Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Metra shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Metra offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Metra at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Metra? Wrong! If the Metra is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Metra then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Metra? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Metra and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Metra wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Metra then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Metra site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Metra, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Metra, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
{{Infobox Public transit|name = Metra|image = Metra Logo.svg|imagesize = 225px|locale =
Chicago metropolitan area|lines = 11|stations = 237|track_gauge = ([standard gauge)] (RTA)|began_operation = 1984|marks = METX, NIRC|system_length = 495
mile (797 kilometre)|ridership = 290,000-->
Metra (Officially known as the
Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Railroad Corporation) is a regional rail that serves the city of Chicago, Illinois, and surrounding cities, many of them
Chicago suburbs. The railroad serves over 200 stations on 11 different rail lines across the Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois)'s six-county service area (
Cook County, Illinois,
DuPage County, Illinois, Kane County, Illinois, Lake County, Illinois, McHenry County, Illinois and Will County, Illinois Counties) providing over 80 million rides annually. Metra has been honored with several E. H. Harriman Awards for employee safety, most recently with a Bronze award in class B (line-haul railroads with between 4 and 15 million employee hours per year) for 2005. Previous Harriman Awards conferred to Metra include Gold awards for 2003 and 2004 and a Silver award for 2002.
History
" approaching the Deerfield, Illinois station,
June 23,
2006.In 1926, the
Illinois Central Railroad electrified its commuter service between downtown Chicago and the neighborhood of
Hyde Park (Chicago). This would later become the
Metra Electric Line. Forty-eight years later, in 1974, the Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois) was formed after a March 1973
referendum to provide financial support from local and county governments to railroads providing commuter service between Chicago and its
suburbs. Purchase of service contracts with all the railroads operating commuter service in the area were signed in 1976. In the wake of the 1980
bankruptcy and liquidation of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, the RTA also inherited ownership and operational responsibilities of that railroad's commuter operations (Now Metra's Rock Island District) in 1982. The same year it also leased the Milwaukee Road's Suburban Mass Transit District lines (Now Metra's Milwaukee Districts). In
1979, the RTA purchased 27
EMD F40PH locomotives, as well as inheriting 14 EMD F40C locomotives, 18
EMD E8/EMD E9 locomotives, and two EMD F7 units. (They would later come in possession of 45 F40PH-2 locomotives between
1979 and
1989, and 29 F40PHM-2s in 1991-1992.) The
Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois) created the current organization, with three management boards for Chicago area public transit: the
Chicago Transit Authority for city
rapid transit and buses, Pace (transit) for suburban buses, and Metra for suburban rail. The Metra service mark, short for Metropolitan Rail, was adopted in 1984. Before then, Metra was briefly known just as the Northeast Illinois Railroad Corporation. Many Metra locomotives remained in the RTA paint scheme until the early to mid-
1990s. Metra acquired the operations of the
Heritage Corridor and Metra Electric Line in
1987, and the Southwest Service in 1993. In
1996 it began operating the
North Central Service over the
Wisconsin Central Transportation Corporation, now part of the
Canadian National Railway. Commuter service that had previously been operated on that line by the
Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway ended by 1971. From 1991-1992, Metra purchased 29 F40PH-2M locomotives, and came in possession of the Milwaukee Road's F40C fleet. In the early 1990s, the E and F units were retired (The F units being sent to the Illinois Railway Museum), and in 2005, the F40Cs were replaced by new
MPI MP36PH engines. Metra's other lines are still operated by the freight railroads that own the trackage. The
Union Pacific Railroad operates three ex-
Chicago and North Western Railway lines – the Union Pacific/North Line,
Union Pacific/Northwest Line and Union Pacific/West Line. The other line, the BNSF Railway Line, is operated by BNSF. With over 60,000 daily passengers on 94 revenue trains, the BNSF line is Metra's busiest. Commuter service is also provided by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District's South Shore Line (NICTD) to
South Bend, Indiana, one of only a few remaining interurban streetcar lines in the U.S. From
1971 to
1991, Amtrak's
Calumet (Amtrak) provided commuter rail service to
Valparaiso, Indiana, and provides intercity rail to Chicago, including frequent
Hiawatha (Amtrak) service to
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, used by some commuters to Chicago.
