Thanksgiving Travel Blues
I didn’t plan how I was going to get out of Missoula to visit my Grandparents in Havre soon enough. I figured that some combination of sharing a ride, taking the bus, and hoping a train would get me the 278 miles from Missoula to the Havre. I was wrong.
First, my requirements:
- I had to work Tuesday night in Missoula until 11:30 PM.
- I needed to be in Havre by noon on Turkeyday.
- I could have caught a ride with my parents from Helena to Havre no later than Wednesday afternoon.
- All told, I had a 36.5 hour window of time to get from Missoula to Havre.
- It’s a 4.5 hour drive, but I don’t have a car/don’t believe in using a car unless I have too.
Here is a catalogue of the problems that I encountered:
- I couldn’t take Amtrak from Whitefish to Havre, because I couldn’t get to Whitefish. The bus to Whitefish is not synchronized with the train in either direction, so I would have had to spend a night each direction in Whitefish. Couldn’t afford a room, too cold to camp, didn’t want to be delayed by two days.
- I couldn’t take the bus to Helena in time to ride with my folks, because it was an 8-hour-ride. The bus to Helena (an hour-and-a-half drive) goes to Butte first. After a layover and a change of carriers, I would arrive in Helena 7 hours and 55 minutes after I left Missoula — too late for my parents’ schedule.
- I couldn’t use the campus-sponsored rideshare program, because nobody was going where I was. The trips available on Facebook-integrated GoLoco.org would get me to Helena, Whitefish or Great Falls, but before or after my 36.5 hour window.
I don’t mean to nag and complain about this, but I am pretty dedicated to getting from A to B in any way but the Single-Occupant Vehicle, and I couldn’t do it. People who need or want public transportation should be able to get around this state with at least moderate conveinence. If I wasn’t able to borrow my girlfriend’s car (she took the Greyhound to Billings), I may have been stuck away from my family for the Holiday. A few goals/solutions that come to mind:
- Public Transportation should be timed such that it is roughly competative with driving when possible. There should be direct bus routes (at least once a day) to and from most major towns in the state. Helena is the capital, and you can only get to it by bus from Great Falls or Butte once per day.
- A mid-way hotel stay should not be necessary when traveling across Montana by bus or train. Connections to and from different bus/train legs should line up with each other for easy transfers and efficiency in travel.
- Corridor bus transportation should be frequent and cheap. Rimrock Trailways could get wheelchair-accessible coaches and apply for federal funding to increase service from Whitefish to Missoula and back; several times a day would serve commuters and those connecting to Amtrak’s Empire Builder. This model could also be extended to the Havre-Great Falls-Helena-Butte-Dillion corridor segments.
- Restoration of Amtrak’s North Coast Hiawatha route should be expedient. Daily trains serving southern Montana would allow for bus resources to be re-approapriated to other areas that need the boost.
Tags: Amtrak, GoLoco, Greyhound, problems, Rimrock Trailways, solutions, statewide
November 24th, 2007 at 11:27 am
This is a really persuasive blog post. Your expectations are entirely reasonable, and there must be plenty of other people in the same situation.
There is no way to know how many people would choose public transportation over driving in Montana if there are no reasonable public transportation options for trips like this.