Boarding Manager??? The things I don't know never ceases to amaze me. Where is he? How does he decide when to have the passengers board?
I like the idea of making St. Louis another hub. Makes a lot of sense.
But working with what Amtrak does have right now, what procedures could be implemented to make boarding more streamlined?
"Boarding Manager" is a term I use to describe the employee who is in charge of boarding the entire concourse. He's a step above all of the general boarding crew but below the station master... somebody more on the inside could probably tell you his or her official position.
But in reality, nobody on the station has any real control over deciding when a train is ready for boarding-- that responsibility falls to the train's head conductor.
There is a set method of boarding pax. Boiled down bare it goes like this:
The train is moved into the station.
The OBS crew finishes stocking and turning down the train.
The running crew run checks on all major systems to make sure the train is safe and ready to board.
About 45 minutes prior to departure the conductor or the asst. conductor goes into the Lounge and takes all the sleepers' tickets.
About 30 minutes prior to departure the conductor calls the station crew and tells them he is ready to board sleepers. The station crew in the lounge direct the sleepers out of the side door.
About 25 minutes prior to departure the conductor calls the station crew and asks for redcap assisted or special needs coach pax. (Ideally, no line in coach should form earlier than this.)
About 20 minutes (sometimes 15 minutes) prior to departure the conductor calls the station crew and tells them he is ready for all coach pax. In other words, general boarding.
As coach pax are boarded they are asked their destination by the conductors/coach attendants who assign them seat checks and cars based on destination.
About 5 minutes prior to departure the boarding gates are closed. The conductor checks the train, making sure all doors are closed and all departments are ready for departure. Sometimes (if not always) there is a final test of the brakes and the conductor calls the station indicating the platform is clear and the train is ready to depart on indication.
Just pick up a scanner, all of this is on open frequency.
What fouls up this method is, not Amtrak or station staff, but pax themselves. People shoving, cutting, moving into and out of line... Boarding at CUS is only stressful to those who make it stressful to themselves and others. If they realized that no amount of bad behavior will get them a better seat or anything then everybody could calmly sit and wait until that general boarding announcement. Of course, there is a lack of seating, however this is no excuse for some of the acts of distaste I have witnessed.
I happen to love watching people stand in a line for half an hour only to hear the general boarding announcement and realize that the line they blindly walked into wasn't moving.... because nobody was getting on the damn train.