Riding Metro comes with a lot of downsides.
First, it always seems to be a crapshoot whether you make it to your
destination before the End of Times. We actually just went through a two-week
period where Blue Line trains were only running from Arlington National Cemetery
to somewhere in Springfield, and Orange and Silver Line trains were
single-tracking between Smithsonian and McPherson Square for repairs…and
running at 20-minute intervals instead of eight. Red Line trains were bollixed
for different reasons, but that’s pretty much a standing affair these days.
Basically, they announced at the beginning of
August that everyone in the metropolitan DC area should just stay home.
And then WMATA management has the unmitigated
gall to moan that they’re losing riders so they’re going to need to raise more
revenues. One of their tactics is to increase charges to park at the garages
and lots by their stations, and to charge for parking on holidays and the
weekends, when it used to be free on those days.
When I lived in Arlington, I could walk to the
Pentagon City station, so parking wasn’t an issue. Here in the People’s
Republic, I live about a mile from the station. I could walk, although I’m
disinclined to do this in the summer. The Metro bus that goes by my house only runs
for about three hours in the morning and again in the afternoon, so that’s not an
option. I’m ideologically opposed to paying $5 a day to park in addition to the
fare to and from the District, and there’s no street parking anywhere near the station.
Back in pre-Metro days, there were park-and-ride
lots on either side of the Toll Road, where commuters could leave their cars
and take buses into Arlington, Tysons and DC. With the advent of the Silver
Line, one of the lots disappeared altogether, but the other is still in use for
both bus and rail commuters. As you might imagine, however, it fills up fairly
early—by 0730 all the spaces are gone, and it’s a $5 space in the lower reaches
of the parking garage under the station for you.
There are parking lots for office buildings,
but of course they’re all posted as NO COMMUTER PARKING and TOWING ENFORCED.
Well, the other day, I was on my morning walk,
when I noticed this guy coming out of a parking structure for one of those NO
COMMUTER PARKING buildings. He did not
head toward the building, but toward the station.
It was not quite 0740, and if this guy’s a
regular, he should have known he was too late for the parking lot—which indeed looked
like this:
But he was also clearly too cheap to pay to park
in the garage. I appreciate that cheapness, but dude—you may find that this “free”
spot turns out to cost more than $5. Maybe think about getting up earlier…
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