A train station run entirely by volunteers 鈥 many well over 60 years old
Ken Lyons, in his 90s, has been one of the volunteers at Centennial Station in Washington State. He鈥檚 an example of how many seniors keep making a difference in their communities after their official retirement date.
Ken Lyons, in his 90s, has been one of the volunteers at Centennial Station in Washington State. He鈥檚 an example of how many seniors keep making a difference in their communities after their official retirement date.
Ken Lyons could have been a lot of other places.
But it鈥檚 been here, in a busy Amtrak train station, that Mr. Lyons has chosen to be, not home with his feet up and TV remote in hand. At 96 years young, he is still a doer, a goer by choice.
Every Monday from 8 a.m. to noon, Lyons has been behind the counter at Centennial Station just outside Lacey, Wash., answering questions and helping passengers waiting for the next train.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just something I love to do,鈥 says the friendly Lyons, adding that this has given him a chance 鈥渢o talk with people.鈥
It鈥檚 not a steady paycheck that has lured Lyons to drive across town to the station each week. He鈥檚 been one of 55 volunteers who have kept the station running.
It鈥檚 one of the few all-volunteer train stations in the United States. 鈥淭here鈥檇 be no station there if there were no volunteers,鈥 says Audrey Skaugseth, the station鈥檚 volunteer coordinator, who is herself a volunteer. 鈥淭hey keep it going.鈥
Many of the volunteers are well over 60 years old 鈥 Lyons being a case in point. He鈥檚 volunteered on Monday mornings since 1993, when Centennial Station opened.
This summer, Lyons decided to step down from his role. But that was after a very long ride, so to speak 鈥 24 years of service. The help he鈥檚 lent is a prime example of how many seniors keep making a difference in their communities well after their official retirement date.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e just got to find something to replace your job when you retire,鈥 says Lyons, who spoke with the Monitor before he stepped down at the station.
Centennial Station was itself built by volunteers, replacing an old depot nearby. It serves an area that includes Olympia, the capital of Washington State. Last year, about 65,000 passengers boarded or got off a train at the station.
Ten passenger trains pull into the depot every day: The first, a southbound train, arrives at 8:45 a.m., and the last, a northbound one, pulls in at 8:42 p.m. The volunteers have it all covered, with two of them serving at a time in four-hour shifts.
And if a train is ever late, be it midnight or 2 a.m., a volunteer is still there. It doesn鈥檛 matter whether the delay was due to bad weather, a breakdown of equipment, or something else.
The volunteers often have an important role to fill. 鈥淥ver and over again I have people come up and say, 鈥業鈥檝e never traveled by train before. What do I do?鈥 鈥 says Lowell Dightman, who started volunteering about three years ago. 鈥淚 see the job as helping people understand trains.鈥
Like Lyons, Dr. Dightman was looking for something to fill his schedule after retiring as a family doctor. Being around trains seemed like a perfect fit: As a child, he traveled from the state of Montana to Tacoma, Wash., via train, giving him a childhood memory of riding trains. And he hasn鈥檛 stopped taking them. 鈥淎ctually, my wife and I prefer rail travel,鈥 he says.
鈥淪taying active is important,鈥 Dightman notes. 鈥淲hen the time became available to help, I did that.鈥
As for Lyons, he was born in 1921 and grew up in Los Angeles. He remembers riding his bike down to the train station to watch the steam engines pull in. In the 1950s, he even got the chance to blow the whistle of a steam locomotive.
Lyons has spent a lifetime of doing. He was in the Navy during World War II, serving as a radio operator on a ship in the North Atlantic. After the war, he worked as a cabinetmaker, then reenlisted in the Navy. After earning his master鈥檚 in economics in 1959, he worked as an economist for a bank. In 1985, he retired from running his own hobby shop business. Amid all these things, he鈥檚 raced cars and boats, enjoyed jazz music, and painted oils and watercolors.
It was imperative that something replace his job. Volunteering at the train station was a natural fit. With his sense of humor and a list of jokes ready to share, he鈥檚 tried to give passengers an enjoyable encounter.
And of course, he鈥檚 always liked trains. 鈥淭he only trouble I have with them,鈥 he says, 鈥渋s they don鈥檛 have steam coming out of them anymore.鈥