People helping people as they get from here to there

Tips for Metro North riders week of May 20, 2013

May 19th, 2013  |  Published in examples

Earlier today, we published a posting of web resources for Metro North riders. In addition to that, here is some additional info

  • Remember our zen: Share [information]…don’t ask [for it]. For those of you who are new to Clever Commute, please check out our best practices. We have 20,00+people in our network…so stepping in and asking questions of the community simply don’t work at this scale.
  • If you have info that will help others…then share it. In the aftermath of the May 17 derailment, there may be new crowdsouring opportunities (e.g., car parking information for displaced train commuters). If you think you have good info for your fellow riders, then share it with the group. If you have questions about suitable use, the please contact us via the web site…or reach out via feedback [at] clevercommute-dot-com
  • Regarding the branches.  We generally have one “community” for each major train line on Metro North (Hudson, Harlem and New Haven). However, we recently added new communities for each of the branches on the New Haven line (Waterbury, Danbury, New Canaan), so please signup for and use those for branch-specific sharing.
  • Tweets and Texts – If you simply want to receive real-time alerts from your fellow commuters (via Twitter…or their texting feature), then you may do so via http://clevercommute.com/twitter

 

 

 

 

 

Top web resources for Metro North New Haven riders

May 19th, 2013  |  Published in announcements, MNR

There is a lot of great information out there regarding the overall MNR experience…and we hope to cover those in a future blog post. But for now, we wanted to highlight the ones which will help in the aftermath of the May 17 derailment. Please send us any others you have (via the Contact Us feature of the web site).

 

 

Metro North Derailment

May 17th, 2013  |  Published in examples, MNR, press

Tonight, a Metro North train derailed near Fairfield. The cronology below shows what information was shared…and by whom.

The blue timestamps show the info that Metro North shared via their e-mail alerting system
The red timestamps show data that was created and shared via the Clever Commute network of passengers on the New haven line

For media inquiries, please use the contact us feature of the website.

(7:22 PM – Metro North) Service is suspended between South Norwalk and New Haven. Westbound service will originate out of South Norwalk making all stops to Grand Central Terminal. Eastbound service will make all stops to South Norwalk due to a derailment in the vicinity of Bridgeport …
(6:59 PM – Clever Commute) 5;57 gct to s norwalk terminating stamford. Collision confirmed in bridgeport.
(6:57 PM – Clever Commute) Derailment and injuries is accurate. No service tonight.
(6:54 PM – Metro North) Upper New Haven Line Service: At this time no Westbound service is being provided beyond Bridgeport due to a train incident in the vicinity of Bridgeport. Eastbound service will run to South Norwalk …
(6:38 PM - Clever Commute) No trains going further then South Norwalk.
(6:34 PM - Clever Commute) 505 from gct stopped at Westport passengers off train waiting for buses. Nothing moving north through Fairfield metro
(6:33 PM - Clever Commute) Major train collision and derailment Fairfield Bridgeport line. Many injuries
(6:32 PM – Metro North)  Upper New Haven Line Customers traveling through the vicinity of South Norwalk and New Haven should anticipate delays …

How NJT riders can beat the crowds at NY Penn

May 15th, 2013  |  Published in Inside Track

Clever Commute maintains a database of track number history for each train. We make that information available to our members via  pie charts and tables.

When the history numbers are used in combination with the current conditions at Penn Station, our members have a HUGE advantage over everyone else. You might say they have The Inside Track.

Here is how it works:

MyEveningDepartureBoardAnnotated

 

#1 – Keep this value set to Auto …so that it shows the proper view in the morning… and the evening

#2 - Here is my train to MSU. Alas! I am at Penn Station too early for the track number to be announced

 #3- However, the history icon shows me that I can click-through to see what track my train has been on over the last N days

Scroll down to see why this is so incredible…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TrackNumberHeadStartAnnoated

 

Here is the track number history for this train.

 #1 – The default is 10 days of history, but you have other options (5, 30 and 60)

 #2 – This tells you that – historically – 70% of the time, the train is on that  platform shared by tracks 1 and 2. So, go down and take a peek.