Lines and stations
Until the
1960s, Chicago had six major intercity rail
terminal stations. Three of them – Central Station (Chicago terminal),
Dearborn Station (Chicago) and
Grand Central Station (Chicago) – have closed. Metra still uses the other three – LaSalle Street Station (Chicago),
Union Station (Chicago) and the
Ogilvie Transportation Center – as well as the
Millennium Station (formerly Randolph Street Station), a terminal for commuter lines that operated through Central Station.
Union Station (Chicago) serves all
Amtrak intercity trains. It also serves Metra trains on several lines that operated into Union Station from before the 1960s:
Since the 1960s, other routes have been rerouted into Union Station:
The Ogilvie Transportation Center, originally the Chicago and North Western Terminal, serves the three lines formerly operated by the Chicago and North Western Railway – the Union Pacific/North Line,
Union Pacific/Northwest Line and
Union Pacific/West Line.
LaSalle Street Station (Chicago) serves only trains of the
Rock Island District, originally operated by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad.
Millennium Station (previously Randolph Street Station) serves the ex-Illinois Central Railroad Metra Electric Line, and the South Shore Line (NICTD)
interurban streetcar service to South Bend, Indiana, operated by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District.
Extension projects
Despite the State of Illinois's current budget crisis, Metra is implementing vigorous expansion in the coming years. Some of this expansion has already been realized: the Union Pacific/West line has been extended from Geneva, Illinois through La Fox to Elburn, Illinois, and the Southwest Service line has been extended from
Orland Park, Illinois to
Manhattan, Illinois.http://metrarail.com/Press_Releases/press-release-01-06-06.html Metra is also in the process of extending the McHenry, Illinois branch of the Union Pacific/Northwest into Johnsburg, Illinoishttp://metraconnects.metrarail.com/upnw.php.
Metra is also planning to create new rail services as well, namely the
SouthEast Service (Metra) line from downtown Chicago to
Crete, Illinoishttp://metraconnects.metrarail.com/ses.php, as well as Metra's first entirely intra-suburban commuter line, the Suburban Transit Access Route (Metra), or "STAR" Line, which would operate between
Joliet, Illinois and O'Hare International Airport, linking together Metra lines in the western suburbs.http://metraconnects.metrarail.com/star.php
Fare Structure
Metra has a zone-based fare structure. The zones range from A (downtown stations and terminuses) to M.
Harvard (Metra station) on the Union Pacific/Northwest Line is the only station located in the M zone, and no stations are located in the L zone. Fares are lowest within zones ($1.95 for a one-way regular fare ticket) and escalate as the distance between zones spreads farther apart (a one-way ticket between the A and M zones costs $7.30) Metra Adult Fare Schedule (effective 2006). Metra sells four types of standard tickets: one-way, round-trip, 10-ride, and monthly passes. A reduced fare ticket may be purchased at half price for children from ages 7-11, students, seniors, the disabled, and military personnel, though round-trip tickets are not sold at reduced fare. Metra also sells a $5.00 weekend pass allowing for unlimited travel on weekends. A $2.00 surcharge is added to ticket fares if a passenger boards at a station with an open ticket booth and purchases a ticket on the train. Metra-Ticket Information
Motive Power and Rolling Stock
Locomotive Fleet
{| class="wikitable"! Numbers! Model! Year Built! Assigned! Disposition|-| 100–127|
EMD F40PH| 1976–1977| All diesel routes| Operating, to be rebuilt|-| 128–184|
EMD F40PH-2| 1979–1989| All diesel routes, many of which are assigned to the UP lines| Operating|-| 185–214| EMD F40PHM-2| 1991–1992| BNSF Railway Line,
Rock Island District, Milwaukee District/North Line, Milwaukee District/West Line, and North Central Service| 2003–2004| BNSF, RI, Milwaukee North, Milwaukee West, and North Central Service| Operating|-| 305, 308| [EMD F7| 1949| All Diesel Routes| Retired|-| 514–516, 518, 521| EMD E8| 1951–1953| All Diesel Routes| Retired|-| 600–614| EMD F40C| 1974| Milwaukee Districts| Retired, although engines 611 and 614 remain on the property.|-| 1–2|
