      months.”    
    Article Source here
Author: By MATT FLEGENHEIMER


 
 
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