If your train is there (check the sign on the train…or just ask), then get on! Of course you need to confirm before departure…but you always do that anyway.

Depending on other announced trains, you can eliminate some tracks (e.g., if the next-most-frequently-used track for this train is currently used by another train…then you know that YOUR train won’t be on THAT track!)

 Veteran commuters know that track assignments at NY Penn are chaotic and often random. However, I can tell you personally that this method gets me a seat with much greater frequency than standing around with the masses…waiting for the cattle call! 

 

 

 

 

Inside Track: We can show you WHERE your NJT train is

May 15th, 2013  |  Published in examples, Inside Track

A picture is worth a thousand words…and here are two really amazing ones.

What you see below is the main view of the morning view of our NJ Transit departure board.

MorningDepartureBoard

 

First, let’s look at two key things about the departureboard

 #1 – We recommend that you keep this value set to Auto …so that it shows the proper view in the morning… and the evening

 #2 – If Departs is underlined, then it is a clickable link

 

 Scroll down to see why this is so incredible…

 

 

 

MorningDepartureMap
  Yes! That pin is where your train is!

What you need to know

 #1 – This is live location info…directly from NJ Transit.

 #2 – This reflects what you shared as Origin when you signed up for Inside Track. You can view/change that via the Profile feature at clevercommute.com/insidetrack

 #3 – Additional information (e.g. train details and timestamp)

This is a standard Google map. Therefore you can pinch, swipe and zoom for additional info.

Please note: This is a brand-new feature….and is not available for all trains at this time.
Clever Commute gets this data from NJ Transit…and as they continue to deploy this technology, you will see maps available on more and more trains.

An exciting new version of The Inside Track

May 7th, 2013  |  Published in examples

As you may have seen, we recently rolled our a slew of enhancements to The Inside Track.  We’ve been getting some questions about how it works…so we are updating this posting…and adding a picture (there will be more pictures):

AnnotatedNJTDepartureBoard

1. Set your primary and secondary line via your profile…and you get these new choices

2. We assume you want to see Inbound in the morning…and Outbound in the evening…so select Auto (AM/PM) and that’s what you get. Otherwise, flip around as you like!
HINT: The Inbound feature is very cool in the morning (train status and countdown clock available)

3. The color-coded number notifies you of unread alerts from fellow commuters on a given line

4. Click Newsfeed to see the alerts from fellow commuters AND from Clever Commute HQ

5. When this icon is enabled (for the 6 major stations), you can click to see recently-departed trains
HINT: Scroll down for more info about how to put this feature to work for you.

6. We show you which trains stop at Secaucus

7. We show you which trains take you to the airport

8. When you see the History icon, you can click through to see a pie chart and a table with track-number history (5, 10, 30, 60 day).
HINT/Example: if there is a 80% history on track 3 or 4…then don’t stand around at Penn. Just go down the stairs and take a peek! (Remember: the 2 tracks are right next to each other…and history is on your side)

9. Click through on the To column to see the station stops and times for that train

As is the case for many Inside Track features, the key is your profile. To edit your profile…

A few things on your profile for you to verify in order to leverage these new features:

  • Primary Provider – set that to your carrier (e.g., NJ Transit Train (NJTT)
  • Primary Route – the train route your ride the most
  • Secondary Route – An alternate (not required)
  • Origin – Where you start your commute. This should be your home
  • Destination – Where you end your commute. This is where you end your commute to work/school etc.

More on Set Departed Trains Time

The “v” menu shows you Departed Trains. That icon is only every enabled for NJT’s 6 major stations. You control how much history is shown via Set Departed Trains Time (15, 30 or 45 minutes).
This allows you to see tracks even though the train has been removed from the departureboard. This is very helpful when you think you just missed your train (and it has been taken off the board)…or on those nights when everything is all messed up at the station. You’d be surprised how long trains linger after they are de-listed from the official board.