EMD SW1| 1939| RI| Operating|-| 3| EMD SW1200|| Milwaukee West, Milwaukee North| Operating|-| 4–8|
EMD SW1500|| RI, Milwaukee West, Milwaukee North,
Metra Electric Line| Operating|}
Coach fleet
{| class="wikitable"! Numbers! Type! Heritage! Year Built! Builder! Disposition|-| 740–820| Coach|
Chicago Burlington and Quincy| 1950–
1973| Operating|-| 7100–7121| Coach| Burlington| [1977–1978–[2005| Operating|-| 7200–7382| Coach| [Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific| 1961–1980–[1998| Operating|-| 8200–8283| Coach/Cab| Milwaukee| [1961–
1974| [1978–
1980–[1995| Operating|-| 8414–8478| Coach/Cab| Metra| [1995–
1998–[2005| [1949| Operating|-| 555| Club Car| [Chicago and North Western Railway| 1949| Retired|-| 7600-7613| Coach| [Chicago and North Western Railway|
1955| Retired|-| 7650-7866| Coach| C&NW| [1955-1970| Retired|-| 7867-7871| Coach| [Chicago Rock Island and Pacific| 1970| Pullman| Retired|-| 7881-7885| Coach| RI| [1970| St. Louis| Retired|-| 8700-8763| Cab Cars| C&NW| [1960-
1968| Pullman| Retired|}
Metra electric fleet
{| class="wikitable"! Numbers! Type! Heritage! Year Bulit! Builder|-| 1201–1226| MU Coach| Metra| 2005| Nippon-Sharyo| 1971–1972| [St. Louis Car Company|-| 1631–1666| MU Coach| IC| 1978–1979|
Bombardier|}
Notable accidents
Metra, as all passenger rail, has a reputation for being a safe and reliable mode of transportation. However, there have been several accidents in the past that have caught regional, and sometimes national, attention:
- At around 5:53 p.m. on August 26, 1991, Mary T. Wojtyla, 41, of Chicago, was walking with her lawyer across the tracks at the Fairview Avenue grade crossing in Downers Grove, Illinois, directly in front of a westbound train which was stopped at the Metra station. Apparently distracted by ongoing divorce proceedings, she crossed the center track and was struck by a westbound Burlington Northern EMD E9 pulling a "Racetrack" express train, estimated to be traveling at 60 miles per hour. Wojtyla was killed instantly; her lawyer saw the oncoming train and was not struck.Operation Lifesaver assembly. Lake Park High School. 1999. The accident delayed between 12,000 and 15,000 commuters on the Burlington Northern line for more than an hour."Train kills woman in Downers Grove", Chicago Tribune, August 27, 1991, CHICAGOLAND, p. 6 Trains were further delayed when Downers Grove police ordered the engineer to back up the train in order to re-enact the incident. According to an account in the Downers Grove Reporter, "the engineer was so seriously affected by the re-enactment, where he had to pass by the dead body still on the tracks, he was unable to continue and had to be relieved of his duties.""Pedestrian killed by speeding Metra train", Downers Grove Reporter, August 28, 1991, front page. A railfan captured Wojtyla being stuck by the train. The video, dubbed "Traingirl", has been shown with the impact edited out at many Operation Lifesaver events, and unedited on shock site web sites and YouTube. A wrongful death lawsuit brought by Wojtyla's estate was dismissed in 1996.
- On the morning of October 25, 1995, Fox River Grove level crossing accident which was stopped along the tracks at the stoplight at Algonquin Road and Northwest Highway in Fox River Grove, Illinois. The accident resulted in seven deaths, multiple injuries, and a massive overhaul in safety, especially with respect to school buses and at short crossings. Millions of dollars were spent by several parties in lawsuits and safety improvements.
- On September 17, 2005, a Metra train from Joliet, Illinois to Chicago derailed about five miles from LaSalle Street Station (Chicago), killing two people – Allison Walsh, 38 and Jane Cuthbert, 22 – and injuring approximately 80 others. While the investigation is still proceeding at this time the indications are that the train was traveling at excessive speed, one report stating that the train was moving at more than 60 mph over the posted speed limit of 10 mph, and this was a factor in the accident.
