The Reading's electrified territory ended at Norristown; the
Great Depression curtailed plans to extend electrification up the main line.[2] Electrification and
multiple unit operation permitted more frequent service to Norristown. At the end of the 1970s service operated at 30 minute
headways, compared to seven round-trips per day to Reading or Pottsville.[3]
When
Amtrak was forming in 1970–1971, the Reading determined that its longer-distance trains qualified as
commuter trains and stayed out of the system.[a][5] Public subsidy of the trains began in the late 1960s.[2]Conrail replaced the Reading as the operator of the service after the latter's bankruptcy.
SEPTA subsidized operations within its five-county area; practically speaking, no further than Pottstown. Federal and state subsidies made up the difference.[6]
The Pottsville line was one of four diesel routes that were part of the SEPTA network at the end of the 1970s.[b] Most trains ran with
Budd Rail Diesel Cars; SEPTA also had three
EMD FP7 locomotives and a set of coaches.[7] The Pottsville service faced several challenges:
The section between Pottstown and Pottsville lay outside SEPTA's five-county area. Funds to operate that part of the service had to be drawn from state and federal sources, or from entities within
Berks and
Schuylkill County.[8]
The diesel-powered equipment was aging and increasingly unreliable.[9]
The
Center City Commuter Connection, begun in 1978, would open in 1984. The tunnel would link the ex-
Pennsylvania Railroad and ex-Reading parts of the commuter rail network, transforming operations. It would also lead to the closure of the Reading Terminal, and the end of direct diesel service to Philadelphia.[10]
A change in Pennsylvania state law, effective at the start of 1981, significantly reduced the subsidy for SEPTA services outside the five-county area. SEPTA estimated the combined shortfall for the Bethlehem and Pottsville trains at $2 million.[11] Berks and Schuylkill counties refused to subsidize the service, and SEPTA initially planned to truncate service at Pottstown, the last station within the five-county area. Through operation to Philadelphia would be replaced by a rail shuttle to Norristown.[12][13] A final attempt to preserve service, with the
Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) providing subsidies and the
Berks Area Reading Transportation Authority (BARTA) acting as operator, foundered when BARTA rejected the arrangement.[14]
Service north of Pottstown ended on July 1, 1981.[15] SEPTA, in the middle of a major funding dispute with Conrail, discontinued the Pottstown shuttles on July 26, 1981, as part of broader system cutbacks.[16][17]
Amtrak, as part of its "Amtrak Connects US", proposed restoring Philadelphia to Reading service using the main line and bypassing the Norristown Branch. The proposal was announced in 2021 and received funding from the
Federal Railroad Administration in 2023.[19][20]
Notes
^The
Interstate Commerce Commission had defined various criteria for assessing whether a train qualified as a "commuter train," including the character of the operation and ridership and the distance traveled.[4]
Pawson, John R. (1979). Delaware Valley Rails: The Railroads and Rail Transit Lines of the Philadelphia Area. Willow Grove, PA: Pawson.
ISBN0-9602-0800-3.
OCLC5446017.
Thoms, William E. (1973). Reprieve for the Iron Horse: The AMTRAK Experiment–Its Predecessors and Prospects. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Claitor's Publishing Division.
OCLC1094744.
Williams, Gerry (1998). Trains, Trolleys & Transit: A Guide to Philadelphia Area Rail Transit. Piscataway, New Jersey: Railpace Company.
ISBN978-0-9621541-7-1.
Woodland, Dale W. (December 2003). "SEPTA's Diesels". Railpace Newsmagazine. pp. 21–26, 42–43, 46–47.
ISSN0745-5267.