Maplewood, South Orange, Morristown…some helpful news for for commuters

November 8th, 2012  |  Published in announcements, bus, new markets, NJT, press, promotion

We created 3 new Clever bus communities. Please join whichever one(s) you like. If you have never used Clever Commute for the bus…then this might be a good opportunity to start.
(More info about Clever Commute here)

  • Lakeland bus Route 78 (Summit)
  • NJ Transit bus Route 107 (South Orange)
  • Coach USA Route 77 (Morristown)

To sign up: go to clevercommute.com/signup and change “Select provider type” to “Bus Alerts”.
(there is no easy way to simply “add” these to your current subscription…so you need to re-sign up for each. Sorry)
A few other caveats:

  • If you are new to Clever Commute, it may take a few days until you can _send_ messages…but you will be able to _receive_ as soon as you get your “Welcome” e-mail
    (after you confirm…and we approve you)
  • When you get the mail asking you to confirm, please use the “Click this link” option. If you use the “reply to this mail to confirm”…you’ll see it does not yet work yet.
  • The e-mail address that you need for each community is found in the “Welcome” mail you receive after we approve/add you.
  • We are still working on the Twitter feeds for each of these new communities.
  • And of course: the content comes from YOU. Please lead by example and share whatever it is you think your fellow commuters want to know.

We pulled these together quickly…so there are some rough edges. Please be patient as we put the finishing touches on.
If you have any questions or comments, please use the Contact Us feature of our web site

The Thursday PM Post-Sandy “State of the Commute”

November 1st, 2012  |  Published in announcements

Summary/Scorecard

  • Metro North riders generally had a good cost-free commuting  day. In many cases, it was a normal commute. I’d call it a “B+”
  • LIRR has uneven day…yes, a free ride…in those places where there was service. We grade it a “B”
  • NJ Transit Trains was “N/A” since they are not running…so that’s “incomplete”
  • Same for PATH
  • Clever Commute serves two large bus communities: Decamp and Coach USA (East Brunswick)…so we have lots of feedback on that below
  • Car drivers who left early seemed to do OK. If you drove in later…it had the potential to be bad
  • As the day went on, we also heard from NJ Transit bus riders…but we don’t have full info on that

How to use this guide:

  • It is organized by carrier and then by line (where applicable)
  • Each paragraph (or collection of bullets) is a first-hand vignette from an individual commuter
  • Scroll through or use your browser’s “search” feature to look for content of interest
  • For more info about Clever Commute (including how to contact us, see this page)
 ————————————————————————

Metro North - Harlem Line

White Plains to GCT
The 7:41 was about 15 minutes late, so the platform was very crowded. The train came in full so everybody squeezed on. Those of us who travel out of White Plains every day know that the 8:01 train just a few minutes behind it (it was on time) comes from the yard after one stop and would come in empty.  So yes it was very crowded unless you waited the two minutes for the empty train which had plenty of seats.  It was the classic example of being a clever commuter vs a regular one

No fare collection, plenty of announcements saying conditions were slippery, we would get there just we were going to be moving slower.

If your regular train was the 7:41 you were very late, very crowded, and very unhappy. If you take the 8:01, you noticed virtually no difference in your daily ride.

  • Greenwich to Grand Central
  • No crowds
  • ~ 45 minutes
  • They didn’t even check my ticket
  • Regular schedule
  • It was smooth sailing. Great job by MetroNorth!

I’m a displaced New Haven line rider staying with family in New York. Took 8:24 am express out of North White Plains on Harlem line to Grand Central. Got a seat with no problem and arrived at 9:40 with no issues. Pretty much a non-event, which was a nice surprise.

  •  Chappaqua to GCT
  • Train had some seats in Chappaqua, few after Pleasantville
  • 1 hour—no complaints there
  • no fare as promised

Train came to Chappaqua around 7:40-7 minutes late. Better service than after a snow storm, it got pretty crowded, but what do you expect?

  •  From Fleetwood to Grand Central
  • Slightly more crowded than usual on an early train
  • about 35 min, slightly longer than usual
  • free and there were Metro North guys in the station telling people it was free and not to purchase tickets. There were two other Metro North guys inspecting the elevators
  • 645 am departure from Fleetwood, normal schedule. It was a few minutes late, but no big deal.
  • The people running the train seemed new to their jobs — they didn’t seem to know where to stop in the Fleetwood station (moved back and forth a number of times before opening the doors) and there were a lot of announcements among themselves during the ride about opening the doors, etc. But overall was great that it was almost normal so soon, and I was really happy they got us moving again!

