Metrolink (California)

Metrolink

Metrolink Hyundai Rotem cab car, Virginia Colony, Moorpark, California
Overview
Owner Southern California Regional Rail Authority
Locale Southern California
Transit type Commuter rail
Number of lines 7[1]
Number of stations 59[1]
Daily ridership 39,613 (avg. Q4 2015-16)[1]
Chief executive Art Leahy
Headquarters MTA Building, Los Angeles
Website Welcome to Metrolink
Operation
Began operation October 26, 1992[2]
Operator(s) Amtrak
(under contract to the SCRRA)
Reporting marks SCAX
Number of vehicles 95 locomotives, 260 rail cars[1]
Technical
System length 534 mi (859 km)[1]
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Top speed 90 mph (140 km/h)
System map

Metrolink (reporting mark SCAX) is a commuter rail system serving Southern California; it consists of seven lines and 59 stations operating on 534 miles (859 km) of rail network.[1] It travels up to 79 miles per hour (127 km/h) and up to 90 mph on sections of the Orange County line.

The system operates in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Ventura counties, as well as to Oceanside in San Diego County.[3][4] It connects with the Los Angeles County Metro Rail system, the San Diego Coaster commuter rail and Sprinter light rail services, and with Amtrak's Pacific Surfliner, Coast Starlight, Southwest Chief, and Sunset Limited intercity rail services.[5]

The system, founded in 1991 as the Southern California Regional Rail Authority (SCRRA) and quickly adopting "Metrolink" as the marketing and user friendly moniker, started operation in 1992. Average weekday ridership rose to 42,265 in 2012,[6] but had fallen slightly to 41,951 in the fourth quarter of 2014.[7]

Routes

In addition to several suburban communities and cities, Metrolink also serves several points of interest such as Downtown Los Angeles; Bob Hope Airport; California State University, Los Angeles; Angel Stadium; and the San Clemente Pier.[8] Special service has also been extended to the Pomona Fairplex,[9] the Ventura County Fairgrounds,[10] and the Auto Club Speedway[11] for certain events.

The rail system experiences its peak ridership during weekday mornings and afternoons.[12] More trains operate during the morning between 5 a.m. and 9 a.m. and between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m.[13] However, the agency's recent success providing trains to concerts at the Honda Center has rekindled interest in providing more service to other venues near stations, and inspired AEG, in its effort to build Farmers Field, a proposed NFL football stadium, to cite the possibility of selling Metrolink fare media at the time of purchasing tickets for events at the stadium to meet environmental concerns regarding increased vehicular traffic should the stadium be built.[14][15]

Line[3] Series Termini Operation Routing[3][4]
     91/Perris Valley Line 700[16] Los Angeles
Perris
Daily Southeast from Union Station, east along the Riverside (California Route 91) Freeway to Riverside, turns south along Interstate 215.
     Antelope Valley Line 200[17] Los Angeles
Lancaster
Daily Northwest from Union Station, roughly following Interstate 5. Turns east, then north, to parallel State Route 14.
     Inland Empire–Orange County Line 800[18] San Bernardino
Oceanside
Daily Southwest from the Santa Fe Depot to follow the Riverside Freeway west. Turns south to parallel Interstate 5.
     Orange County Line 600[19] Los Angeles
Oceanside
Daily Northwest from the Oceanside Transportation Center along Interstate 5. Deviates slightly from the interstate in north Orange and southeast Los Angeles counties.
     Riverside Line 400[20] Los Angeles
Riverside
Weekdays Northwest from the Downtown Riverside Metrolink / Amtrak station, eventually paralleling State Route 60.
     San Bernardino Line 300[21] Los Angeles
San Bernardino
Daily West from the Santa Fe Depot between Interstate 10 and I-210. Runs in the Interstate 10 median starting near El Monte.
     Ventura County Line 100[22]
900[23]
Los Angeles
East Ventura
Weekdays East from the East Ventura Metrolink station roughly following State Route 118. Turns south at Bob Hope Airport towards Union Station. Trains with 900-series numbers run between Union Station and Bob Hope Airport.

