Tracing Tracy Territory
by Sam Matthews
Jul 25, 2008 | 298 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print


Our golf group’s excursion on

the Altamont Commuter Express to San Jose and back, as reported in last week’s

column, has generated several comments, both orally and in written form in

recent days.

Several responders asked how

to purchase senior-citizen half-fare tickets, and others expressed curiosity about

other aspects of the trip.

One reader, Sandi Burgos of Pleasanton, e-mailed that

I needed more than two rides on ACE to know the problems that regular

passengers often encounter.

At the top of her list: The

ACE rule against riders placing laptops, backbacks or other items on seats next

to them is not enforced by train personnel.

“Every single day, there are

people with luggage, backpacks, computer carriers, etc., that take up two or

three seats, and people have to sit on the stairs or on the floor,” she wrote.

“How right is that?”

Her comments struck a chord

with other members of our five-man ACE-excursion group. They mentioned that,

yes, they saw several riders on our car that morning with either backpacks or

computer cases on the seats next to them. One man moved his computer case when

people were looking for a seat, but another passenger didn’t make a move to

clear the space next to him.

We didn’t see anyone seated

on the stairs or on the floor that morning, but with only a couple of vacant

seats visible in our car, I can well imagine that occurs.

ACE plans to add more cars to

the most heavily traveled trains in the next month or so, but that doesn’t mean

the apparently common practice of occupying two seats should be ignored.

One Tracyite asked where

senior citizens can get discount tickets. I replied that the ACE ticket booth

at the Tracy

station was open and staffed before 7 o’clock the morning we took our trip. It

appeared to be closed before the 10:02 a.m. train arrived some three hours

later, but in those cases, tickets can be purchased upon boarding the train.

I bought our senior citizen

Tracy-San Jose tickets ($7.50) at the ACE office in Stockton

after I found the Tracy

station ticket office closed at 10 a.m. several days before our ride.

On its Web site

(acerail.com), ACE does offer special deals for group excursions, so it is

worth checking out if an organization is interested.

I told one person that for

many people, the best schedule for a trip to San Jose

would be to take the uncrowded 10:02 a.m. westbound train out of Tracy, arriving in San

Jose
at 11:40 a.m., in time for lunch. There would be

time after lunch for other activities, including making a visit to the San Jose

Tech Museum — a unique facility chronicling the growth of Silicon Valley’s

high-tech revolution and other technological advances — before boarding the ACE

eastbound train at 3:35 p.m. That train arrives in Tracy at 5:09 p.m. And for our trip, ACE

trains were on time.

The future of regional rail

services, for ACE and BART in particular, is the subject of constant

conjecture. I ran into Da Mayor, Brent Ives, the other morning at Barista’s

downtown, and he told me a number of issues face ACE in the immediate future.

Brent, who has served on the

San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission — ACE’s parent — for 15 years since its

formation, said at Barista’s and later that joint use of Union Pacific tracks

between Stockton and San Jose is a continuing concern.

“When you run both freight

and commuter-rail trains on the same tracks, there are always conflicts,” he

said. “And freight trains can take priority, although our on-time record is

pretty good.”

According to Brent, talks

between the rail commission and U.P. about the commission’s purchase of U.P.

tracks used by ACE has ended in the past few months after U.P. pulled the plug.

That leaves the establishment of a separate ACE rail line over the Altamont  either

on the old Southern Pacific right-of-way or on a new route — a goal, but one

not easily achieved.

The outcome of the high-speed

rail bond on the November ballot — which promises an Altamont Pass high-speed

feeder element — and a new round of federal funding for regional transportation

projects, due to be decided next spring, could be keys to any break-through

plans, according to Brent.

“We just have to keep

plugging away and see what develops,” he said. “No one gave us much a chance of

getting ACE trains rolling a decade ago, but we did it, and I’m proud of what

we’ve been able accomplished so far.”

Sam Matthews, Tracy

Press publisher emeritus, can be reached at 830-4234 or by e-mail at

shm@tracypress.com.

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