- On November 23, 2005, a Metra train from Chicago to Antioch, Illinois collided with multiple cars at the Grand Avenue crossing in Elmwood Park, Illinois. The railroad tracks cross Grand Avenue at a shallow angle, therefore creating a longer-than-normal crossing. Just past the tracks on Grand Avenue (heading east) there is a traffic signal that can trap drivers disregarding the signs around the crossing warning them not to stop on the tracks. No one died at the scene, but 15 people needed to be sent to hospitals throughout Chicago. Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board determined that the signals were working properly and have implied in statements to the press that fault for the accident lies with motorists who ignored warning signs and stopped across the railroad tracks.
In popular culture
Metra has made several appearances in film:
- In the 1990 film Home Alone, Kevin runs across a bridge as a Metra train pulls under it.
- In the film She's Having a Baby, the main character takes the Metra to and from work each day.
- In the film U.S. Marshals (film), although it's set in New York City, the train that cuts Deputy Gerard off shortly after the graveyard scene is a Metra. This is probably due to the fact that many scenes set in New York were actually filmed in Chicago.
- In end of the film Weird Science (film), the train that Gary speeds in front of to lose the police belongs to the Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois), before it became Metra.
- Many shots take place aboard a Metra train in the 2005 film Derailed.
- In the film Cheaper by the Dozen (2003 film), Mark boards a Metra train in an attempt to run away from home.
- In the film Stir of Echoes, the main character played by Kevin Bacon works along a Metra line. He also lives in the Wicker Park, Chicago neighborhood in Chicago, and visits a station there, though Logan Square does not actually have a Metra station.
- In the film Save The Last Dance, the main character takes a Metra train to Chicago to live with her father.
- In the Nintendo 64 title Cruis'n USA, a Metra F40PH (With "TOXIC" written in the place of "METRA" on the side) appears on railroad lines in several courses.
- In R. Kelly's Trapped in the Closet, the opening shot of Chicago features a passing Metra train.
External links
- RAILChicago
- Metra
- Chicago Transit & Railfan Web Site
- MetxPix.com
- Railfanning.org: Metra
- Metra Maps Site
- South Shore Pictures Partially Metra/RTA sponsored service
- Metra Commuter Rail profile and photos
References
See also
- Mass transit in Chicago
- Pace (transit)
- Chicago Transit Authority
{{Infobox Public transit|name = Metra|image = Metra Logo.svg|imagesize = 225px|locale = Chicago metropolitan area|lines = 11|stations = 237|track_gauge = ([standard gauge)] (RTA)|began_operation = 1984|marks = METX, NIRC|system_length = 495 mile (797 kilometre)|ridership = 290,000-->
Metra (Officially known as the
Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Railroad Corporation) is a regional rail that serves the city of Chicago, Illinois, and surrounding cities, many of them
Chicago suburbs. The railroad serves over 200 stations on 11 different rail lines across the
Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois)'s six-county service area (
Cook County, Illinois,
DuPage County, Illinois,
Kane County, Illinois,
Lake County, Illinois, McHenry County, Illinois and Will County, Illinois Counties) providing over 80 million rides annually. Metra has been honored with several
E. H. Harriman Awards for employee safety, most recently with a Bronze award in class B (line-haul railroads with between 4 and 15 million employee hours per year) for 2005. Previous Harriman Awards conferred to Metra include Gold awards for 2003 and 2004 and a Silver award for 2002.