Fares

Metrolink ticket vending machines. Machines also sell tickets for Amtrak trains and the FlyAway Bus to LAX.

Metrolink's fare structure is based on a flat fee for boarding the train and an additional cost for distance with fares being calculated in 25-cent increments between stations.

Metrolink riders can ride most buses in Los Angeles and Orange County, as well as the Metro Rail, free with their valid ticket or pass, and monthly pass holders in Orange, Los Angeles, and Ventura Counties can use Amtrak Pacific Surfliner and Thruway Coach services through the Rail 2 Rail program.[24]

Fare increases normally occur annually in July, to coincide with increased fuel and labor expenses, and have generally averaged between 3.5% and 5% per year (although the restructuring caused a larger jump in rates).[25] The oil price increases since 2003 are partly to blame for consistently increasing fares, as Metrolink trains are powered by diesel fuel.[26]

In July 2011, Metrolink introduced a new Weekend Pass allowing for passengers to travel all weekend trains for only $10. This was the first pass of its kind on Metrolink giving passengers unlimited rides all weekend long going anywhere in the system. However, with a fare increase on July 1, 2013, the Weekend Pass was renamed the Weekend Day Pass and is valid for one day rather than the entire weekend. The Weekend Day Pass still functions as an EZPass and TAP media for travel on LACMTA and other L.A. County transit services.

On January 1, 2016, Metrolink lowered short-distance fares to as low as $3 for adults/youth/students and $1.50 for disabled riders for One-Way tickets. These fares are offered to encourage local travel on Metrolink and are good for travel from one station to the next on any line. For example, riding from Cal State L.A. to Los Angeles Union Station is only $3 for One-Way and $6 Round-Trip for adults/youth/students. El Monte Station to Los Angeles Union Station is $6 for an adult One-Way ticket and $12 for a Round-Trip ticket. For travel more than two stations, distance-based pricing is more affordable.[27]

History

See also: CalTrain
Metrolink trains approaching and leaving Union Station during the evening rush hour

The member agencies of the SCRRA purchased 175 miles (282 km) of track, maintenance yards, and stations and other property from Southern Pacific for $450 million in 1990. The rights to use Los Angeles Union Station were purchased from Union Pacific, the station's owner at the time, for $17 million in the same year (Union Station has since been purchased by and is owned by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority).[28][29] The Authority was formally founded in 1991.[30] It began operation of the Ventura, Santa Clarita, and San Bernardino Lines on October 26, 1992 (the Santa Clarita Line later became the Antelope Valley Line)[2][31] which were operated by Amtrak.

In 1993 service was expanded to include the Riverside and Orange County Lines in 1994. The Inland Empire-Orange County Line opened in 1995, becoming the first suburb to suburb commuter rail line in the country. In 1995 more trains on the Orange County service were funded.[32] The system gained its current form in 2002 with the addition of the 91 Line.[33]

From July 2004, Metrolink fares were changed from zone based to one based on distance. In 2005 a five-year operational contract was awarded to Connex Railroad/Veolia Transport. In 2005, the Orange County Transportation Authority approved a plan to increase frequencies to 76 trains daily on the Orange County and Inland Empire-Orange County Lines by 2009,[34] and funding for increased Metrolink service was included in the renewal of the Measure M sales tax for transportation approved by voters in November 2006.[35] A proposed station in Yorba Linda was canceled in 2005 due to local opposition.[36]

In July 2008 it was announced that ridership had risen 16% over the previous year.[37][38] Following the 2008 Chatsworth train collision in which 25 people died and 135 were injured a number of safety measures were taken; in the fall of 2009, inward-facing video cameras were installed in locomotives in order to ensure that staff were complying with regulations, in particular a ban on use of mobile phones,[39] $200 million of funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act was provided to implement the positive train control crash avoidance system,[40] and in 2010, the first of 117 energy absorbing passenger carriages (which lessen the toll on passengers in the case of an accident) were received by the operator.[41] Amtrak regained the contract to operate Metrolink beginning in July 2010.[42] Average weekday ridership for the fourth quarter of 2009 was 38,400.[37]

