Lack of equipment leads to cancellation of Southwest Chief round trip

Lack of equipment leads to cancellation of Southwest Chief round trip

By Bob Johnston | July 16, 2024

| Last updated on August 6, 2025


Move attributed to 16-hour-late arrival of California Zephyr

Two rows of bilevel long distance passenger cars in yard.
Two sets of Superliners sit in the Chicago coach yard at 5:05 p.m. on Monday, July 15, the day the westbound Southwest Chief was cancelled. The enclosed service and inspection building is at left and the facility’s “repair in place,” or RIP tracks, filled with cars awaiting repair are visible in the distance. Bob Johnston

CHICAGO — The lack of stand-by operational Superliners at Amtrak’s Chicago maintenance facility led to the cancellation of the westbound Southwest Chief on Monday, July 15, less than five hours before it was to depart, Trains News Wire has learned.

With additional equipment unavailable on the West Coast, the eastbound Chief scheduled to leave Los Angeles Wednesday, July 17, has also been cancelled.

Amtrak spokesman Marc Magliari says the day-late arrival of Sunday’s eastbound California Zephyr — it arrived more than 16 hours late at 7:15 a.m. Monday morning — “prevented the successful origination of Train No. 3.” Sources tell News Wire the decision was made by officials at the Consolidated National Operations Center in Wilmington, Del. A “service adjustment” advisory was issued Monday at 10:03 a.m. CDT saying the train, scheduled to depart at 2:25 p.m., “is now cancelled due to equipment issues. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience in advance.”

The Zephyr and Chief, along with the Empire Builder and Texas Eagle, are Amtrak long-distance trains whose cars and locomotives are serviced and inspected overnight after making cross-country treks to the Windy City. This involves pulling trains into an enclosed building with an inspection pit, interior cleaning, watering, pumping of all toilet systems, and checking every car for mechanical malfunctions, such as air conditioning failures on equipment dating from 1979 to the mid-1990s. Amtrak’s Chicago mechanical forces must also deal with at least six sets of Midwest Corridor trainsets and the St. Paul-Chicago Borealis overnight.

Sunday’s Southwest Chief arrived an hour and a half late at 4:11 p.m.; the Eagle was 20 minutes early at 2:54 p.m.; and the Builder arrived at 8:26 p.m., three hours, 41 minutes behind its scheduled arrival time. On Monday, with the Chief cancelled, the southbound Texas Eagle and westbound Zephyr departed on time at 1:52 p.m. and 2 p.m., respectively;  the westbound Empire Builder departed an hour and a half late, according to Amtrak’s train status advisory, “for the second time after addressing a mechanical issue.”

Reports from observers indicate that five of the Superliners arriving Sunday on the Chief went out Monday on the Zephyr, which has been operating with a slightly different consist, although both are assigned only two coaches during the busy summer travel season.

Unclear is why the Chief cancellation came so late. Chicago management and shop forces had plenty of time to see what challenges would be unfolding. The Zephyr that departed Emeryville, Calif., on July 12 was 8 hours late leaving Reno, Nev., after its original locomotive failed at Sacramento, Calif. It was almost 11 hours late departing Denver at 5:47 a.m. Sunday morning. Though every Superliner car type is represented in the Chicago coach yard, apparently not enough rolling stock was deemed road-ready. Sunday’s westbound Zephyr departed more than 3 hours late at 5:09 p.m.

Other disruptions over the last few days include outright cancellation of the Crescent from New York to New Orleans on Sunday, July 14, after other departures were held for hours or cancelled following a Norfolk Southern freight derailment near Atlanta.

Last Friday’s westbound Pennsylvanian was terminated at Lancaster, Pa., Amtrak says, “due to a mechanical issue;” 233 passengers transferred to an electric-powered Keystone as far as Harrisburg and those traveling beyond via bus to Pittsburgh. Buses substituted for Saturday’s eastbound train as far as Philadelphia. These incidents follow a cascading series of systemwide setbacks previously reported [see, “Significant delays, cancellations disrupt Amtrak’s network, News Wire July 12, 2024].    

As of this morning (Tuesday, July 16), the only space available from Los Angeles to Chicago on Wednesday — a day the already sold-out Sunset Limited-Texas Eagle departs — was a bedroom on the California Zephyr via Emeryville, Calif., for $3,298. That trip would require taking the Pacific Surfliner to Santa Barbara, Calif., and an overnight bus ride. Those who suddenly found themselves in need of a way from LA to Chicago could always shift to airlines — United flights Wednesday were available for as little as $339 in coach or $704 in first class — but there were no options for passengers planning to take the train from any of the Chief’s or Sunset/Eagle’s dozens of intermediate stops.

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