I think its the MTA
http://www.mta.info/nyct/maps/submap.htm
New York City has two main rail stations: Grand Central Terminal and Penn Station. Grand Central is on the East Side, in Midtown, and Penn Station is on the West Side, just below Midtown. Both are served by numerous bus and subway lines. Metro-North Commuter Railroad, which goes to NYC suburbs in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey, serves Grand Central. Penn Station serves Long Island Railroad (LIRR), a commuter railroad serving New York's Long Island; Amtrak, the U.S. national passenger railroad, serving many points throughout the U.S.;New Jersey Transit, a commuter line serving points in New Jersey; andPATH (Port Authority Trans Hudson), a subway line serving Manhattan and New Jersey.
york
Metra rail service can be found in Chicago an the surrounding areas. It is the rail service that connects many different counties such as Cook, Will, Lake, and Cane to the main area of Chicago.
The most often used means of transport are road, rail and air travel.
Mass transit, cars, highways, rail service, commuter rail, trains, busses, public transportation, carpools.
Durham is roughly 60 miles north of York, straight up the A1 or, by rail, two main railway stops up the east coast main line (the one in between is Darlington, there are smaller stations in between at Thirsk, Northallerton and Ferryhill). The cathedral stands on a hill in a meander in the River Wear and is clearly visible as you approach the city, both by road and rail. It is one of the finest Medieval catherdrals in the world.
One can get a New York MTA travel schedule on the MTA website where they provide both rail (Long Island Rail Road, Metro- North Railroad) and New York City Bus (Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan) schedules.
The fate of York Rail Works was sealed with its privatization.
Via rail or Greyhound from Ottawa to New York City via Montreal
VIA rail Canada
Using the rail is a very common way to travel in Europe, so almost every large city and many smaller ones have rail service. Some of the larger rail hubs are located in London, Paris, Rome, and Berlin.
Yes. Take VIA Rail Canada to Montréal, then Amtrak to Schenectady (or all the way to New York City). A different Amtrak train connects New York City (via Schenectady) to Chicago.
The main differences between Suburban Rail and Rapid Transit Rail Networks is the services that they provide.