In 2010, to save money in the face of funding cuts, the Metrolink board voted to reduce mid-day service on the Inland Empire–Orange County Line, as well as weekend service on both the Orange County and Inland Empire–Orange County lines.[43]

Average weekday ridership was 41,000 during May 2011. A survey found that 90% of users during a typical weekday in 2009 would have previously driven alone or carpooled and the system replaced an estimated that 25,000 vehicle trips.[6] During a weekend closure of Interstate 405 in July 2011 the system recorded its highest-ever weekend ridership of 20,000 boardings which was 50% higher than the same weekend in 2010 and 10% higher than the previous weekend ridership record which occurred during U2 360° Tour in June 2011.[44] Ridership continued to rise in 2012 (up 2%),[6] when average weekday ridership reached 42,265.[6] Although 2013 annual boardings were almost 12.07 million, ridership dropped to 11.74 million by fall 2014 which was contrary to projections. Blaming the decrease on the worst recession since World War II, Metrolink said it found itself caught between cutting service and boosting fares, both of which would probably further decrease ridership.[45]

In early 2016, Metrolink began testing mobile ticketing.[46][47] Later in 2016, the mobile ticketing system was fully rolled out.

The Riverside County Transportation Commission (RCTC) extended the 91 Line southeast 24 miles (39 km) to Perris, using the existing San Jacinto Branch Line, which it purchased in 1993.[48] Initial plans were for construction/renovation of the line to begin in 2012, but these were delayed by a lawsuit filed by homeowners in the affected area, who challenged the RCTC's environmental report. The lawsuit was settled in late July 2013.[49] Construction on the $248.3 million extension began in October 2013;[50] service was originally planned to begin in December 2015,[51] and then in February 2016.[52][53] In mid-February 2016, the extension's opening was planned in March of that year.[54] The extension opened in June 2016.[55]

Notable incidents

Placentia, April 2002

Two people died and 22 were seriously injured on April 23, 2002, when a BNSF freight train collided head-on with a Metrolink train in Placentia, near the Atwood Junction, at the intersection of Orangethorpe Avenue and Richfield Road. Both trains were on the same east–west track moving toward one another. The Metrolink had the right-of-way; it was supposed to switch to a southbound track. The BNSF train was supposed to slow and stop just before the switch while the Metrolink passed, but the crew missed a signal one and a half miles back warning them to slow down. By the time the crew saw the red "stop" signal at the switch and the Metrolink train, they were going too fast to avoid a collision. Although there was speculation that the signals alerting the BNSF to slow and stop had malfunctioned, an investigation later concluded that it was human error by the crew that caused the accident.[56]

Glendale, January 2005

2005 Glendale crash aftermath

Eleven people were killed (including an off-duty sheriff's deputy and a train conductor) and over 100 people were injured, about 40 seriously on January 26, 2005, when a Metrolink passenger train collided with a vehicle parked on the tracks, which then jackknifed and struck a stationary freight locomotive and a Metrolink train moving in the opposite direction. The man who parked the vehicle on the tracks, Juan Manuel Alvarez, was apprehended and charged with 11 counts of first-degree murder with special circumstances, including murder by train wrecking.[57][58] On June 26, 2008, Alvarez was convicted on the 11 murder counts and sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.[59]

Chatsworth (Los Angeles), September 2008

Twenty-six people were killed and 135 injured when a Metrolink commuter train carrying 222 persons[60] collided head on with a Union Pacific freight train, toppling one of the passenger cars and the locomotive onto its side in the Chatsworth district of Los Angeles.[61] Along with the 135 people who were injured, 81 were transported to local hospitals in serious or critical condition.[62] The velocity of the trains caused the Metrolink locomotive to telescope into the first passenger car.[62] Some 218 people have been killed by Metrolink train accidents from 1993 to 2008, a figure which includes pedestrians.[63]