Metro North – New Haven Line

  • Rye to Grand Central
  • Heard regular trains were running arrived early for the 6:52, was told 6:34 would be next train and running 10 minutes late.
  • That never showed up. No mention of the 6:52. Next announcement at 7:10 that the 7:09 would be 10-15 minutes late.
  • I was freezing with wet hair (no power for hairdryer) and left about 7:20. A friend said train came at 7:20 and took about and then crawled into city stopping at each station.
  • Have no clue what schedule was followed.
  •  New Haven, STM to GCT
  • Took “express” with very few people on the train. Prior train was late and may have been SRO.
  • No collection. Conductors and passengers in good spirits considering.
  • 7:49 stm to gct
  • Train Time is down, so watch the board for changes. Trains were limited to 40mph due to slippery rail.

I took the Metro-North New Haven Line from New Rochelle to Grand Central. The posted schedule was supposed to be as it is for a normal day. However, the 8:15 train never materialized, and the 8:30 train changed from an express to a local and got in about 10 minutes later than usual. The trains were blissfully empty. Tickets were not collected. Otherwise, all was normal, except for the News 12 reporter and videographer conducting interviews about storm aftermath, first on the platform and then on the train.

  •  New Rochelle to GCT
  • Normally populated train, on a normal schedule, about 15 minutes late in arriving at New Ro and a little later than that into GCT
  • Delightful ride

Metro North Miscellaneous 

8:28 scarsdale to grand central- 10 minutes late/ went slower than normal. Train was less cars but half empty

I commute from Scarsdale. The train pulled in as I got to the track at 6;45AM. No problem today

  •  MNR NH. STM GCT 5:36 am. Left 2min late, train was empty.
  • Arrived at ~7:12 since the train kept slipping.
  • Announcements explained what was going on and made clear tix were on the house.
  • New train. Way better than driving.

Larchmont to GCT 7.30 AM train: No fair collected, 3/4 full. about 20 minutes late. Moved well at less than 30 MPH

I drove from Weston to stamford, caught the 6:17 to GCT. Lots of people at Stamford but a full sized train showed up and there were PLENTY of seats. (Parking at the Stmfd station parking lot was filling up fast, not sure how later train riders fared). Train only made about 4 or 5 stops (Greenwich, Port Chester, Rye, Harrison) but took a little over an hour to get in. Train was moderately full but not overly packed. I sat by myself in a two-seater. Conductors never asked for tkts.

LIRR - Ronkonkoma

  • Farmingdale to penn
  • 903 In – no crowds. Got seats. Lots of space
  • 9am in. 9 min late in fdale. 15 min late at penn.
  • 408 out – packed. Standing all the way down aisles
  • 408 out left 6 mins late
  • Free. No collectors.
  • Hourly schedule
  •  Bethpage to Penn Station
  • There were a lot of people. We were sardined at Mineola. But everyone on the platform got on, and everyone – for the most part – was polite and didn’t complain. There was one man on my train who was obnoxious about not being able to sit across from a 6-foot-plus guy in the flip down seats, but it was very orderly and quiet.
  • No fare collections.
  • The train was supposed to arrive at 6:08, but didn’t arrive until almost 6:25 because of equipment problems.
  • Then we traveled at a slow rate of speed because of debris and “slip slide.” We also stopped at Hillside Facility. We got to Penn around 7:30.
  • The one amusing part: The conductor advised passengers to exit at Jamaica to take shuttle buses to avoid crowded trains. Like the shuttle buses would be less crowded?
  •  Hicksville-to-Penn.
  • crowds? Normal.
  • No collection.
  • While waiting for the train, the on-platform announcer said that the incoming train was overcrowded and to wait for the next one. The incoming train not only wasn’t overcrowded, but I got one of the last seats. It was a lot better than one of the typical “late” trains that have people all but hanging off the side of the cars.
  • LIRR Ronkonkoma to Atlantic Terminal.
  • Fairly empty parking lot & train (first train out – 6:37), all local stops, at Mineola, they announced that the next stop would be Penn Station.
  • Stopped at Jamaica anyway (thank God).
  • Arrived 8 mins after the connecting train was supposed to have left, but they held it for us and there were plenty of seats.
  • No fares collected at all.
  • 2-3, 4-5 were supposedly running from Atl Term to Borough Hall, but announcements / trains were all messed up and misleading / incorrect.
  • After waiting 12 mins for a subway, wound up taking the B41 bus, but there was so much traffic that I got out and walked.