History
" approaching the Deerfield, Illinois station,
June 23, 2006.In 1926, the
Illinois Central Railroad electrified its commuter service between downtown Chicago and the neighborhood of Hyde Park (Chicago). This would later become the Metra Electric Line. Forty-eight years later, in 1974, the Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois) was formed after a March
1973 referendum to provide financial support from local and county governments to railroads providing commuter service between Chicago and its
suburbs. Purchase of service contracts with all the railroads operating commuter service in the area were signed in 1976. In the wake of the 1980 bankruptcy and liquidation of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, the RTA also inherited ownership and operational responsibilities of that railroad's commuter operations (Now Metra's
Rock Island District) in 1982. The same year it also leased the Milwaukee Road's Suburban Mass Transit District lines (Now Metra's Milwaukee Districts). In 1979, the RTA purchased 27 EMD F40PH locomotives, as well as inheriting 14 EMD F40C locomotives, 18 EMD E8/
EMD E9 locomotives, and two EMD F7 units. (They would later come in possession of 45 F40PH-2 locomotives between 1979 and 1989, and 29 F40PHM-2s in 1991-1992.) The
Regional Transportation Authority (Illinois) created the current organization, with three management boards for Chicago area public transit: the Chicago Transit Authority for city
rapid transit and buses, Pace (transit) for suburban buses, and Metra for suburban rail. The Metra
service mark, short for Metropolitan Rail, was adopted in
1984. Before then, Metra was briefly known just as the Northeast Illinois Railroad Corporation. Many Metra locomotives remained in the RTA paint scheme until the early to mid-1990s. Metra acquired the operations of the Heritage Corridor and
Metra Electric Line in
1987, and the
Southwest Service in 1993. In 1996 it began operating the North Central Service over the Wisconsin Central Transportation Corporation, now part of the
Canadian National Railway. Commuter service that had previously been operated on that line by the
Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway ended by 1971. From 1991-1992, Metra purchased 29 F40PH-2M locomotives, and came in possession of the Milwaukee Road's F40C fleet. In the early 1990s, the E and F units were retired (The F units being sent to the
Illinois Railway Museum), and in
2005, the F40Cs were replaced by new MPI MP36PH engines. Metra's other lines are still operated by the freight railroads that own the trackage. The Union Pacific Railroad operates three ex-Chicago and North Western Railway lines – the
Union Pacific/North Line,
Union Pacific/Northwest Line and
Union Pacific/West Line. The other line, the BNSF Railway Line, is operated by
BNSF. With over 60,000 daily passengers on 94 revenue trains, the BNSF line is Metra's busiest. Commuter service is also provided by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District's South Shore Line (NICTD) to South Bend, Indiana, one of only a few remaining interurban streetcar lines in the U.S. From 1971 to 1991, Amtrak's
Calumet (Amtrak) provided commuter rail service to
Valparaiso, Indiana, and provides intercity rail to Chicago, including frequent
Hiawatha (Amtrak) service to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, used by some commuters to Chicago.
Lines and stations
Until the 1960s, Chicago had six major intercity rail
terminal stations. Three of them – Central Station (Chicago terminal), Dearborn Station (Chicago) and Grand Central Station (Chicago) – have closed. Metra still uses the other three –
LaSalle Street Station (Chicago), Union Station (Chicago) and the Ogilvie Transportation Center – as well as the
Millennium Station (formerly Randolph Street Station), a terminal for commuter lines that operated through Central Station.
Union Station (Chicago) serves all
Amtrak intercity trains. It also serves Metra trains on several lines that operated into Union Station from before the
1960s:
Since the
1960s, other routes have been rerouted into Union Station:
The Ogilvie Transportation Center, originally the Chicago and North Western Terminal, serves the three lines formerly operated by the Chicago and North Western Railway – the
Union Pacific/North Line, Union Pacific/Northwest Line and
Union Pacific/West Line.
LaSalle Street Station (Chicago) serves only trains of the
Rock Island District, originally operated by the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad.
Millennium Station (previously Randolph Street Station) serves the ex-
Illinois Central Railroad Metra Electric Line, and the
South Shore Line (NICTD) interurban streetcar service to
South Bend, Indiana, operated by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District.
Extension projects
Despite the
State of Illinois's current budget crisis, Metra is implementing vigorous expansion in the coming years. Some of this expansion has already been realized: the Union Pacific/West line has been extended from
Geneva, Illinois through La Fox to Elburn, Illinois, and the Southwest Service line has been extended from
Orland Park, Illinois to
Manhattan, Illinois.http://metrarail.com/Press_Releases/press-release-01-06-06.html Metra is also in the process of extending the McHenry, Illinois branch of the Union Pacific/Northwest into
Johnsburg, Illinoishttp://metraconnects.metrarail.com/upnw.php.