Oxnard, February 2015

Thirty people were injured when southbound Metrolink Ventura County Line train 102 (East Ventura to LA Union Station) crashed into a truck that was stopped on the tracks at the Rice Avenue crossing near Oxnard at about 5:40 am on February 24, 2015. One person, the train's engineer, later died of his injuries.[64] The driver, who had left the truck before the crash, was located by the police and taken into custody. The train consisted of a Hyundai-Rotem "guardian fleet" cab car in the lead, a Bombardier Bi-level "bike car" coach, two Hyundai-Rotem "guardian fleet" coach cars and an EMD F59PH locomotive. After this accident, Metrolink leased 40 diesel freight locomotives from BNSF, to be placed as temporary cab cars as they investigate problems with their Hyundai-Rotem cars. On July 8, 2016, the Metrolink board approved a $1.5 million plan to repair the plows on the Hyundai Rotem cab cars. Once the repairs are completed, the cars will return to service and the leased BNSF locomotives will be returned.[65]

Future

Metrolink has grown in popularity and there are a number of planned extensions of the system and new stations. Station parking capacity has also been strained.[66]

A new Metrolink station in Placentia, which will serve the 91 Line's north Orange County passengers, has completed its final design phase, save for issues related to the parking needed to accompany the station.[67] Construction on the $24 million Placentia station is currently projected to begin in 2017, and scheduled to open in 2019.[68][69]

The San Bernardino-Redlands Passenger Rail Corridor, a 9-mile (14 km) eastward rail extension from San Bernardino to Redlands and Mentone, is planned by the San Bernardino Associated Governments (SANBAG). The association was considering whether to extend commuter rail along the corridor or to install either bus rapid transit or light rail lines,[70] but as of December 2015, SANBAG plans to extend Metrolink service only to the San Bernardino Transit Center and use diesel multiple units operated by Omnitrans in lieu of Metrolink locomotive-hauled coaches on the rest of the route.[71][72][73] The project, budgeted at $242 million, is expected to begin final design in September 2015. Construction is projected to begin in late 2017, with service starting in late 2019.[71]

The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) has proposed adding commuter rail service along the Harbor Subdivision corridor offering services to Inglewood, Los Angeles International Airport, the South Bay, the Port of Los Angeles, and/or the Port of Long Beach. A decision whether to employ commuter rail, light rail, or bus rapid transit in this corridor has not yet been reached.[74]

In 2008, lobbyists pushed for a rail line to Temecula in southwestern Riverside County via the 91 Line's La Sierra station.[75] While this proposed line could follow the route of an abandoned freight line, it would require significant money, as freight service ceased almost 30 years ago. Despite this, the Riverside County Transportation Commission's 2008 Commuter Rail Feasibility Study still lists this route as one possibility being considered.[76]

The cities of the Coachella Valley (Palm Springs, Cathedral City, Palm Desert, and Indio) have requested commuter rail service from Los Angeles and Orange County, but the Union Pacific Railroad opposes further passenger service on its tracks.[77] Nonetheless, as recently as 1999, the Coachella Valley Association of Governments was investigating the possibility of two daily round trips via the 91 Line from Los Angeles's Union Station through Fullerton and Riverside to stations in Palm Springs and Indio (with a possible stop near Palm Desert),[78] possibly through a partnership with Amtrak. This extension would likewise require significant money for infrastructure improvements: at least $500 million, according to the California State Rail Plan of 2005.[77] Nonetheless, in 2013 Caltrans conducted a feasibility study of a Coachella Valley service[79] and RCTC has resolved to pursue establishing one.[80]

High speed rail interface

During the initial years of operation of the California High-Speed Rail between Merced and Burbank, projected to commence in 2022, passengers would use Metrolink for travel between Burbank and downtown Los Angeles. An alternative plan would have track-sharing to Union Station but this would require electrification for that portion of the line. This alternate plan would provide a "one-seat ride" at the start of service between the Central Valley and downtown, or even Orange County.[81]

Governance

The MTA Building, where Metrolink is headquartered

The SCRRA is a joint powers authority governed by five county-level agencies: the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the Orange County Transportation Authority, the Riverside County Transportation Commission, the San Bernardino Associated Governments, and the Ventura County Transportation Commission.[30] Ex officio members include the Southern California Association of Governments, the San Diego Association of Governments, and the state of California.[1] It is headquartered at the MTA Building at Union Station in Los Angeles where Metro (LACMTA) is headquartered.[82] In 2014, a report suggested changes in the railroad's governing structure as the conflicting demands of the various agencies are difficult to meet. The report proposed turning the operation over to a local transit agency.[83]

