Tag Archives: Josh Prince

Railing About Failing

Josh Prince is a Westport commuter.

He’s also a blogger.

Metro-North: Watch out!

His “Longitude & Gratitude” blog is a grab-bag of clever, cogent observations about life in the burbs. The other day, though, Josh’s general good nature gave way to venting about Metro-North’s piss-poor performance recently this winter for a long goddamn time.

Usually, Josh takes out his anger by tweeting. He tweets photos of delay signs. Leaking roofs. Crowded cars.

(Photo/Josh Prince)

(Photo/Josh Prince)

This time, though, he had a few blessed days off the rails. He wrote: “I’ve tried to dial back my own vitriol by thinking about why Metro North yields such a level of rage in me and others, and by offering a few realistic, actionable ways the railroad might start to alleviate it.”

His 1st point was:

“Why does Metro-North make the average commuter’s head want to explode? In a nutshell, it’s the stark contrast in culture between the railroad’s ridership and its providership. ”

Josh said that many Metro-North riders work for companies that are performance-oriented. “We are held accountable for delivering, developing, growing, improving, innovating, and excelling,” he wrote.

Yes, that's water leaking in a Metro-North car. (Photo/Josh Prince)

Yes, that’s water leaking in a Metro-North car. (Photo/Josh Prince)

“This goes as much for interns and administrative folks as it does for mid- and senior-level people. We work all day (and often into the night) in competitive cultures with an underlying reality: if we don’t perform, there’s someone else hankering for the chance to do the same.”

And, he added, “most of our work cultures are customer- or client-centric. In order to survive, we have to understand what our customers want or need, and figure out how to deliver it better. What can we do better than our competitors to win the hearts and minds of our customers?  What satisfies them and brings them value? How can we serve them better?”

Quoting a comment made at last week’s open meeting  in Southport, Josh wrote: “If [Metro-North] was a restaurant, nobody would eat here, and if it was an airline, nobody would fly it. The real problem is that there is no responsibility being taken, and there won’t be any change until that happens.”

He challenged the new president, Joseph Giulietti: “Culture starts at the top.”

Change will take a while, Josh knows. But he offered a few smart ideas, which should not take long to put into place:

1) Use the digital station signs already. And have them show real information, including times. “Displaying the date at a train station is about as useful as showing altitude or windspeed,” Josh wrote.

(Photo/Josh Prince)

(Photo/Josh Prince)

2) Offer refunds for genuinely disastrous service. Even credit for a future ride would go a long way to restoring good will, Josh said.

3) Join the 21st century and accept credit cards on trains. “Cash only? In 2014?” Josh fumed. “I can pay for my morning coffee at a tiny start-up coffee shop with Square.”

Josh also suggested fixing the TrainTime app, updating the website, and improving the PA announcements.

Reasonable points, I say.

Metro-North: What do you say?

(To read Josh Prince’s full post, click here. Bonus feature: For Newsweek’s rant about Metro-North, click here.)

Josh Prince’s Longitude, Gratitude — And Garbage

Alert “06880” reader Josh Prince loves to ride his motorbike through Westport and Fairfield.

He blogs about his jaunts too, on Longitude & Gratitude.

We’re blessed, he says, with “genuinely fair fields, plus lazy, rolling hills, old-growth forests, New England onion farms, wetlands, a gorgeous but gentle saltwater coastline, Revolutionary and Civil War-era homes, and tumbledown stone walls everywhere you look.”

The other day — forced off his Vespa Granturismo by the dreaded polar vortex — he took a combination walk/jog on Long Lots and Hulls Farm Roads. Josh went “just fast enough to break a sweat, but slow enough to observe the stark, mid-winter beauty” of the area.

He found it.

Along with plenty of litter.

Josh documented his travels with a few dozen photos.

For example:

Josh Prince 1

Josh Prince 2

Josh Prince 4

Josh Prince 3

The next day — realizing the trash wasn’t going to pick itself up — he grabbed his iPod, work gloves and a few black bags, and headed back.

Josh wrote about what he learned:

1) You need more than 1 bag.

2) Wet  newspapers — still in their plastic — weigh as much as a cinderblock.

3) Don’t bother with cigarette butts. They’re tough to pick up; there are a bazillion of them, and if you set out to achieve a pure state of trashlessness, you will be physically and emotionally doomed.

4) There is a direct correlation between the height and elaborateness of a home’s wall or fence, the size of the property fronting the street, and the amount of trash.

These homeowners may not actually ever see the trash. They drive into their driveways, close their gates with a remote, and that’s that.

A 2nd possibility is that they may not choose to see the trash. Everything that’s on their side of the wall may be pristine, but on the road-side of their walls? Someone else’s problem.

A 3rd possibility is that they do see it, are aware of it and just as disgusted by it, but they still don’t do anything about it.

Ta da!

Ta da!

5) I have no idea who actually litters, and I’m actually not that interested in trying to understand (or reprimand) them. Their actions are so beyond  comprehension that I’d rather not obsess about their mindless, selfish, antisocial behavior. I’m not going to bother to write my senator to introduce a cigarette butt bill. I’m not even going to get angry.

There’s zero satisfaction, productivity or progress in that. But there’s a ton when you decide to pick stuff up.

(To read Josh Prince’s entire blog about garbage, click here — the scroll down.)