Metra is also planning to create new rail services as well, namely the
SouthEast Service (Metra) line from downtown Chicago to Crete, Illinoishttp://metraconnects.metrarail.com/ses.php, as well as Metra's first entirely intra-suburban commuter line, the
Suburban Transit Access Route (Metra), or "STAR" Line, which would operate between
Joliet, Illinois and
O'Hare International Airport, linking together Metra lines in the western suburbs.http://metraconnects.metrarail.com/star.php
Fare Structure
Metra has a zone-based fare structure. The zones range from A (downtown stations and terminuses) to M.
Harvard (Metra station) on the
Union Pacific/Northwest Line is the only station located in the M zone, and no stations are located in the L zone. Fares are lowest within zones ($1.95 for a one-way regular fare ticket) and escalate as the distance between zones spreads farther apart (a one-way ticket between the A and M zones costs $7.30) Metra Adult Fare Schedule (effective 2006). Metra sells four types of standard tickets: one-way, round-trip, 10-ride, and monthly passes. A reduced fare ticket may be purchased at half price for children from ages 7-11, students, seniors, the disabled, and military personnel, though round-trip tickets are not sold at reduced fare. Metra also sells a $5.00 weekend pass allowing for unlimited travel on weekends. A $2.00 surcharge is added to ticket fares if a passenger boards at a station with an open ticket booth and purchases a ticket on the train. Metra-Ticket Information
Motive Power and Rolling Stock
Locomotive Fleet
{| class="wikitable"! Numbers! Model! Year Built! Assigned! Disposition|-| 100–127|
EMD F40PH| 1976–1977| All diesel routes| Operating, to be rebuilt|-| 128–184| EMD F40PH-2| 1979–1989| All diesel routes, many of which are assigned to the UP lines| Operating|-| 185–214| EMD F40PHM-2| 1991–1992| BNSF Railway Line,
Rock Island District, Milwaukee District/North Line, Milwaukee District/West Line, and North Central Service| 2003–2004| BNSF, RI, Milwaukee North, Milwaukee West, and North Central Service| Operating|-| 305, 308| [EMD F7| 1949| All Diesel Routes| Retired|-| 514–516, 518, 521| EMD E8| 1951–1953| All Diesel Routes| Retired|-| 600–614|
EMD F40C| 1974| Milwaukee Districts| Retired, although engines 611 and 614 remain on the property.|-| 1–2| EMD SW1| 1939| RI| Operating|-| 3|
EMD SW1200|| Milwaukee West, Milwaukee North| Operating|-| 4–8| EMD SW1500|| RI, Milwaukee West, Milwaukee North,
Metra Electric Line| Operating|}
Coach fleet
{| class="wikitable"! Numbers! Type! Heritage! Year Built! Builder! Disposition|-| 740–820| Coach| Chicago Burlington and Quincy|
1950–1973| Operating|-| 7100–7121| Coach| Burlington| [1977–
1978–[2005| Operating|-| 7200–7382| Coach| [Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific|
1961–1980–[1998| Operating|-| 8200–8283| Coach/Cab| Milwaukee| [1961–
1974| [1978–1980–[1995| Operating|-| 8414–8478| Coach/Cab| Metra| [1995–1998–[2005| [1949| Operating|-| 555| Club Car| [Chicago and North Western Railway|
1949| Retired|-| 7600-7613| Coach| [Chicago and North Western Railway| 1955| Retired|-| 7650-7866| Coach| C&NW| [1955-1970| Retired|-| 7867-7871| Coach| [Chicago Rock Island and Pacific| 1970| Pullman| Retired|-| 7881-7885| Coach| RI| [1970| St. Louis| Retired|-| 8700-8763| Cab Cars| C&NW| [1960-1968| Pullman| Retired|}
Metra electric fleet
{| class="wikitable"! Numbers! Type! Heritage! Year Bulit! Builder|-| 1201–1226| MU Coach| Metra| 2005| Nippon-Sharyo| 1971–1972| [St. Louis Car Company|-| 1631–1666| MU Coach| IC| 1978–1979| Bombardier|}
Notable accidents
Metra, as all passenger rail, has a reputation for being a safe and reliable mode of transportation. However, there have been several accidents in the past that have caught regional, and sometimes national, attention:
- At around 5:53 p.m. on August 26, 1991, Mary T. Wojtyla, 41, of Chicago, was walking with her lawyer across the tracks at the Fairview Avenue grade crossing in Downers Grove, Illinois, directly in front of a westbound train which was stopped at the Metra station. Apparently distracted by ongoing divorce proceedings, she crossed the center track and was struck by a westbound Burlington Northern EMD E9 pulling a "Racetrack" express train, estimated to be traveling at 60 miles per hour. Wojtyla was killed instantly; her lawyer saw the oncoming train and was not struck.Operation Lifesaver assembly. Lake Park High School. 1999. The accident delayed between 12,000 and 15,000 commuters on the Burlington Northern line for more than an hour."Train kills woman in Downers Grove", Chicago Tribune, August 27, 1991, CHICAGOLAND, p. 6 Trains were further delayed when Downers Grove police ordered the engineer to back up the train in order to re-enact the incident. According to an account in the Downers Grove Reporter, "the engineer was so seriously affected by the re-enactment, where he had to pass by the dead body still on the tracks, he was unable to continue and had to be relieved of his duties.""Pedestrian killed by speeding Metra train", Downers Grove Reporter, August 28, 1991, front page. A railfan captured Wojtyla being stuck by the train. The video, dubbed "Traingirl", has been shown with the impact edited out at many Operation Lifesaver events, and unedited on shock site web sites and YouTube. A wrongful death lawsuit brought by Wojtyla's estate was dismissed in 1996.
- On the morning of October 25, 1995, Fox River Grove level crossing accident which was stopped along the tracks at the stoplight at Algonquin Road and Northwest Highway in Fox River Grove, Illinois. The accident resulted in seven deaths, multiple injuries, and a massive overhaul in safety, especially with respect to school buses and at short crossings. Millions of dollars were spent by several parties in lawsuits and safety improvements.
- On September 17, 2005, a Metra train from Joliet, Illinois to Chicago derailed about five miles from LaSalle Street Station (Chicago), killing two people – Allison Walsh, 38 and Jane Cuthbert, 22 – and injuring approximately 80 others. While the investigation is still proceeding at this time the indications are that the train was traveling at excessive speed, one report stating that the train was moving at more than 60 mph over the posted speed limit of 10 mph, and this was a factor in the accident.
- On November 23, 2005, a Metra train from Chicago to Antioch, Illinois collided with multiple cars at the Grand Avenue crossing in Elmwood Park, Illinois. The railroad tracks cross Grand Avenue at a shallow angle, therefore creating a longer-than-normal crossing. Just past the tracks on Grand Avenue (heading east) there is a traffic signal that can trap drivers disregarding the signs around the crossing warning them not to stop on the tracks. No one died at the scene, but 15 people needed to be sent to hospitals throughout Chicago. Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board determined that the signals were working properly and have implied in statements to the press that fault for the accident lies with motorists who ignored warning signs and stopped across the railroad tracks.
In popular culture
Metra has made several appearances in film:
- In the 1990 film Home Alone, Kevin runs across a bridge as a Metra train pulls under it.
- In the film U.S. Marshals (film), although it's set in New York City, the train that cuts Deputy Gerard off shortly after the graveyard scene is a Metra. This is probably due to the fact that many scenes set in New York were actually filmed in Chicago.
- Many shots take place aboard a Metra train in the 2005 film Derailed.
- In the film Stir of Echoes, the main character played by Kevin Bacon works along a Metra line. He also lives in the Wicker Park, Chicago neighborhood in Chicago, and visits a station there, though Logan Square does not actually have a Metra station.
- In the film Save The Last Dance, the main character takes a Metra train to Chicago to live with her father.
- In the Nintendo 64 title Cruis'n USA, a Metra F40PH (With "TOXIC" written in the place of "METRA" on the side) appears on railroad lines in several courses.
External links
- RAILChicago
- Metra
- Chicago Transit & Railfan Web Site
- MetxPix.com
- Railfanning.org: Metra
- Metra Maps Site
- South Shore Pictures Partially Metra/RTA sponsored service
- Metra Commuter Rail profile and photos
References
- J. David Ingles, Metra: "Best Commuter Train", Trains (magazine) July 1993
See also
- Mass transit in Chicago
- Pace (transit)
- Chicago Transit Authority
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