The Metrolink system is operated under five-year contracts. For fiscal year 2013 it was allotted an operating budget of $211.17 million.[7]

Facilities

Metrolink operates several maintenance facilities across its service area. Its Central Maintenance Facility (CMF) is located on the east bank of the Los Angeles River near the intersection of the 5 and 110 Freeways, just south of the location of the former Southern Pacific Taylor Yard.[84] The facility is operated by Metrolink's equipment maintenance contractor, Bombardier Transportation.[85] The Eastern Maintenance Facility is located in San Bernardino. Metrolink's first crash-resistant cars were displayed at the facility at an event in May 2010.[86] Metrolink trains are also serviced at Coaster's Stuart Mesa Facility, located between San Clemente Pier and Oceanside at the southwest end of Camp Pendleton. This yard is owned by the North County Transit District.[85]

Metrolink's operations center is located in Pomona, near the Pomona (North) station.[87]

Rolling stock

Metrolink F59PH 860.
Late afternoon train passing through Lake Forest, California
Metrolink F59PHI.

The Metrolink fleet consists of 95 locomotives (52 owned, 43 leased)[1] and 137 active Bombardier BiLevel Coaches (Sentinel Fleet) with 137 Hyundai Rotem Bi-level cars (Guardian Fleet) with cab cars that can absorb energy in case of a collision.[88] An additional order of 20 Rotem cars was ordered after Metrolink obtained a loan from the LACMTA, although this still leaves Metrolink 34 cars short of its goal of completely replacing its entire Bombardier fleet. With Metrolink continuing to receive its new Rotem cars, the agency has returned all its leased equipment to their owners. Around 2009, the authority leased 10 cars from the Utah Transit Authority, which operates FrontRunner.[89]

With the delivery of many of the new Rotem cars (Guardian Fleet), Metrolink now has sufficient numbers of cars that have enabled Previous CEO John Fenton to introduce new services on board trains. All weekday trains now include at least one Quiet Car (designated as the 2nd car from the locomotive) and 35 legacy Bombardier cars have had all seats removed from the first level to create Bicycle Cars as in-line on some trains.[90][91] Future Bicycle cars will be retrofitted legacy Bombardiers as the Rotem's seats have been cited by Metrolink as an integral part of the safety features of the new Guardian Fleet and cannot be removed. Both new services have had positive reaction from the public.

In addition, the extra equipment has allowed Metrolink to add express service on the Antelope Valley Line and the San Bernardino Line as pilot programs. If they are successful (currently reducing travel times upwards of 45 minutes), Metrolink will make express service permanent and add express service to other lines to gauge if such service should also be permanent on those lines.

Several of the surplus legacy Bombardier cab cars and in-line cars are stored just outside Union Station along the track used by Pacific Surfliner, OC Line, and 91 Line trains along the Los Angeles River. Metrolink's long-term plan is uncertain for these cars as their original goal was to replace all Bombardier cars with the Guardian Fleet (Rotem cars), but will be short of that goal, until they are able to place additional orders. The decision of which Sentinel Fleet cars to keep or lease or sell will have much to do with the financing terms as much as age or cost to upgrade Sentinels with some of the Guardian Fleet safety features (this will be limited to enhanced seating and break-away tables, etc., but will not include the material and structure of the sentinel cars such as the weaker aluminum or aluminum alloy skin/body and the lack of horizontal steel beams on either side of the car to absorb impact forces. Although the Sentinel Fleet lacks crumple zones, it is unknown if that could be engineered for the Sentinel Fleet). The older the Sentinel car, the less debt owed on the car (or completely owned), or superior financing, while younger Sentinel cars carry more debt or less desirable financing. Metrolink is analyzing the cost of keeping either older or younger Sentinel cars to upgrade, as older Sentinel cars will require major rehabilitation of its systems, as they are close to the end of their life, in addition to upgrading them to some of the Guardian Fleet safety features. The younger Sentinel cars will not require any major rehabilitation of is systems, but carry more debt while still needing to upgrade to some Guardian Fleet safety features.