LIRR – Port Washington

Took the 6:45 AM to NYC from Great Neck. Train made all local stops, no problems.

  • Great Neck to Penn
  • No crowds
  • Normal time for a local from Great Neck
  • No fares charged today and tomorrow
  • Once hourly in each direction, local only
  • Surprisingly smooth

LIRR – Other

I was at jamaica and took a train at about 745 am to penn. I don’t know where it originated but I jumped on. It was not crowded because I think a lot of people either did not trust the railroad or could not reach jamaica. Sine I don’t have power I am staying at my mother in law in queens so I chanced it. The F train is working, I took that from 49 and rockefeller center to forest hills at about 3pm. It was crowded but not too bad and no delays.

LIRR is free today and tomorrow

New Jersey Transit Buses

  • I had to relocate from the Jersey shore. Took njt 107X from so orange train station to port authority. And left work early to catch it back. Gate 213.
  • Needed exact change or a ticket.no free ride in nj!
  • Could not pick up passengers after first few stops coming in due to crowd. Long ride, but it worked
  • Was told today by nj transit that in addition to cross honoring, they are accepting October monthlies thru nov 7th. Have not tried yet. Also – took bus 113x in from Westfield today – took 90 minutes – not bad.

Other  NJ Bus

  • Community Coach #77
  • Northfield Road and Colony Drive East, West Orange – Port Authority NYC
  • - crowds? I was the last person on the bus this morning, the driver did not have to pick me up, but he did – I was almost standing on the steps – this was at 6:45 am. I took the same bus yesterday and it was empty.
  • - how long it took? It look a little more than an hour – today the bus lane was open, yesterday when I went in the bus lane was not open. Major back-up at the toll booth on the turnpike
  • - fare collection/cross-honoring? The driver would not take my NJ Transit ticket yesterday so I did not even try today
  • - what schedule was followed? Normal weekday schedule
  • - any other gotchas? After standing on the bus for more than an hour, I waited on line at the Community Coach window for more than 50 minutes to purchase additional tickets – while they have about 5 windows at the Port Authority, only one was open, this was also the case yesterday. I walked to 7th Avenue and took the 7th Avenue bus to my office, the farebox was covered with a plastic bag. Major backup at the NJ Turnpike toll booth as just beyond the police had set-up barriers so they could check that every vehicle had three occupants.
  • 167T from Teaneck to PABT at 6:40 this morning was fairly empty and quick.
  • Likely because NJ Transit was late in announcing they’d be running. Tomorrow I’d expect it to be more crowded, especially adding usual train riders.
  • I inadvertently showed my Oct. monthly pass (forgetting it’s Nov. 1), and the driver didn’t say anything.

Other Driving

From NJ

  • I drove with 2 other people today. leaving at 7am it took 12 minutes to get to secaucus and then 90 minutes to get to the top of the helix. then 5 minutes into PABT after HOV Filter
  • driving was a disaster today due to HOV filter. if you must commute – take a very early bus. once you get to bus lane – it was smooth sailing
  • No traffic to the tunnel from the city side. Still checking hov so down to one lane w massive tie up including the busses
  • Long long gas line at main ave/passaic exit
  • My driver is from glen ridge – said he waited 3 hjs 27 min for gas this morning at ten in montclair.

Tunnel restrictions don’t apply before 6am. Not sure many realize that.

Decamp Bus

  •  Broad & Watchung 9:40 am
  • Bus was pretty empty, but on the Route 3 service road across from the Olive Garden we stopped for more than 5 minutes and they boarded the passengers from another DeCamp bus onto ours. We asked them why and they didn’t know. I assume it was because both buses were pretty empty and they only wanted to send one in to PABT
  • We arrived at PABT at 10:40

My usual route is NJTransit Train from Bloomfield to NYPenn. I can also walk to a bus stop for DeCamp 33 or 88, and I took that route for approximately 18 years, but recently switched to the train. Both are walkable for me, but Port Authority is much closer to work.

