An Amtrak trip from Vermont to New York made Kevin Ellis angry. But not in the way a difficult flight or terrible traffic can make us angry. A trip that could have been, that should be, a pleasure was instead deeply annoying. And he was embarrassed to think that this was the best America has to offer visitors from other countries. There was sadness, too, and deep frustration with the way we’ve neglected trains over the decades, “By Hartford or New Haven, you are wondering how this country ever got to the moon or invented anything.”
Kevin echoed the thoughts of many Americans we have heard from over the years. While not directly involved in train advocacy (yet!), Kevin’s article, “The Embarrassment of Amtrak,” has been widely circulated among those of us working to promote passenger rail. He speaks eloquently for all train riders who want to see Amtrak and other passenger service operators create a world-class US rail network. Those concerned about the decline of rural America should consider this:
If this train took under four hours, it would be packed with people back and forth to NYC. It would bring New Yorkers to Vermont to spend their tourist dollars, buy homes and inject commerce into our Covid economy. They would get off in Springfield, Vt., rehab a house for under $200,000, and go to work at the Black River Innovation Campus with the fastest internet in the country. They might go to Putney, or Dummerston, or Brattleboro and start businesses.
This is exactly the perspective that created and continues to energize the Train Campaign. Read the full text of Kevin’s article here.
Thanks to Transportation for Massachusetts (T4MA) for underwriting Train Time.
Kevin Ellis is a co-founder and partner in Ellis Mills Public Affairs, a consulting firm offering political strategy and communications counsel to companies and nonprofits nationwide. Kevin co-founded Ellis Mills after 22 years at KSE Partners, LLC, a leading government affairs and communications firm. He has led advised on government strategy, public relations, and crisis communications, including the historic same-sex marriage campaign in 2009. Kevin’s clients have been in telecom, transportation, health care, farm-to-plate agriculture, and education. He serves on the board of directors of Chelsea Green Publishing, a leading environmental and sustainability publisher, and the Green Mountain Film Festival in Montpelier.
Transcript
Note: This transcript was created using AI and is imperfect. For purposes of quotation, please check the actual recording! It is time-stamped , which is useful as a guide to finding a point in the recording, but please be aware that the time-stamps are not a perfect match to the published podcast.
Tue, 10/26 7:39PM • 22:26
SPEAKERS: Kevin Ellis, Karen Christensen
SPEAKERS
Kevin Ellis, Karen Christensen
Karen Christensen 01:48
Kevin. Good morning.
Kevin Ellis 01:50
Good morning, Karen, how are you?
Karen Christensen 01:52
It’s delightful to have you here. So to speak. from Vermont. No, you are in.
Kevin Ellis 02:02
I’m in. I’m just outside of Montpelier, the state capitol
Karen Christensen 02:07
Great. I’m in Western Massachusetts. Well, your blog post about the embarrassment of Amtrak was rather widely circulated, which is how I came across you. So can you tell us how you came to write that? I mean, you