Business & Tech

MBTA Fines Commuter Rail Operator $434,000 for Late Trains

The MBTA fined Keolis Commuter Service a total of $804,000 for issues, as outlined under the company's 8-year $2.7 billion contract.

The MBTA fined its new operator of its commuter rail service $804,000 for late trains, cleanliness and other issues.

The contractor for the commuter rail service - Keolis Commuter Services - said mechanical problems and specifically old trains operating in the fleet as reasons for late trains.

In October, the on-time performance of the commuter rail slipped to its lowest since Keolis began overseeing operations, at just 85 percent. The worst record was on the Fitchburg line at less than 65 percent in October. The MBTA has set a goal of 95 percent on time for commuter rail trains.

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In July, Keolis Commuter Service began overseeing the commuter rail, including the Framingham/Worcester line, when it won the 8-year, $2.7 billion contract.

Included in the contract was penalties for service delays. The contract caps penalties at $12 million per year for Keolis. Penalties and fines can be levied for late trains, dirty trains and station, lack of heat or air conditioning on trains, and staffing issues.

Find out what's happening in Framinghamfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The MBTA fined Keolis $434,000 for late trains.

The MBTA also fined Keolis $370,000 for poor fare collection, uncleanliness on the trains and at the station and staffing issues.

Keolis won the new contract this summer over the Massachusetts Bay Commuter Railroad Company, who had operated the commuter rail service of the MBTA since 2003.

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Photo Credit: Susan Petroni

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