Yesterday morning, a colleague drove in, and it wasn’t a bad commute at all. I generally travel starting at 9:00 a.m. (need to be at work at 10:00 a.m.), but we left at 8:30 and were in midtown by 9:30.

This morning, I got on a DeCamp 33M at Broad and Liberty in Bloomfield at 9:19 a.m. (right on schedule). Route 3 was pretty easy; we flew to the Meadowlands, then slowed down a bit. The bus lane was still open; I was at the Port Authority just after 10:00 a.m. DeCamp honored my

  • From Union & Orange in Montclair to PABT
  • picked up at 635am; bus was half full when it got on Rt. 3
  • 75 minutes –bottleneck at gas stations; rubbernecking at the HOV verification point;
  • Full fare
  • The fact that DeCamp fails to have ticket kiosks at PABT made the line to buy tickets extraordinarily long – 40+ deep
  • DeCamp #33 Grove St. bus
  • Montclair to Port Authority – started in Montclair on Grove St., south of Watchung Ave.
  • I waited nearly 90 minutes for a bus (during which I called DeCamp twice and they assured me the bus was running) – and TWO buses ultimately arrived simultaneously!
  • Bus was not full, and they were cross-honoring. Trip took maybe 45 minutes – not excessive given the Lincoln Tunnel traffic – but that 90-minute delay was ridiculous. “What schedule was followed?” I have absolutely no idea.
  • Watchung Plaza Montclair / Port Authority
  • NO crowds – only another rider waiting with me.
  • Into NYC – about 1:10 minutes — there was traffic on three – but once
  • the bus settled into the bus lane we sailed. The driver navigated there to advance quite nicely.
  • Yes, the bus was on time at Watchung Plaza.
  • No, I thought the driver was nice — the bus drivers were in constant communication trying to figure out best routes – and the dispatcher at Port Authority (around 1 PM) suggested I take the 33 back home since
  • delays were already a possibility and the 66 was not at the station yet. I took her advice and was in Montclair (not my usual stop) in about 40 minutes.
  •  Harrison Avenue and Tichenor Plac (near Nishuane Park) around 9:15 am
  • Bus was empty when we got on. Cross-honored NJT train pass. Took Harrison to Bloomfield and then took a right. Took left on Grove and went all the way up with slight detour around fallen tree zone.
  • Few pickups and bus was 2/3rds empty. Continued to 46 and then to I-80 and Turnpike and straight into bus lane. Saw crazy lines at the HOV checkpoint. Total travel time to PABT about 70 minutes.
  • I have no idea what schedule it was on because I don’t have one and can’t get it from website. Tried to get one at PABT but the line for tickets was crazy.
  • I waited for the DeCamp 66 at Valley and Lorraine from about 8:15 until about 9:10. Then I got a message from a friend who was heading to the NJT Allwood Park and Ride bus stop. I’d never used that route before, but decided to join him. As we drove to the Allwood stop, we were passed by the 66 bus, which had finally come.
  • We got to the Allwood Park and Ride at about 9:30. The bus came within 5 minutes. Driver cross-honored my NJT train ticket.
  • In spite of cars being backed up for miles, our driver deftly worked his way into the Express Bus Lane, which (I overheard his radio call) had been kept open an extra hour.
  • We arrived at the PABT just at 10am. I felt very very lucky.
  •  33M/88 (Used the 33 this morning)
  • Bloomfield (Broad and Glen Ridge Pkway) to PABT
  • What you experienced:
  • Two buses showed up at around 8am. The first was full but the second only had a handful of people in it. I was the only person at my stop at that time.
  • Rt. 3 was jammed up pretty badly but there were no other buses in the bus lane or in the Lincoln tunnel. We made it to the Port Authority by 9:15, so the entire trip only took about an hour and 15 minutes.
  • I am a regular DeCamp customer and the bus seemed to run as closely to schedule as it ever does.
  • Bellevue Ave/Valley Road to Port Authority
  • took bus at 8 am this morning, regular schedule.
  • Took about 90 minutes because of heavy traffic on Route 3 and Route 495 approaching the Lincoln Tunnel.
  • Otherwise no issues, was grateful to have the service available.
  • The 66 got me at Bellevue & balley at 10 am. Bus lane still open do we dodged the jam & got to the Port at 1036 pretty good.
  • Now I’m On a 330 pm 33grove & we are jammed on rt 3 at Passaic Ave exit. Near dead stop. This does not bode well.
  • Oh turns out it was a giant gas line that we now escaped will get to grove & Alexander by 410. Still pretty good.
  •  I took the 8:57 a.m. bus from Broad and Watchung on both Wednesday and Thursday.
  • The bus came pretty much on time both days, but was significantly more crowded on Thursday morning, presumably from the train spillage.
  • It was standing room only, though the commute into the city took only around 40 minutes. Not too bad.
  • We took the 66 and we were waiting outside the kings on Valley Road by about 8:30AM. We got word (thanks CC) that a prior 66 had turned down bellvue to come across grove. The bus we road on picked us up (maybe 8 on the corner) at 9:15. We got into the PA at about 9:50 after our driver managed to circumvent the major traffic. We took the bus lane in and the helix and tunnel were both almost empty.
  • Bus was about 1/2 full, maybe 2/3rds by the end.
  • One rider got on the bus just after we did and used a ticket for the 33/grove line offering to pay any difference. Driver said no problem and no $ exchanged.