BNSF 5696 pulling Metrolink during the Oxnard derailment aftermath

On September 3, 2015, Metrolink announced they will add a second locomotive to each train set while cab cars, designed by Hyundai Rotem, undergo a review of the safety features of the cars following the 2015 Oxnard train derailment. The cab cars will remain in service as passenger coaches. Using BNSF Railway locomotives, Metrolink will have a locomotive on either end of each train. The investigation is examining the plow-like attachment on the front of the cab cars that failed to prevent the derailment in the collision by allowing wreckage to get under the wheels.[92][93]

Model Manufactured Road Numbers Number In Fleet Notes
Locomotives
EMD F40PH 1981 800 1
  • Used as a spare, for special events, switching, and for work trains.
  • 4 units purchased from Amtrak, 3 later sold for scrap.
  • Former Amtrak 396.
EMD F59PH 1988 18520, 18522, 18533 3
  • Ex-GO Transit units on short-term lease to Metrolink while the rest of the locomotive fleet receives PTC equipment upgrades.
EMD F59PH 19921993 851873 23
  • Locomotive #855 was involved in the 2008 Chatsworth train wreck and was retired and scrapped.
  • Locomotive #865 has caught on fire on multiple occasions on June 5, 2014 and on March 11, 2016. 865 was retired from service as a result.
EMD F59PHI 1994 874881 8
EMD F59PHI 1995 882, 883 2
  • Part of the canceled Marlboro train project.
EMD F59PHI 2001 884887 4
MPI MPXpress MP36PH-3C 20082009 888902 15
EMD F125 20162017 903-942 40
  • Order for ten locomotives announced in December 2012, with multiple additional options since then.[94]
  • Locomotive 905 was delivered to Metrolink on June 18, 2016. F125s 903 and 904 are still being tested while 905 is going through final touches before entering service.
  • The first three new F125s 903, 904, and 905 are expected to enter service in early 2017.
  • All 40 EMD F125s will replace all current existing F59s in the Metrolink fleet. A few F59s will act as yard switchers in Metrolink's maintenance facilities.
GE AC4400CW 2000 5603, 5606, 5607, 5610, 5613,
5615-5617, 5619-5622, 5624,
5626-5629, 5631, 5633-5636,
5638-5644, 5647-5652, 5654-5656, 5658, 5662, 5696, 5704
40
  • On loan from BNSF Railway. Temporarily replacing Rotem Cabcars for revenue service during investigation of the 2015 Oxnard derailment and while cab cars undergo repairs. Will be returned to BNSF once lease expires in October 2016.[95]
Passenger cars
Bombardier BiLevel Generation 1 19921993 101163 60
  • 35 cars converted into bike cars.
  • #162 and 163 sold to Caltrain.[96]
Bombardier BiLevel Generation 2 1997 164182 18
  • #184 was wrecked en route from the factory and number was retired, #197 was involved in the Glendale accident and #164179 sold to Caltrain[96]
Bombardier BiLevel Generation 3 2002 183210 26
  • Generation 3 cars have smooth sides without rivets and power ports at most seats.
Hyundai Rotem bilevel cars 20102013 211290 80
Cab cars
Bombardier BiLevel Generation 1 19921993 601631 28
  • Generation 1 cab cars have only one window on the front of the car.
  • All cab cars retired and replaced by Rotem cab cars.
Bombardier BiLevel Generation 2 1997 632637 5
  • #634 was involved in a head-on collision in Orange County and has been retired.
  • All cab cars retired and replaced by Rotem cab cars.
Hyundai Rotem bilevel cars 20102013 638695 57
  • All cab cars will be temporarily restricted from leading trains and replaced by BNSF AC4400CWs during the investigation of the 2015 Oxnard train derailment. Cab cars will still be used as passenger coaches.[97]
References:[98][99]

Livery

Metrolink Liveries

Most Metrolink-owned units are painted in the Metrolink livery, white with blue streaks. The agency is currently in the process of rolling out a new blue and green "ribbons" design. Locomotives are being given the new ribbon livery during downtime for maintenance and the new Rotem Bi-level cars are coming from the factory with the updated design already applied.[42][100]

