The last Northstar train will leave the station in January, after the Metropolitan Council voted Wednesday night to suspend the beleaguered commuter rail line.
The Met Council has cited low ridership and a contract that prevents adding service to meet changing post-COVID rider needs as reasons to suspend the service. The last Northstar train will run the first weekend in January, following the final regular season Vikings game. Buses will then replace the train along parts of the route.
“This was a challenging decision,” said Deb Barber, the chair of the Met Council’s transportation committee. “But we also know that we have to take the time to look at the service we provide to see that they’re efficient and effective.”
Ridership challenges
Northstar, which Metro Transit has run from Target Field in Minneapolis to Big Lake in Sherburne County since 2009, has faced challenges from the jump.
It was originally planned to move riders between the Central Minnesota population center of St. Cloud and Minneapolis. With a $320 million pricetag, it only got about halfway there before it ran out of money. Its northern terminus became Big Lake, a city about one-fifth St. Cloud’s size.
In 2019, Northstar had 2,660 riders on the average weekday, according to the Met Council. After a decade in service, it was less than halfway to the ridership projections it was expected to reach between Minneapolis and Big Lake by 2025.
Then came the pandemic, which shifted commuting patterns dramatically. Metro Transit cut Northstar service, reducing weekday trips and eliminating weekends, except to events such as Twins and Vikings games.
In June, the line averaged 428 weekday riders.