I rode a Grove St. Bus from Bellevue Ave in Montclair at 9am. It was on a regular schedule. The bus went up Cooper because Grove was closed ahead. It then went right on Park, right on Bellevue and left onto Grove again. Commute was just about average length. Bus was moderately full because a few buses got bunched up

630 66 ran on time with a 495 delay for HOV checkpoint. Leave time for purchasing tickets at PA as there were long lines early in day and at noon.

6.40 am bus at Watchung Plaza on time and half-full. Trip took approx 70 minutes.

  • Took 9:10 bus (I think) – it arrived at 9:15
  • Bellevue / Upper Montclair station
  • bus was 25% full at best
  • ~ 40 min door to door
  • They didn’t ask for ticket
  • I think it was the normal schedule, don’t know

 Coach USA

  • Coach USA 400 line from Tower Center to Port Authority
  • Usually take the East Brunswick TC but no buses there. Parking permit honored at Towers.
  • Long lines at 6:00AM for a bus every half hour. Waited 45 minutes. Some toll/merge traffic by the tunnel but clear before and after.
  • Free A train uptown and back.
  • Buses back from PA were as available at 4:15 PM
  • East Brunswick,Neilson Plaza to NY PABT
  • Lots of crowds, hundreds
  • 1st bus, arrived full with standings
  • 2nd, bus, empty, took a lot people
  • 3rd bus, empty, I was able to get in there, last seat
  • Coach USA (Suburban Transit) Princeton to PABT line Line 100
  • Kendall Park NJ to PABT
  • - crowds? Standing room only, a lot of people left behind because the buses are getting filled with NJT Train passengers. I was lucky to get a seat.
  • Got to the bus stop at 6:10 am bus came at 7:50 am and we arrived at approx. 9:45 am (supposedly running Saturday service, they skipped first two buses, emailed them and they said Police diverted the buses  Not sure if I believe that.
  • I heard they are forcing people to get off 2 miles before their stop due to road closures and not willing to take detour. I don’t know if it is legal to leave people stranded like that. I heard it was a major drama. I hope that doesn’t happen to me, I will really get angry.
  • East Brunswick, Tower Center to Port Authority
  • Crowded, but everyone was orderly. Very long line but line got short as buses came.
  • 1 hour waiting on line and 1-15mins to Port.
  • yes, crossed honored. Took cash and normal tickets.
  • This morning was Saturday Schedule.
  • Need more buses since 4 different bus lines were combined into one.
  • East Brunswick,Neilson Plaza to NY PABT
  • Lots of crowds, hundreds
  • 1st bus, arrived full with standings
  • 2nd, bus, empty, took a lot people
  • 3rd bus, empty, I was able to get in there, last seat
  • Suburban, Line 500
  • East Brunswick Tower Center
  • Long line, about a 45-minute to an hour wait.
  • I had my monthly pass, but since I couldn’t buy November’s, I was able to use October’s. Otherwise, cash only on the bus. They followed a Saturday schedule.
  • New Brunswick to Port Authority, NYC using monthly NJTransit (they’re honoring today & tomorrow).
  • First bus passed me – already full. 2nd bus half hour later – standing room only; took 2 hours (v. little traffic until near NJTP exit and the Lincoln Tunnel).
  • Otherwise – no problem, considering. Hopefully no worse going home this evening!