See also

References

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  2. 1 2 3 "Routes". Metrolink. 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  3. 1 2 "Metrolink - How 2 Ride Guide - Southern California System Map" (pdf). American Automobile Association (AAA). Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  4. "Los Angeles". Amtrak California. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  5. "Stations". Metrolink. 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  6. "Metrolink to Make Special Stops at Fair". Metrolink. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
  7. "Metrolink to Again Offer Service to Ventura County Fair". Metrolink. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
  8. "Take Metrolink to the Auto Club Speedway for NASCAR Action!". Metrolink. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
  9. Schiermeyer, Carl (1996). "As Fuel Prices Increase, Metrolink Ridership Soars". Daily News. The Free Library. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  10. "Schedules". Metrolink. 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  11. "METROLINK QUARTERLY REPORT (2011)" (pdf). LA Metro. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  12. Arnold, Shayna Rose. "Metrolink, AEG Form Partnership". Los Angeles Magazine. Los Angeles Magazine. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  13. "91 Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  14. "Antelope Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  15. "Inland Empire-Orange County Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  16. "Orange County Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  17. "Riverside Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  18. "San Bernardino Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  19. "Ventura County Line". Metrolink. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
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  22. "Metrolink Board approves increase to systemwide and Group Travel Program fares". Metrolink. April 25, 2008. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
  23. "EZ transit pass program". Metrolink. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
  24. "Travel For As Low As $3 on Metrolink Starting January 1, 2016". Metrolink. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
  25. "LACTC to acquire Union Pacific property and trackage rights for planned five-county commuter rail system. (Los Angeles County Transportation Commission)". Southern California Business. September 1, 1991. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  26. Middleton, William D. (November 1, 1992). "California gets it together. (rail systems)". RailwayAge. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  27. 1 2 "About Metrolink". Metrolink. Retrieved March 26, 2010.
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  30. "Metrolink Milestones". Metrolink. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
  31. Radcliffe, Jim (November 14, 2005). "Metrolink daily O.C. service to nearly double". Orange County Register.
  32. "Measure M2". Orange County Transportation Authority. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
  33. Pang, Kevin (March 17, 2004) "Yorba Linda Rejects Train Station Plan" Los Angeles Times
  34. 1 2 "Public Transportation Ridership Report: Fourth Quarter 2009" (pdf). American Public Transportation Association. March 2, 2010. p. 5. Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  35. Hymon, Steve (August 2008). "Metrolink sets ridership record, candidates don't talk traffic and sales tax: Ramping up, August 18". Los Angeles Times.
  36. Willon, Phil (October 6, 2009). "Metrolink adds video cameras to locomotives". Los Angeles Times.
  37. Groff, Joann (March 12, 2010). "Metrolink receives passenger cars specially designed to absorb a crash". Camarillo Acorn. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  38. 1 2 "Metrolink Matters" (pdf). Metrolink. March–April 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  39. Connell, Rich (January 8, 2010). "Metrolink cuts some weekend trains, but fares stay put". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 26, 2010.
  40. "Metrolink sets weekend ridership recording during 405 closure". The Source. Retrieved July 21, 2011.
  41. Weikel, Dan (September 7, 2014) "Metrolink's annual ridership continues to drop" Los Angeles Times
  42. Worrell, Carolina (March 14, 2016). "Metrolink launches mobile ticketing app". Railway Age. Archived from the original on March 15, 2016. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  43. "Metrolink board approves purchase of mobile ticketing technology" (Press release). Metrolink. January 15, 2016. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  44. "Perris Valley Line Project Description". Riverside County Transportation Commission (RCTC). Retrieved February 3, 2014.
  45. Downey, David (July 30, 2013). "PERRIS VALLEY LINE: Judge signs off on settlement". The Press-Enterprise. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
  46. "Perris Valley Line". Riverside County Transportation Commission. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  47. Downey, David (September 14, 2014). "Transportation: Perris Valley Line taking shape". The Press-Enterprise. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  48. Weikel, Dan (December 11, 2015). "Metrolink expansion to Perris is dedicated ahead of its 2016 opening". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
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