 

Hurricane Sandy – Resources for Clever Commuters

October 30th, 2012  |  Published in announcements, examples

As of Tuesday AM, it appears that the commuting infrastructure has experienced damage which exceeded the largest estimates. It will be a while until the commute returns to normal.

As usual, Clever Commute will be providing the technology which connects the commuters and filters and curates the data. But, we rely on YOU to supply much of it. Please lead by example and share information which you think others should know. (a gentle reminder to not ask question of the group…as that can result in a “mail storm”…and I think we’ve had enough storms lately)

Key resources for post-Sandy commuters:

(1) Inside Track – our premium service. Much of it runs on the mobile web, so you can access it via iPhone, Android, PC, Mac, etc. Two key benefits (1) Frees up your inbox (2) Allows you to monitor alerts on two different commuter lines. Members of this service will therefore have seamless access to otherwise unavailable updates. It’s got a 30-day free trial…so now is the time to try it.
Watch the 3-minute video here and get all the info here and signup here.
(it’s a crucial tool if you ride NJ Transit Trains. For others, it’s still beta)

(2) Use the existing tools: Subway…PATH…and of courser NJT/LIRR/MNR…and more!

  • Subway. Yes…we  have “Clever” communities for the 1-2-3, 4-5-6 and the A-C-E. (go to clevercommute.com/signup and set Select provider type to “Subway”)
  • PATH. Each of the 4 PATH lines has its own community (Select provider type to “Light Rail w/PATH”)
  • All major commuters lines: NJ Transit, Metro North, LIRR, some private and NJT buses. See the whole list

(3) Clever tools you may NOT yet know about: Facebook and Twitter

  • our Facebook page. We’ll be posting updates there, too. This is a great place to share…ask…learn
  • Twitter – there are two key ways to use Twitter
    (i) Follow @clevercommute for general updates and info
    (ii) use the Twitter follow for YOUR line. We Tweet all of the alerts generated. To see the @follow for your route, go to www.clevercommute.com/twitter

The best way to reach us is via the Contact Us feature of the website…but a note to feedback at clevercommute dot com will get a response, too.

If you ride NJ Transit trains…

October 5th, 2012  |  Published in announcements, Inside Track, NJT

It’s time you try The Inside Track …our premium offering which goes WAY beyond the features you know
(actually, we have moved some features FROM our “free” service…and put them in the premium product)
So, why the urgency?

1. LAST NIGHT
– It was a TERRIBLE commute for many of you. (e.g., NE Corridor)
Yes…the traditional “Clever Commute” service helped…BUT…”Inside Track” has a FANTASTIC feature which lets you browse the Clever Commute alerts on your smartphone (NOT in your inbox)!
  • YOU control “which train lines?” (yes…you can see not just your own line)
  • YOU control “how much history to see?” (1-24 hours)
  • YOU control whether or not you read the new alerts (yes…our technology “hides” messages you have already seen!)
2. Oct 14 – The NJT train schedule will change on that day.
We are putting the finishing touches on an INCREDIBLE NEW FEATURE
We will tell you “what changed?”
That’s right! It’s the end of the tedious process of YOU doing a side-by-side comparison between “old” and “new”.
YES – we do it for you…included in your subscription price.

 

And of course, there is a 30-day free trial…so you have NOTHING to lose.
We have extended the Fall promotion…so the monthly fee is less than a cup of coffee.